Campus wants to crack the code to get community college to work for everyone

Community colleges aren’t immune from the current reckoning higher education is facing. Student enrollment is declining while institutions keep raising tuition prices, which can prevent students from finishing their programs. Clearly, it’s time for the industry to try something new.

Tade Oyerinde thinks startups can help. Oyerinde is the founder and CEO at Campus, a venture-backed, fully accredited, online community college. Campus pays its professors more than other institutions while students pay low tuition and receive laptops and mentorship. Oyerinde said this system helps attract great professors while keeping costs to students low — many go for free thanks to grant funding — creating a better environment for both sides to succeed.

Oyerinde said on a recent episode of TechCrunch’s Found podcast that he got the idea for Campus while working on an earlier iteration of the startup, CampusWire, which created online learning software. Oyerinde was meeting directly with professors to sell his software when he learned how little these professors were paid, and how many of them taught at multiple schools to make ends meet. He was surprised to learn that many of them also worked at community colleges. Once he did some research into the current state of community colleges, the next iteration for CampusWire began to click.

“I thought what if we took our software, ran a community college way more efficiently using software, kept our tuition super low so that you could afford to pay your tuition completely with these federal grants and state grants without having to take on a debt,” Oyerinde said. “Knock out the first few years of college learning from these amazing professors from top schools. So that was the idea.”

Campus was born. Oyerinde then talked about what happened next. From finding and acquiring an already accredited community college, deciding which subjects it made sense to focus on first and how to get students on board.

“Originally, it was extremely hard [to get students to enroll], because I think everyone thought we were a scam,” Oyerinde said. “There’s been a lot of bad actors in the for-profit higher education space. I think now that we have graduates, and we’ve had more and more students come through the program, I think it’s a lot easier to acquire students and to get them involved. So that I think just gets easier and easier the more good outcomes we have over time.”

Oyerinde also talked about how he got interested in education in the first place as he’s been building startups in the edtech space since he was in college himself. He talked about how despite coming from a long line of educators both in the U.S. and Nigeria, he still managed to fall into this sector largely on accident.

He also talked about what it has been like to both hire and build a culture around a workforce made up of both operators from tech startups and folks from academia — two wildly different industries.

The company recently raised a $23 million Series A extension round and Oyerinde said Campus is ready to expand its course offerings and footprint.

“I think what I would love to see is over the next five years, anybody in America can come to Campus, and eventually the world, and get that support that they need to build the life that they want,” Oyerinde said.

Latest

Episodes

Eric Ly has a storied career: He started as an engineering intern at IBM, and 20 years later found himself co-starting and serving as the…

Eric Ly from KarmaCheck shares his entrepreneurial lessons after decades in the industry

This week on Equity are some deals that are unusual for a few reasons — some good, some… well, we’ll find out. First up is…

AI talent managers, technocapitalist college towns and a rise in defense tech acquisitions

The release of ChatGPT in November 2022 sparked a new wave of AI companies. It also brought attention to the companies that were already building…

Etched founder Gavin Uberti thinks his company stands on the ‘shoulders of giants’

There was lots going on in startup land, as always, and the Equity crew had a blast breaking it all down. Kirsten Korosec, Mary Ann…

AI for landlords, Grok-2 unleashed and the latest attempt at AI regulation

The one and only Parker Conrad stopped by TechCrunch’s Found this week to talk to us about his company Rippling, as well as the X…

Parker Conrad doesn’t think Rippling has won — yet

AI was prominent in the news cycle this week — yet again. In this Friday’s episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Kirsten Korosec, Mary Ann Azevedo…

Maybe it’s a good thing that we’re not seeing too many AI unicorns

In today’s episode of Equity Podcast, Mary Ann Azevedo talked to Flourish Ventures co-founders Tilman Ehrbeck, Emmalyn Shaw and Arjuna Costa about a variety of…

Flourish Ventures on repeat founders, emerging markets and when not to hop on the AI bandwagon

When Nick Frosst was in college over a decade ago, he was worried he was a little late to the AI game. Frosst, a co-founder…

Nearly a decade before co-founding Cohere, Nick Frosst thought he was late to AI

AI hardware has taken on a new shape with Friend’s $99 necklace — a pendant that gives you an AI friend to talk to and…

AI friends, deepfake foes and which Tiger Global partner is leaving now

Global startup funding was up 16% in the second quarter, according to Crunchbase data, led by an uptick in mega-rounds. That increase was led, unsurprisingly,…

Global startup funding is picking up with AI still in the spotlight

The popularity of refurbishing technology has only increased these past few years and with it, the understanding of how important sustainability is in the industry. …

How Back Market built a marketplace of refurbished tech

Welcome back to another recap of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups. Today’s episode is packed with M&A talk, how one YouTuber…

Stripe’s easy-peasy acquisition and why is Twitch still losing money?

Welcome back to another recap of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups. This episode is packed with some significant fundraises, a potentially…

Alphabet is clearly looking to buy, so who’s selling, and why did Wiz say no?

Maven Ventures general partner Sara Deshpande has been investing in the consumer tech space for a decade. Over time, the seed-stage venture firm has backed…

Cracking the AI and consumer code with early Zoom-backer Maven Ventures

After hearing that a U.S. Navy submarine ran into an underwater mountain, Joe Wolfel was surprised to find out just how little both government and…

Terradepth wants to map the rest of the ocean floor

On today’s episode of Equity, Rebecca Bellan did a deep dive into the CrowdStrike outage that affected around 8.5 million Windows devices around the world,…

CrowdStrike’s fallout, Harris’s stance on tech and Yandex’s rise from the ashes

Welcome back to another recap of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups. This episode is packed with deals, antitrust musings, AI and…

Silicon Valley’s impact on the election and an acquisition making our HeadSpin

Renegade Partners co-founders Renata Quintini and Roseanne Wincek have seen it all in their careers — notably over the past four years when they launched…

If the music stops, which startup gets a chair? Renegade Partners’ co-founders are finding out

On today’s episode of Equity, Rebecca Bellan explored Google’s reported talks to acquire Wiz, a cloud security company, for around $23 billion. Wiz provides an…

Google’s talks to buy Wiz, and the gap between AI spending and AI revenue

Welcome back to another recap of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups. This episode is packed with deals, antitrust musings, AI and…

There’s always something happening to OpenAI’s board

Mike Maples Jr. is a prolific angel investor and co-founder of early-stage venture firm Floodgate. Over the years, he’s taken a lot of bets. Some…

Floodgate’s Mike Maples explains how startups that most people ‘don’t like’ are the best ones to back

Since AI started its historic rise in prominence in 2022, the conversations around how the industry could be regulated have swelled at a similar rate.…

Why the AI industry should want regulation now, not what could come later

On today’s episode of Equity, we’re taking a look at news you might’ve missed over the holiday weekend here in the U.S., starting with the…

A new trend for seed VCs and the scariest part about OpenAI’s data breach

What’s the common thread between Tesla, building startups, General Motors venture capital and Lyft?  Jon McNeill, co-founder and partner of DVx Ventures, joins TechCrunch editor…

Jon McNeill on VC 2.0 and creating startups in house

Welcome back to another recap of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups. This episode is jam-packed with deals, hot topics and the…

AI-powered drug development, VW teams up with Rivian and DEI is ‘bad’

When Paul Hedrick left his private equity career to launch Tecovas in 2015, he knew he wanted to sell the brand’s signature cowboy boots a…

Why Tecovas sought out physical sales first despite its DTC dreams

Apple has been named the first of tech’s so-called “gatekeepers” to be charged for violating the EU’s Digital Markets Act. In a press release this…

The EU’s DMA is coming for Apple, and X bots are on the loose

Get ready for a jam-packed episode of Equity, TechCrunch’s flagship podcast about the business of startups! This week, co-hosts Mary Ann Azevedo and Haje Kamps…

Ilya Sutskever’s new AI venture, and time to BeReal about bankruptcy

In this week’s episode of Equity, Haje Kamps and Mary Ann Azevedo delve into the recent decision by fintech company Brex to abandon its co-CEO…

Do co-CEOs make sense?

Steve Case is no stranger to how policy can help aid innovation. His former company AOL would have been dead in the water if not…

Steve Case on why policy is crucial to make sure AI success isn’t concentrated to a few players