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在线翻译:
szdaily -> In depth -> 
5% of online education firms profit in 2015
    2016-04-05  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    CHINA’S online education market was white hot in 2015.

    According to data from Tech in Asia, a media platform for Asia’s tech community and startups, more than 90 different Chinese edtech startups raised funding during the year, with at least 19 of them raising rounds of more than US$20 million and a handful raising upwards of US$100 million. China’s online education companies were numerous and raising money like mad in 2015. But according to a new report from China’s Internet Education Research Institute, there’s one thing that China’s edtech startups weren’t in 2015: profitable.

    The report, which was released in January, found that China’s online education market reached nearly 40 billion yuan (US$6 billion) in 2015, a massive upswing from its 28 billion yuan value the previous year. But massive crowding in the marketplace — the report estimates that China has about 9,500 different edtech companies — has meant that very few companies are actually making any money. Just 5 percent of China’s online education firms profited in 2015, according to the report.

    Specifically, the researchers surveyed 400 Chinese online education companies, of which more than 70 percent reported operating losses, 13 percent reported breaking even and 16 percent reported profits.

    Those numbers may be more reflective of outcomes for larger firms that have at least raised a round or two of venture funding. But given the number of new edtech startups that ultimately fail, researchers estimate that in the market as a whole, the number of companies that profited in 2015 is probably more like 5 percent, with 10 percent breaking even, 70 percent posting losses, and the remaining 15 percent having gone out of business.

    The report estimates that within a couple years, 80 percent of these companies will have gone out of business. The reason is that education is a relatively slow-to-develop industry, and it requires both patience and a massive up-front investment to do things like develop curricula, build all the relevant technology, and market services to students, teachers and parents. Most online education companies will need to be able to sustain losses for at least three to five years before becoming profitable, the report says. (SD-Agencies)

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