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BIZ CZAR The Case Study competition

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BIZ CZAR The Case Study competition

The Apollo Group, Inc. [University of Phoenix] Richard B. Robinson

1 John G. Sperling was a late bloomer as an entrepreneur. A Cambridge University PhD

who had spent most of his career teaching at San Jose State University after brief stints at

Maryland, Ohio State and Northern Illinois, he didn’t launch Apollo Group Inc.—parent

of the University of Phoenix—until 1976, when he was 55. But what Sperling lacked in

precociousness he more than made up for in ambition: His goal was nothing less than to

turn conventional higher education on its head. 2 Rather than catering to 18- to 22-year-olds looking to find themselves, Sperling focused on

the then-neglected market of working adults. And he recruited working professionals as

teachers, rather than tenured professors. Although UOP and its online campus, University of

Phoenix Online, have more than 18,000 faculties, only about 450 are full-time. Most radical of

all, while nearly all other universities are nonprofits, Sperling ran his university to make

money. Those ideas sparked overwhelming resistance from the education establish-ment,

which branded UOP a “diploma mill.” The result? “We faced failure every day for the first 10

years,” said Founder Sperling, who turned 88 in 2009. 3 From an IPO adjusted price of $0.76 to a mid-2005 high of $98, Apollo’s stock reflected a

company BusinessWeek considered among the top 50 performing companies on Wall Street.

The Phoenix-based company, whose day-to-day operations were still generating average

annual revenue growth exceeding 30% over that time, saw its revenues reach $2.5 billion in

2006 with net income exceeding $414 million. With a price-earnings ratio of 76, Apollo had

one of the richest price-earnings multiples on Wall Street at the time. 4 Tuition at Apollo averages only $10,000 a year, 55% of what a typical private college

charges. A key factor, says Sperling, is that universities for the young require student

unions, sports teams, student societies, and so on. The average age of a UOP student is

35, so UOP doesn’t have those expenses. It also saves by holding classes in leased office

spaces around the country. By 2005, over 135,000 of its 275,000 students studied at

University of Phoenix Online. 5 By 2006, Phoenix Online had become the dominant player in the online education

mar-ket that still has lots of potential for growth. The bricks-and-mortar University of

Phoenix was one of the first institutions to identify and serve the burgeoning market for

educating working adults. In the late 1980s, long before the Web debuted, the school

began to experi-ment with offering its classes online. It got off to a slow start, “and we

lost money for a number of years,” recalled Brian Mueller, Apollo’s president. 6 As a result of this head start, however, Phoenix Online was ready to capitalize on an

online-education market that began exploding in the mid-1990s. Today, about 15% of the

600,000 or so U.S. students earning a degree via the Net are enrolled at Phoenix Online.

©RCTrust, LLC., 2008. This case was developed by Dr. Richard B. Robinson based on publicly

available information from The Apollo Group, Inc., the University of Phoenix; interviews with UOP

students and professors; and selected BusinessWeek articles.

7-1

7-2

Phoenix Online also garners an outsize share of the industry’s revenues—about one-third

of the total. That’s because as the market leader, it can charge higher tuition than most

rivals. Undergraduates pay a little more than $10,000 a year at Phoenix Online, while

students seeking a master’s degree pay nearly $12,500. “They’re by far the giant in this

industry,” says Eduventure market analyst Sean Gallagher. Appendix A at the end of this

case lists some of the other key players or “competitors.” 7 Is the best yet to come? Both Phoenix Online and the broader industry are still in their infancy.

“There are 70 million working adults in this country who don’t have a college degree,” says

Gallagher. Increasingly, they realize that they need a degree to get ahead. But because they

often have a family as well as a job, studying online is the most convenient solution. Howard

Block, an analyst at Banc of America Securities, predicts “dramatic enroll-ment growth” for

Phoenix Online. He expects that half of the students in post-secondary education will one day

make at least some use of the Internet to earn their degrees.

GLOBAL OUTREACH

8 Phoenix Online began to tap the international market in 2005, initially “bringing in about

500 students a month,” said Mueller. “But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.” Though

Phoenix Online started offering classes only in English, it has begun to offer courses in

Spanish and plans to introduce Mandarin soon as well. Ironically, one of the hottest tech

stocks of recent years has done all this with plain-vanilla technology. While other

companies charged into online education with dazzling digital content, Phoenix Online

offers a text-heavy format that can easily be accessed with dial-up modems. 9 This might sound like a recipe for failure. But Phoenix Online realized that interaction

with humans—the professor and other students in the class—was far more important to

suc-cess than interaction with the digital content. Thus, Phoenix Online keeps its classes

small, averaging just 12 students. And to combat the Achilles heel of distance

education—a high dropout rate—it offers its students plenty of hand-holding, including

round-the-clock tech support. The result: 65% of its students go on to graduate. 10 Some see plain technology as a potential negative for the virtual college. “At some

point, Phoenix Online will need to upgrade the sophistication of its platform,” warns

Trace Urdan, an analyst with ThinkEquity Partners, a boutique investment bank. That will

require more spending on research and development and information technology, he

warns, which could crimp margins. Still, any extra spending could be easily offset if

Phoenix Online bumped up its class size to 15 students, argues Block. Even with today’s

small classes, operating profit margins now top 30%.

THE ONLINE TREND

11 The dot-com bubble may have burst in the world of commerce, but the promise of har-

nessing the Internet for paradigm-changing growth—and even profits—still thrives in the

halls of academia. At the University of Maryland University College, enrollment in

classes offered over the Net soared to 63,000 in the past academic year, up 50% from the

year before. UMUC students can now earn some 70 degrees and certificates entirely

online. The University of Phoenix Online saw revenues jump some 76% in the fiscal year

ended Aug. 31, to $181 million, while profits grew 82%, to $32 million. 12 Since the U.S. Army began rolling out an e-learning program in 2001, annually more than

10,400 soldiers are taking classes and earning degrees online from 24 participating col-leges.

Students at eArmyU, as it’s known, receive a free laptop and printer and 100% of their tuition.

The Army enrollment hit 80,000 after it took the program Army-wide in 2006.

13 Nearly seven years after the dot-com fizzle began, e-learning has emerged from the wreck-age as

one of the Internet’s most useful applications. Nearly 75% of the 4,000 major colleges and

universities in the U.S. now offer classes over the Internet or use the Web to enhance cam-pus

classes, according to market researcher International Data Corp. About 6 million students take

online classes from U.S. higher-ed institutions in 2007 according to John G. Flores, head of

the U.S. Distance Learning Assn., a nonprofit trade group outside Boston. And it’s not just a

U.S. phenomenon: students from developing countries are jumping online, too.

FIGURE 1 Corporations

Are Charging

into E-Learning Data: International Data Corp.

FIGURE 2 The E-Learning Explosion Data International Data Corp., Eduventures.com. IDC. U.S. Distance Learning Assn.

20

Corporate spending 16 on online training

and education

12

8

4

0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Billions of dollars

As More Colleges ...And Spend More Money

90 Offer E-learning...

12 on Technology

60 8

30 Share of post-secondary 4 Technology spending by

institutions offering post-secondary institutions

e-learning

0

0

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Percent Billions of dollars

...More Students Are ...Pushing Up

6 Taking Online Courses

6 Revenues

Enrollment in courses

Online tuition and fees

offered online by earned by for-profit and

4 post-secondary 4 nonprofit post-secondary

institutions institutions

2 2

0 1998 2001 2006

0

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Millions Billions of dollars

14 These classes are opening new horizons for the fastest-growing segment of higher

education: working adults, who often find it difficult to juggle conventional classes with

jobs and families. Adults over 25 now represent nearly half of higher-ed students; most

are employed and want more education to advance their careers. 15 E-learning is an influence in the traditional college class as well. Online classes won’t

replace the college experience for most 18- to 24-year-olds. But from the Massachusetts

Institute of Technology to Wake Forest University in North Carolina, colleges are using

the Web in on-campus classes to augment textbooks and boost communication. 16 There are still plenty of hurdles to clear before the e-learning world can take off. For

one thing, most of the success is with established universities, like UMUC, which can

leverage their brand names to reach out to working adults. The for-profit start-ups, by

contrast, have struggled with accreditation and poor name recognition. Many have fallen

by the wayside, including BigWords.com, an Amazon-like purveyor of textbooks, while

only a handful make money, like UOP Online.

MASS MARKET?

17 Quality is a problem, which is a key reason why many online students drop out. That will

force a further shakeout, eliminating mediocre players. Many colleges grapple with such

issues as how much time their faculty should devote to e-teaching. And long-established

rules make it difficult for online students to get financial aid. Even as these problems are

resolved, “online learning will never be as good as face-to-face instruction,” argues Andy

DiPaolo, director of the Stanford Center for Professional Development, which offers

online graduate classes to engineers. 18 Ultimately, the greatest e-learning market may lie in the developing world, where the

population of college-age students is exploding. Just as cell phones leapfrogged land-based

telephones in many developing countries, so may e-learning help to educate the masses in

countries that lack the colleges to meet demand—and can’t afford to build them.

ROAD WORK

19 Looking way out, as far as mid-century, e-learning could “become the environment in

which the majority of human beings are educated beyond the secondary level,” asserts

University of Melbourne President Alan Gilbert. His school, along with Canada’s McGill

University and more than a dozen other universities, is part of U21 Global, a virtual

university being created through a joint venture with textbook giant Thomson Learning. It

aims to enroll 100,000 students by the decade’s end, mostly in Asia. 20 Meanwhile, e-learning demand in the U.S. is rising, driven by higher education’s

chang-ing demographics. Take Dr. Michael Kaner, a 43-year-old dentist in suburban

Philadelphia who’s halfway through adding a law degree to his credentials. Attending a

night program at an area law school wasn’t practical, he says, since it would have

required 12 hours of com-muting a week. So in 1999, Kaner signed up for Kaplan’s

Concord law program. Although the classes require 25 to 30 hours a week, there’s no

commute and he studies when it suits him. “This is the only way I could pursue a law

degree,” says Kaner, who hopes to build a part-time legal practice in dental issues. 21 Judy Rowe, who dropped out of college in the 1960s after running out of money,

earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from UMUC last year while working as a flight

attendant for American Airlines Inc. “I took my laptop with me and did my assignments

on the road,” says Rowe, who’s now thinking about a second career in psychology.

COST-EFFECTIVE

22 E-learning is a good fit with the military, where frequent transfers complicate pursuing a

degree. The U.S. Army awarded PWC Consulting a $453 million, five-year contract to

cre-ate an electronic university that allows soldiers to be anywhere and study at Kansas

State University or any of the 24 colleges involved in the program. 23 eArmyU already has changed the perspective of soldiers like Sergeant Jeremy

Dellinger, 22, who had been planning to leave the Army to go back to school when his

basic enlistment ends. Then he enrolled in eArmyU to earn his bachelor’s degree from

Troy State University in Alabama. “Now I can get my degree and still do the work I love”

as a supply sergeant, says the Fort Benning (Ga.)-based soldier. Like Dellinger, about

15% of those who have signed up so far have reenlisted or extended their commitment.

By cutting turnover, “eArmyU could almost pay for itself,” says program director Lee

Harvey, since it costs nearly $70,000 to train green recruits. 24 Corporations, too, see e-learning as a cost-effective way to get better-educated employ-ees.

Indeed, corporate spending on e-learning is expected to more than quadruple by 2005, to $18

billion, estimates IDC. At IBM, some 200,000 employees received education or training online last

year, and 75% of the company’s Basic Blue class for new managers is online. The move cut IBM’s

training bill by $350 million last year, because online classes don’t require travel.

25 Even as online higher-ed catches on, however, few private-sector providers are turning a

profit. During the boom years, venture capitalists pumped some $5 billion into e-learning

companies, says Adam Newman, a senior analyst at Eduventures.com. Roughly $1 billion

went to companies that have already flamed out, he says. Beyond Phoenix, probably only half

a dozen companies are making money now. Lack of name recognition is the biggest problem

for companies like Capella, Jones International, and Cardean, UNext’s virtual cam-pus. And

winning accreditation—crucial for attracting students—is tough going, too. It took Capella

five years to make the grade; Jones waited four years. Concord’s grads can sit for the

California Bar Exam, but the American Bar Assn. still hasn’t granted it accreditation.

CAUTIOUS ELITES

26 Phoenix Online aside, the big e-learning winners so far are the traditional nonprofit uni-

versities. They have captured nearly 95% of online enrollments, figures A. Frank

Mayadas, head of e-learning grants at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Most active are

state and com-munity colleges that started with strong brand names, a faculty, and

accreditation, says Mayadas, as well as a tradition of extension programs. 27 By contrast, many elite universities have been far more cautious about diluting the

value of their name. Harvard Business School believes it would be impossible to replicate

its classroom education online. “We will never offer a Harvard MBA online,” vows

professor W. Earl Sasser, chairman of HBS Interactive, which instead develops e-learning

programs for companies. MIT faculty nixed teaching classes online, fearing “it would

detract from the residential experience,” says former faculty chair Steven Lerman. 28 That didn’t stop MIT from embracing the Internet in a different way. Over the next

five years, MIT plans to post lecture notes and reading assignments for most of its 2,000

classes on the Web for free, calling the effort “OpenClassWare.” Lerman says “it’s a

service to the world,” but he says it’s no substitute for actual teaching, so faculty aren’t

worried about a threat to classroom learning. 29 A few other top schools see profit-making opportunities. Since 1996, Duke University’s

Fuqua School of Business has been offering MBAs for working executives. In these blended

programs, some 65% of the work is done online and just 35% in classes held during

required residencies that consume 9 to 11 weeks over two years. Duke charges up to

$90,000 for these programs—vs. $60,000 for its traditional residential MBA. Yet they

have been so popular that by next year, “we’ll have more students in nontraditional

programs than the daytime program,” says Fuqua Dean Douglas T. Breeden. The extra

revenues are helping Fuqua to double its faculty.

The Adult Education Market 30 The adult education market is a significant and growing component of the post-secondary

education market, which is estimated by the U.S. Department of Education to be a more

than $275 billion industry. According to the U.S. Department of Education, over 6

million, or 40% of all students enrolled in higher education programs are over the age of

24. This number is projected to reach 6.7 million in 2011. The market for adult education

in the U.S. is expected to increase as working adults seek additional education and

training to update and improve their skills, to enhance their earnings potential, and to

keep pace with the rap-idly expanding knowledge-based economy. 31 Many working adults are seeking accredited degree programs that provide flexibility to

accommodate the fixed schedules and time commitments associated with their professional and

personal obligations. UOP’s format since its inception has focused on working adult stu-dents by

providing an accredited collegiate education that enables them to attend classes and complete

classwork in a schedule and manner more convenient to the constraints their work life imposes on

their ability to obtain a college or advanced degree. UOP has long felt that most colleges and

universities as well as newer emerging technology-based education and training companies do not

effectively address the unique requirements of working adult students. They often cite the following

attributes of the traditional, not-for-profit education industry:

• Traditional universities and colleges were designed to fulfill the educational needs of

conventional, full-time students aged 18 to 24, who remain the primary focus of these

universities and colleges.

• This focus has resulted in a capital-intensive teaching/learning model in typical state

and private colleges and universities that may be characterized by: • a high percentage of full-time tenured faculty with doctoral degrees; • fully-configured library facilities and related full-time staff;

• dormitories, student unions, and other significant plant assets to support the needs

of younger students; • often major investment in and commitment to comprehensive sports programs; • major administrative overhead for all the various university functions; • politically-based funding;

• major resistance to change in any academic programs, even in the face of rapid

global change across disciplines and professions; • an emphasis on research and the related staff and facilities; and

• faculty with PhDs and a research focus but limited practical experience, even in key

programs like business and other working-related professions.

• The majority of accredited colleges and universities continue to provide the bulk of their

educational programming from September to mid-December and from mid-January to May. As

a result, most full-time faculty members only teach during that limited period of time.

• While this structure serves the needs of the full-time 18- to 24-year-old student, it

limits the educational opportunity for working adults who must delay their education

for up to five months during these spring, summer, and winter breaks.

• Traditional universities and colleges are also limited in their ability to market to or

provide the necessary customer service for working adult students because it requires

the development of additional administrative and enrollment infrastructure.

THE APOLLO GROUP, INC.

32 The Apollo Group, Inc. [AGI] has provided higher education to working adults for over

30 years through its four subsidiaries listed below. They enrolled and served slightly over

275,000 students enrolled in 2005.

• The University of Phoenix [UOP]—the largest private university in the U.S. and

source of the majority of the Apollo Group’s revenue.

• Institute for Professional Development—provides adult-education program develop-

ment and management consulting services to 23 regionally accredited private colleges

and universities.

• The College for Financial Planning Institutes—one of the nation’s leading providers

of financial services education for individuals and corporations in the financial

services industry.

• Western International University—adapts the Apollo model with younger

profession-als that seek individualized instruction through campuses in Arizona, and

more recently China, India and the Netherlands.

33 Revenue during the last five fiscal years for the UOP versus the other three parts of

The Apollo Group have almost tripled with combined revenues up 140% companywide.

They were as follows the last five years [in $millions]:

FY2006 FY2005 FY2004 FY2003 FY2002

Univ. of Phx $ 2,075 $ 2,014 $ 1,697 $ 1,251 $ 931

Other 3 Schs $ 402 $ 235 $ 97 $ 87 $ 78

Corporate $ 1 $ 1 $ 4 $ 1 $ 0.2

$ 2,478 $ 2,251 $ 1,798 $ 1,339 $ 1,009.2

34 The Apollo Group network spanned 101 campuses and 165 learning centers in 39 states and

five other countries in 2007. UOP locations identified on its website were as follows in

mid-2007:

The University of Phoenix Strategy 35 The University of Phoenix [UOP] strategy includes six key elements.

1. Establish New University of Phoenix campuses and Learning Centers. The

Univer-sity of Phoenix [UOP] plans to continue the addition of campuses and learning

centers throughout the United States and Canada. New locations are selected based on

an analy-sis of various factors, including the population of working adults in the area,

the number of local employers and their educational reimbursement policies, and the

availability of similar programs offered by other institutions. Chairman Todd Nelson

offered this com-ment relative to establishing new locations:

Even after 30 years we are still in only 35 states. So we still have 15 states to go, including New

York and Connecticut. And in many states there are multiple markets. So we probably easily have

another 35 to 40 new markets to expand into in the U.S. Over the next ten years our plan is to have

a physical campus not only in every state but also in every major U.S. metropolitan area.

2. International Expansion. The UOP believes that the international market for UOP’s

services is a major growth opportunity. The U.S. is the most common destination for

international students studying abroad. They believe that more working adult students

would opt for a U.S. education that does not involve living in the U.S. because they

could do so without leaving their employment and incurring the high travel and living

costs and stringent visa requirements associated with studying abroad. UOP’s belief is

supported by the fact that University of Phoenix Online has students located in

approxi-mately 75 countries despite having used only limited advertising. In addition,

many U.S. residents live and work in foreign countries and would benefit from the

opportunity to continue their education while abroad. UOP plans to offer the

University of Phoenix edu-cational model at physical campuses in international

markets. The UOP now has a loca-tion in Juarez, Mexico, and expects a Mexico City

campus soon. Its Western University operation has a location in China, India, Dubai,

and the Netherlands from which AGI expects to expand into a UOP presence.

3. Enhance Existing Educational Programs. UOP’s current enrollment by college is

spread across eight core programs:

College of Undergraduate Business 41% College of Graduate Business 18

College of Info Systems & Technology 11

College of Social & Behavioral Sciences 8

College of General & Professional Studies 8

College of Education 7

College of Health Sciences and Nursing 6

School of Advanced Studies 1

100%

President Mueller notes several strengths he believes are underpinnings of these

programs that the UOP works continuously to improve: 3a. Accredited Degree Programs. UOP currently offers 15 degree programs across

these eight core program areas that are accredited by The Higher Learning

Commis-sion or the regional accrediting associations. 3b. Experienced Faculty Resources. While substantially all of UOP’s faculty are work-

ing professionals, UOP requires each member of AGI’s faculty to possess either a

Masters or Doctoral degree and to have five years of recent professional experience

in a field related to the subject they teach. UOP’s classes are designed to be small,

with an average of one instructor for every fifteen students. Faculty members are

also required to be accessible to students by maintaining office hours. The UOP

now claims to have over 17,500 instructors available on a regular basis with

advanced degrees and currently working in relevant professional positions as well

as having completed rigorous instructor training and evaluation programs to ensure

the quality of their instruction content and approach.

3c. Current and Relevant Standardized Programs. UOP uses content experts selected

from AGI’s approximately 17,600 faculty to design UOP’s curriculum. This enables

UOP to offer current and relevant standardized programs to UOP’s students.

3d. Emphasize Input from Employers of UOP Students. The employers of UOP’s

students often provide input to faculty members in designing curriculum, and class

projects are typically based on issues relevant to the companies that employ AGI’s

students. AGI’s classes are taught by a practitioner faculty that emphasizes the

skills desired by employers. In addition, the time flexibility provided by AGI’s

classes further benefits employers since it avoids conflict with their employees’

work schedules. A recent survey by University of Phoenix showed that

approximately 60% of its students receive some level of tuition assistance from

their employers. Two pedagogical innovations described below were developed at

the UOP based on input from several major global companies and employers of

UOP students seek-ing improvements on the realism in business course materials

and greater options for incorporating both online and in-person learning. Pres.

Mueller offered this comment:

We consider the employers that provide tuition assistance to their employees through

tuition reimbursement plans or direct bill arrangements UOP’s secondary customers.

3e. Pedagogical Innovations. FlexNet® is one example of UOP adapting its means of

delivering course material to accommodate different learner needs. FlexNet®

com-bines online and face-to-face instruction allowing any UOP student to choose

among three approaches to receive course instruction and interaction. Virtual

Organizations represent another innovation—six composite businesses, schools,

health care and government organizations that have been developed as learning

tools by subject matter experts and professionals in those fields. These virtual

organizations allow UOP students and their instructors to immerse themselves

inside virtual real-world settings to include Internet and intranet sites to provide a

more realistic form of experiential learning than case studies and simulations while

also fostering critical thinking and resourcefulness as the students engage the

virtual organization learning experience.

3f. Small class-size with quality instructor contact. The UOP has long sought to

over-come the “diploma mill” perception long associated with non-traditional

collegiate education by structuring quality instruction into its daily approach. One

way this has steadily paid off and separated UOP from that perception has been

through having every class remain small. The UOP has recently allowed its

average online course to increase in size from 10 to 12 students. The average on-

ground class has gone from 14 students to 15 students. President Mueller offered

these recent observations on this cornerstone aspect of the UOP strategy:

Yes, we’ve taken the average class size from 10 to 12 online, and 14 to 15 on-ground. That

has actually reduced instructional costs because of our overall size. We will never have

large classes compared to other universities. A classroom environment with

20 students or less, like we offer, is better than a strategy class with 50 students or a

lecture class with 200 students like most public universities offer. At the UOP we

know that a good education means students need access to their faculty, easily.

And he went on to suggest that the acid test for quality of UOP instruction versus

other non-traditional universities or even traditional universities can be measured

by students’ employers willingness to reimburse for taking UOP classes:

This is a free-market economy. If we don’t provide value, the companies that are

reimbursing students [to take UOP courses] are not going to pay. We are not seeing

any deterioration in this area. Rather, we are seeing just the opposite.

3g. Offer a Low Cost Advantage. UOP’s tuition is running about $10,000 annually,

for a full load. It is increasing at an average 4%–5% annually. The average

traditional university tuition is running about $15–$20,000 annually, and

increasing approxi-mately 10% annually. The variance is even more pronounced

for graduate programs, where an MBA, for example, costs slightly over $12,500 at

UOP versus an average $28,000 nationwide.

4. Expand Educational Programs. UOP regularly evaluates and responds to the changing

educational needs of working adults and their employers by introducing new undergradu-

ate and graduate degree programs as well as training programs. To its degree offerings,

University of Phoenix recently added the Master of Business Administration in Health Care

Management and specializations in Marketing and Human Resources Management to its

Master of Business Administration; specializations in Elementary and Secondary

Education and Adult Education and Distance Learning to its Master of Arts in Educa-tion;

and a specialization in Educational Counseling to its Master of Counseling. To its

certificate programs, University of Phoenix has recently added graduate certificates in e-

Business, Technology Management, and Global Management, as well as a certificate in

Operations and Supply Chain Management. UOP believes that expanding its program

offerings will help it improve UOP’s market position as a provider of higher education and

training for working adults.

President Mueller made this observation regarding new courses and degrees UOP may

add soon:

We always have new programs being developed. Criminal justice is a big area of

growth. Engineering is a possibility. And some new nursing programs—for registered

nurses and licensed practical nurses—are a possibility in 2007.

5. Serve a Broader Student Age Group. The UOP has built tremendous success focusing on

the working adult student population in the U.S. Based on recent surveys of incom-ing

students, the average age of University of Phoenix’s students is in the midthirties,

approximately 54% are women and 46% are men. Approximately 67% of University of

Phoenix’s students have been employed on a full-time basis for nine years or more. The

approximate age percentage distribution of incoming UOP students is:

Age Percentage of Students

25 and under 16.5% 26 to 33 38.0% 34 to 45 34.7% 46 and over 10.8%

100.0%

Recently, the UOP has adapted this focus and initiated a conscious effort to direct

more attention to younger students, to include targeting high school students as they

make decisions to consider college. President Mueller offered these comments about

this new emphasis at UOP on the traditional collegiate market of 18- to 22-year-old

students:

If you look at the higher education market, at least half your students are in this [18- to 22-

year-old] age group, and over the next decade, this will be the fastest area of growth. Also,

we’ve had literally tens of thousands of 18- to 22-year-olds who have shown interest. We’re

not going to add dormitories. We’re not after the traditional younger student [who goes off to

live at college]. We’re going after the younger student who is working. And they have

similar needs to [our working adult students], including the flexibility of classes that can

start any time of the day, evening or weekend.

6. Market Aggressively. The Apollo Group spent $545 million in the last fiscal year

marketing its academic programs, mostly the UOP. This is a staggering amount when

you consider that few traditional universities spend even close to $10 million in direct

marketing expenditures. Yet Apollo’s earnings almost doubled since 2003 and revenue

grew by over 90% during the same period. Barmak Nasirian, associate director of the American Association of Collegiate

Regis-trars and Admissions Officers, warns: “This rate of growth may not be

sustainable.” His group represent traditional colleges, many of which are critical of

Apollo and the UOP. President Mueller at the Apollo Group offered this observation:

We had enrollment growth, so you would have expected marketing costs to rise

comparably. Two things are behind the increase. First, the cost of leads are more expensive.

And second, because we were having a good year financially, we felt it was wise to spend

aggressively in the marketing area.

The Apollo Group Looks to the Future 36 The Apollo Group’s reputation was sullied in late 2005 with the release of a U.S.

Education Dept. report depicting a high-pressure sales culture at the UOP that resembled

a telemar-keting boiler room more than a university admissions office. “Phoenix

recruiters soon find out that UOP bases their salaries solely on the number of students

they recruit,” the report charged. That’s prohibited by federal law. One recruiter who

started at $28,000, for instance, was bumped to $85,000 after recruiting 151 students in

six months. But another who started at $28,000 got just a $4,000 raise after signing up 79

students. Websites like www.uopsucks. com have emerged as blog-like forums for former

students and employees unhappy with or distrustful of the UOP’s offerings. 37 Ultimately, such violations could have led the government to bar Phoenix from the

fed-eral student loan program, crippling the university. Former CEO Nelson called the

report “very misleading and full of inaccuracies.’’ But he says he decided to settle rather

than wage a protracted legal fight. The Apollo Group agreed to change its compensation

system and pay a $9.8 million fine without admitting guilt. Still, Apollo’s defenders note

that the point of the law is to prevent for-profits from luring unqualified students. If the

UOP is doing that, it hasn’t showed up in student-loan default rates, which remain a low

6%—below the average for traditional colleges and universities. 38 With the regulators off its back, and with tuition growth surging 30% during the quar-

ter following the release of the report, the UOP once again focused on growth. The online

program, with approximately 150,000 students, was seen as far from saturated. And for

the first time the UOP started targeting high school graduates, who are expected to hit a

record later this decade as a ‘‘baby boomer echo” factor. Similarly, the UOP has barely

begun to scratch the international market, where experts see huge demand for U.S.-style

education. Phoenix opened its first Mexican campus in 2005, and has big hopes for

China, where Apollo’s Western International University now has just 50 students, and

India. 39 But the UOP will have to fill acres of classroom seats to keep up its pace—and it is

paying an ever-increasing cost to do so. The company already has over 270,000 students.

Some 90% of those are enrolled at the University of Phoenix, making it by far the

nation’s largest private university. Given that size, it had to add nearly 57,000 students—

the equivalent of another University of Texas at Austin—in 12 months just to make its

growth target. And that has proven very difficult to accomplish at Apollo since it

experienced successively lower enrollment growth for nine straight quarters through Q1,

2007. Add-ing to these problems has been an SEC investigation of stock option grant

irregularities in late 2006 that have resulted in a restatement of financial statements to be

completed in 2007. 40 “Since early 2007 we have focused on making significant changes in two major areas

of our business: marketing and retention,” said President Mueller. “Much of the work

required to launch our marketing and branding efforts is complete and we are already

seeing evi-dence of its effectiveness.” Mueller added that retention and academic

strategies take longer to implement, but that he’s confident that investments in such

improvements will benefit students and stockholders in the long run.

Acquisition Activity 41 Mueller and the Apollo Group may see other ways to grow student counts. In early 2007

Apollo announced the acquisition of Insight Schools, a company that runs online charter

schools in Washington state, for $15 million. Competitor Kaplan followed several months

later with the acquisition of Sagemont Virtual, a company that runs the University of

Miami Online High School. Apollo’s entry into high schools began in 2005 when it

formed a partnership with Orange Lutheran High School in California. It converted many

of the school’s courses so they could be delivered in an online format, a move that was

embraced by the school’s students and faculty, according to Mueller. “We became

convinced we could provide that service to high school students, and it would have the

same kind of value educa-tionally—if not greater—at the high school level than even at

the higher educational level,” said Mueller. That sounds quite familiar to the start founder

John Sperling engineered over thirty years ago. 42 About 700,000 public pre-collegiate students were enrolled in at least one online or

blended course in 2007. Online high school courses are becoming popular with states

with large rural areas and those seeking to expand both high level offerings as well as

special course offerings. Some analysts think an educational setting with 50 million high

school students might well be attractive as a growth vector when compared to a mature

higher education market, domestically, with about 15 million students. 43 And, when you consider the number of high school aged students worldwide, and the

special delivery needs in needy areas that online options may assist, you have to wonder

if this may be a major new trend. Then, too, if a high schooler gets comfortable with an

online approach, that may well feed directly into an online higher educational choice.

Meanwhile, Barbara Stein, manager of 21st century education at the National Education

Assn., is concerned that students who attend virtual high schools may be loosing out on

the benefits of a traditional high school experience. ‘‘We think those are not a great idea.

Most students do not do that well when they have no face-to-face interactions,” says

Stein. “There may be extreme situations where that is the appropriate recourse, but for

most students it is not.”

APPENDIX A Guide to Online Universities As e-learning has exploded, here is a brief look at the range of providers:

1. University of Maryland University College

The largest state university provider of online classes, it moved online in the mid-90s, building on its long heritage of

offering extension classes. Last year, enrollments in its online classes hit 63,000, up 50% in one year. Students can

now earn 70 different degrees and certificates online. In addition to classes, UMUC provides a comprehensive array

of online student services, from applications to academic advising and financial aid consulting. COST: Same as for UMUC’s traditional classroom classes. That means Maryland residents are

charged just $197 per semester hour for undergrad classes, and $301 per semester for graduate

classes. But out-of-state residents must pay over 50% more.

2. University of Phoenix Online

The nation’s largest for-profit virtual university, offering the same kind of business, education and technical classes

for working adults that have made its bricks-and-mortar counterpart, the University of Phoenix, such a success. In

business, students may earn everything from undergraduate degrees in accounting, management and marketing to

an MBA and even a Doctor of Management in Organizational Leadership. Phoenix Online provides lots of attention

to its students. Classes are kept small, and instructors insist on participation. COST: $400 to $500 per credit; an MBA degree costs about $23,000.

3. eArmyU (The U.S. Army’s Virtual University)

Since January, eArmyU has allowed enlisted soldiers to take classes and earn degrees from 24 different

institutions, ranging from Central Texas College to Utah State. So far, 10,400 soldiers have signed up on the

three Army bases where it’s offered. The plan is to offer it Army-wide. COST: Free to soldiers, who receive a laptop, printer, Internet connection and 100% of tuition. Civilians are

not eligible for eArmy.

4. Western Governors University

Virtual university founded by 19 western states in 1997. A pioneer in “competency-based degrees,” which

require students to demonstrate mastery of a subject, rather than complete a certain number of credit hours.

In practice, this means students are assessed when they enter a program. An individual class of study is then

developed for each student to fill the gaps in their knowledge. The result is that the length of time needed to

complete a degree varies widely, and is dependent on what the student knows. While it may sound radical,

WGU is backed by some two-dozen corporate sponsors, including IBM, AOL and Microsoft. COST: WGU charges about $4,500 for the assessment and mentoring needed for a two-year degree.

Students must pay separately for classes, which are offered by some 40 different institutions.

5. Concord Law School

Launched by Kaplan Inc., a unit of the Washington Post Co, Concord has grown to become the nation’s largest

virtual law school, with 800 students at present. Kaplan argues that the law is ideally suited to online learning,

because it facilitates communication (via e-mail) among students and professors. While the program is not yet

accredited by the American Bar Association, students may sit for the California Bar Exam. COST: $6,000 per year, or $24,000 for four-year law degree.

6. Duke’s Fuqua School of Business

“Blended” MBA programs for working executives, in which 65% of the work is done over the Net, and 35%

in classes that meet for 9 or 11 weeks during 20-month programs. There are two blended programs. The

“Global Executive” program is designed for executives who manage a large international business unit or a

global staff. The average global student has 14 years of professional experience. In contrast, the “Cross

Continent” program is aimed at more junior managers—with an average of six years of experience—who

have already demonstrated success at the department level. COST: Up to $90,000 for “Global Executive” program, versus $60,000 for normal daytime MBA. The extra

costs cover the residential program, which in the case of Global Executive is held in various spots around

the world, including Europe, Asia and the Duke campus.

APPENDIX A Guide to Online Universities—Continued As e-learning has exploded, here is a brief look at the range of providers:

7. Cardean University

The virtual university founded by UNext.com, one of the highest profile e-learning start-ups. UNext partnered with

some of the world’s best known universities—including Stanford, the University of Chicago and Columbia—to

develop its cutting-edge business curriculum. It is now offering classes to employees of General Motors and a

number of other companies, and will shortly begin marketing its business classes to consumers.

COST: About $25,000 for MBA.

8. Jones International University

The virtual university founded in 1993 by cable pioneer Glenn R. Jones, who earlier offered distance classes via cable TV

through his Mind Extension University. Jones offers more than 40 executive and professional education programs. Students

may earn a bachelor’s degree in business, an MBA, as well as various masters’ degrees in education.

COST: 3-credit class runs $925; MBA costs about $12,000.

9. Capella University

A for-profit virtual university that offers some 500 online classes every quarter. Students may choose

from 15 different degree programs, and some 80 different specializations. Most of the 4,000 students

study business, education or information technology.

COST: Classes (which offer 3 to 5 credits) tend to cost from $1150 to $1600. A master’s degree runs

about $20,000, and a PhD about $34,000.

10. Walden University

Originally founded in 1970 to offer graduate degrees, Walden moved online in the mid-1990s. Walden is

41% owned by Sylvan Learning Systems, which has other online education programs as well. Walden

specializes in graduate programs in business, education, psychology, public health and human services.

COST: An MBA runs about $20,000, while a PhD can cost $47,000.

11. The Electronic Campus of the Southern Regional Education Board

A sweeping smorgasbord of online classes organized by the Southern Regional Education Board, an

organization formed to promote education reform in 16 southern states. The electronic campus offers over

5,000 online classes from 325 different schools, ranging from Auburn University to West Virginia University.

COST: Tuition varies widely, since it is set by the college that actually offers a given class. As one example,

a class on American History since 1865 offered by Oklahoma State costs $365.

12. Harvard Extension School

Your best chance to take an online class from Harvard, these classes are offered by Harvard’s extension school.

While the Harvard Extension School currently offers over 500 classes in the traditional classroom setting, only about

three dozen are currently available online. However, the plan is to expand the number of online offerings. Most of the

classes available this year are computer science classes, on topics like website development and algorithms.

COST: Same as for attending a class at the extension school. The cost ranges from $275 for a class on

American Constitutional History taken without credit, to $1,750 for the class on website development.

13. UT TelecampUS

An excellent example of the expanding e-learning programs offered by state university systems, the UT

TelecampUS was launched in 1998 by the University of Texas system. Students may earn an MBA, Masters

in Computer Science, and various other online degrees from a school within the UT system. Students who

wish to earn a degree must first apply and be admitted to one of the universities in the UT system. That

campus will then serve as the student’s “home” campus, and ultimately award the degree.

COST: Texas residents pay about $300 for a 3-credit undergraduate class, and $500 for a 3-credit graduate

class. Non-residents are charged roughly twice as much.

APPENDIX A Guide to Online Universities—Continued As e-learning has exploded, here is a brief look at the range of providers:

14. Stanford Center for Professional Development

One of the most challenging and prestigious online programs. The Stanford Center offers both online degrees and

non-degree classes from Stanford’s School of Engineering and affiliated departments. The center now provides over

250 online credit classes in electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science, etc. These are not watered-down classes. They are taught by the Stanford faculty, and students must be admitted, just

like on-campus students. The online classes are designed strictly for employed engineers and scientists. The

attraction is that they may keep working, while furthering their education.

COST: About $3,000 for a credit class, 40% more than it would cost to take a similar class on campus.

Typically, the companies employing the students pick up the tab.

APPENDIX B Apollo Group Financial Information

August 31,

2006 2005 2004 2003 2002

Restated(1)

Revenues:

Tuition and other, net $ 2,477,533 $ 2,251,114 $ 1,800,047 $ 1,338,982 $ 1,007,936

Costs and expenses:

Instructional costs and services 1,112,660 956,631 781,437 630,556 531,332

Selling and promotional 544,706 485,451 383,800 272,348 198,889

General and administrative 149,928 94,485 84,326 61,314 54,388

Goodwill impairment 20,205 — — — — Share based compensation(2) — 16,895 100,283 — —

Total costs and expenses 1,827,499 1,553,462 1,349,846 964,228 784,609

Income from operations 650,034 697,652 450,201 374,754 223,327

Interest income and other, net 18,054 16,787 16,305 14,238 11,181

Income before income taxes 668,088 714,439 466,506 388,992 234,508

Provision for income taxes 253,255 286,506 186,421 153,109 99,107

Net income $ 414,833 $ 427,933 $ 280,085 $ 235,883 $ 135,401

(1) See Note 3, “Restatement of Consolidated Financial Statements” included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K. (2) Share-based compensation in 2005 and 2004 is related to the 2004 conversion of the UPX Online stock options into Apollo Group Class A stock options. Share-based

compensation expense resulting from the revised measurement dates is included in instructional costs and services, selling and promotional, and general and administrative

expenses.

August 31,

2006 2005 2004 2003 2002

Restated(1)

Total cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and securities, and marketable securities $ 646,995 $ 685,748 $ 993,875 $ 1,045,802 $ 688,656

Total assets $ 1,283,005 $ 1,281,548 $ 1,487,750 $ 1,417,388 $ 1,018,659

Current liabilities $ 595,756 $ 566,745 $ 525,239 $ 384,520 $ 297,632

Long-term liabilities 82,876 80,583 67,546 48,072 44,562 Total shareholders’ equity 604,373 634,220 894,965 984,796 676,465

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 1,283,005 $ 1,281,548 $ 1,487,750 $ 1,417,388 $ 1,018,659 Operating Statistics:

Degreed enrollments at end of year(2) 282,300 271,400 238,400 189,800 144,400

Number of locations at end of year:

Campuses 99 90 82 71 65 Learning centers 163 154 137 121 111

Total number of locations 262 244 219 192 176

(1) See Note 3, “Restatement of Consolidated Financial Statements” included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K. (2) Restated Degreed Enrollments includes only UPX and Axia College and represent individual students enrolled in our degree programs that attended a course during the

quarter and did not graduate as of the end of the quarter (including Axia students enrolled in UPX and WIU). Previously, the Company used a different definition of enroll-

ment. Previously reported enrollment numbers are restated above.

The following table presents the most significant components as percentages of total tuition and other, net

revenue for the years ended August 31, 2006, 2005, and 2004:

Year Ended August 31,

2006 2005 2004

Restated(1) Restated(1)

($ in millions)

Tuition revenue $2,304.3 93.0% $2,114.1 93.9% $1,679,0 93.3%

IPD services revenue 74.4 3.0% 69.5 3.1% 62.6 3.5%

Application and related fees 33.8 1.4% 36.4 1.6% 28.7 1.6%

Online course material revenue 138.7 5.6% 104.5 4.6% 69.1 3.8%

Other revenue 31.7 1.3% 33.8 1.5% 23.0 1.3%

Tuition and other revenue, gross 2,582.9 104.3% 2,358.3 104.7% 1,862.4 103.5%

Less: Discounts (105.4) (4.3)% (107.2) (4.7)% (62.4) (3.5)%

Tuition and other revenue, net

$2,477.5 100.0% $2,251.1 100.0% $1,800.0 100.0%

Information about our tuition and other net revenues by reportable segment on a

percentage basis is as follows:

Year Ended August 31,

2006 2005 2004

UPX 83.7% 89.5% 94.4%

Other Schools 16.2% 10.4% 5.4%

Corporate 0.1% 0.1% 0.2%

Tuition and other, net

100.0% 100.0% 100.0%

Instructional costs and services increased by 16.3% in 2006 versus 2005, and 22.4% in 2005 versus 2004. The

fol-lowing table sets forth the increases in significant components of instructional costs and services:

% of Revenues % Change

Year Ended August 31, Year Ended August 31, 2006 vs. 2005 vs. 2006 2005 2004 2006 2005 2004 2005 2004

Restated (1) Restated (1) Restated (1) ($ in millions)

Employee compensation and related expenses $ 382.3 $343.9 $282.5 15.4% 15.3% 15.7% 11.2% 21.7%

Faculty compensation 212.3 195.1 154.2 8.6% 8.7% 8.6% 8.8% 26.5%

Classroom lease expenses and depreciation 193.4 171.3 145.1 7.8% 7.6% 8.1% 12.9% 18.1%

Other instructional costs and services 158.2 142.0 122.3 6.4% 6.3% 6.8% 11.4% 16.1%

Bad debt expenses 101.6 57.2 31.1 4.1% 2.5% 1.7% 77.6% 83.9%

Financial aid processing costs 52.5 43.3 32.4 2.1% 1.9% 1.8% 21.2% 33.6%

Share based compensation 12.4 3.8 4.0 0.5% 0.2% 0.2% 226.3% (5.0)%

U.S. Department of Education

settlement — — 9.8 N/A N/A 0.5% N/A N/A

Instructional costs and services $1,112.7 $956.6 $781.4 44.9% 42.5% 43.4% 16.3% 22.4%

(1) See Note 3, “Retatement of Consolidated Financial Statements,” included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.

Selling and promotional expenses increased by 12.2% in 2006 versus 2005, and 26.5% in 2005 versus 2004. The

following table sets forth the increases in significant components of selling and promotional expenses:

% of Revenues % Change

Year Ended August 31, Year Ended August 31, 2006 vs. 2005 vs.

2006 2005 2004 2006 2005 2004 2005 2004

Restated (1) Restated (1) Restated (1)

($ in millions)

Enrollment advisors’ compensation

and related expenses $ 254.3 $204.6 $155.6 10.3% 9.1% 8.6% 24.3% 31.5%

Advertising 231.6 224.0 174.6 9.3% 10.0% 9.7% 3.4% 28.3%

Other selling and promotional expenses 56.5 56.2 52.9 2.3% 2.5% 2.9% 0.5% 6.2%

Share based compensation 2.3 0.6 0.7 0.1% 0.0% 0.1% 283.3% (14.3)%

Selling and promotional expenses

$544.7 $485.4 $383.8 22.0% 21.6% 21.3% 12.2% 26.5%

(1) See Note 3, “Retatement of Consolidated Financial Statement,” included in Item 8 of this Form 10-K.

Summary financial information by reportable segment is as follows:

Year Ended August 31,

2006 2005 2004

Restated Restated ($ in thousands)

Tuition and other revenue, net

UPX $ 2,074,443 $2,014,124 $1,699,005

Other Schools 402,051 235,183 96,982

Corporate 1,039 1,807 4,060

Total tuition and other revenue, net 2,477,533 $2,251,114 $1,800,047 Income from operations:

UPX 605,708 $ 636,463 $ 478,639

Other Schools 65,790 70,417 15,665

Corporate/Eliminations (21,464) (9,228) (44,103)

650,034 697,652 450,201

Reconciling items:

Interest income and other, net 18,054 16,787 16,305

Income before income taxes $ 668,088 $ 714,439 $ 466,506