After selling his previous company, the email newsletter service Mailout, in 2016, Gregg Oldring was trying to figure out what to do with the empty downtown office space for which he still had a lease. Then he ran into Tony Williams, at that time merely an acquaintance, at a coffee shop.
“I didn’t really know him that well, at that point,” says Oldring. “We had that classic conversation, ‘What do you do for a living?’ And Tony’s response that day was, ‘What I do is stupid.’ Which got me thinking, ‘Okay, tell me more.’”
Williams went on to describe to Oldring his job at the time as a consultant to universities for international student recruitment, which he painted as a frustrating experience for both schools and students.
“That problem seemed like a great thing to be solved with technology,” explains Oldring. Out of that conversation emerged Zept, which allowed Oldring to stop looking for subtenants. Since then,Oldringand his team have tasked themselves with helping make the experience of finding the right school easier for international students.
“The challenge is that there are a lot of schools, and you don’t necessarily know which ones you could get into. And often, really the only way you can find out is to apply. And that’s a daunting and incredibly time-consuming process.”
Zeptstreamlines the entire endeavor, asking a few simple questions at the outset — where a student would like to study, what they would like to study, and their grades.Zept’s algorithm then filters out schools that don’t meet a student’s criteria, acting as a scholastic Tinder of sorts. When a “match” occurs, a student can then learn more about that school and apply, or the school can even reach out to the student.
Whereas education agents, who work with universities to recruit students, have their own interests at heart,Zeptaims to remove the middle-man entirely and put students and schools into direct contact with each other, helping ensure a student finds the best school for them.