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What It Is
LearnUp.me, an online job placement and
training platform, enables job seekers to bone up on specific
skills required by prospective employers. Companies post their
open positions, ranging from bakery clerk to technology
associate, then add links to training videos on YouTube or
other approved material. For example, Staples candidates might
be asked to watch the YouTube video "How to Make a Business
Card." Once users complete the training, their LearnUp résumés
are automatically updated to reflect their efforts, and they
can be considered for the open slot.
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How It Started
After her startup Valence Energy was acquired in 2010, Alexis
Ringwald became interested in the unemployment problem. She
spent six months interviewing people in the unemployment lines in
the Bay Area, trying to determine what was keeping them from
landing work.
"It seemed a lot of people's skills were out of sync with the labor market needs of today," Ringwald says. "There was a sense of confusion by the job seekers, a paralysis over what they needed to learn to be qualified."
In September 2011 Ringwald met Kenny Ma at the education-themed Mega Startup Weekend at Microsoft's campus in Mountain View, Calif., and the two joined together to launch LearnUp, which was announced in June at the Clinton Global Initiative America meeting in Chicago.
Why It Took Off
"Even employers with entry-level positions are having a hard time
finding skilled workers," Ringwald says. Her vision was for
LearnUp to bridge the gap, giving job seekers the expertise they
needed and companies an educated employee pool from which to
choose. Staples and Safeway were on the board of the San Jose,
Calif., unemployment office and signed up immediately. Gap, KPMG,
TeleTech, Whole Foods Market and others came on shortly
thereafter.
The Business Case
Backed in part by venture capital firm New Enterprise Associates,
LearnUp recently received $1.9 million in funding, enough to
build the team and expand throughout California. The company's
revenue model is based on a finder's fee for successful job
placements. Job seekers are not charged to access the listings or
to complete any required training.
Still in startup mode, Ringwald won't divulge the number of positions LearnUp has filled so far, noting that the company is using San Jose as a test case.
What's Next
LearnUp is working with community colleges in California to help
guide curriculum development that will give students the
education that prospective employers are seeking. The company is
also working with its national clients to expand job placements
for positions across California by the end of the year.
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