What Your Edtech Product Needs to Get a Gold Star From EducatorsDon't make the "build it and they will come" mistake with teachers. Without a proven product that fulfills a need of theirs or their students, any attempts to sell to teachers will tank.

ByJodie Pozo-Olano

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Hero Images | Getty Images

For education technology entrepreneurs, things are looking up. On the heels of a four-year low in 2016, edtech investments are on a marked upswing, on pace to reach$1.4 billionby 2017's end by PitchBook's account.

Still, edtech investments are likely to fall short of the $1.5 billion high-water mark of 2015. Especially with the U.S. federal education budgetlikely to face cutsfor 2018, entrepreneurs and investors alike are eyeing edtech with cautious optimism.

Related:5 Challenges Facing Education-Tech Startups

To be sure, 2017 has been a good year for edtech startups in certain niches. Introductory coding tool littleBits, for example, debuted a new kit this year torave reviewsand becamethe starof the year's National Principal's Conference.

Some adaptive learning startups, such as Nearpod, had a good year as well. Nearpod announced$21 millionin funding back in March, according to TechCrunch, which enabled it to debutmore than 300 digital lessonsin a partnership with Education.com.

Investors also signaled interest in gamification platforms such as Classcraft, which turns attending school into a role-playing game over the course of a schoolyear. In September, PE Hub reported that Classcraft closed an impressive early-stage investment of$2.8 millionto scale its tool.

这些edtech成功故事有什么部件n? They make learning fun for kids and easy for educators, and they've been rigorously tested both in and out of the classroom. While that might sound simple, educators have understandably high expectations for products that purport to improve student learning.

Becoming the teacher's pet.

Administrative and support staff, who are often the ones ordering products for districts, often default to teachers' judgment when making classroom purchases. For entrepreneurs hoping to tap into the education market, teachers are the right people to reach.

那么,确切地说,是老师找的edtech product? Typically, they want to see that it:

1. Solves actual problems.

Any product designed primarily to "wow" users won't work in education. Teachers and classrooms are stretched thin as it is, and a tool won't make its way into schools unless it's necessary. Unfortunately, many of the tools available at the moment simply aren't cutting it. Just59 percentof teachers think the tech they use is meeting student needs, according to research from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The problem, more often than not, is that edtech companies assume they know what teachers and students need. When an edtech company decides to create a gamified math program, it's because it believes that's the only way to make math fun. But for every app that tries to gamify a subject, there are already thousands of teachers making it fun without a fancy new product.

For the real story, talk to teachers about the challenges they experience every day. ClassDojo, for one, has succeeded because itsco-founder Sam Chaudhary committedto listening to teachers, parents and students throughout the development process.

As a result, ClassDojo solves a real teacher need: communicating student progress to parents outside of the parent-teacher conference. It's the type of problem that you wouldn't think about unless you're a teacher -- or talked to one. Now ClassDojo is used in90 percentof U.S. K-8 school districts, as reported by the San Francisco Business Times.

Related:4 Startups Revolutionizing the EdTech World

2. Is tested and proven.

在早期的edtech,公关oducts into the hands of teachers was enough. Teachers would pilot the tool, and if their classes liked it, they'd ask administrators whether they could purchase it. These days, competition is much fiercer. So many products have hit the market that teachers don't know which are wise investments.

Fortunately, edtech accelerators serve not only to help entrepreneurs develop their products, but also as trusted testing grounds. In 2015, the University of Virginia's Curry School of Education created its Jefferson Education Accelerator togive promising edtech startups a jump-start. So far, none of the companies the accelerator has worked with have failed.

Accelerators help entrepreneurs validate products, of course, but the trials don't end there.LEAP Innovations, for instance, works to match Chicago-area schools and edtech investment experts. Not only does this help teachers find the right technology, but it also helps edtech companies find the perfect audience for their products.

3. Has a plan for implementation and adoption.

Over the past 20 years, we've seen great steps forward to modernize schools and classrooms. Today, nearly all schools are online, and 88 percent of classrooms have robust broadband internet, according to Education Superhighway's2017 State of the States report.

That broadband access is due, in part, to E-Rate, a program I was lucky enough to help create and launch in the late 1990s. But while broadband access is a real accomplishment for rural schools, in particular, not every teacher at newly connected schools instantly embraced online learning tools. Participating in the program reminded me that a tool alone can't change how a teacher approaches her day.

Simply creating a new product isn't enough; edtech companies need to consistently support teachers as they adopt and implement that product in their classrooms. For example, there have been several programs to get iPads into schools. Although it seems like they'd be a big hit, taps and apps are a big shift from paper and pencils.

Related:How Edtech Startups Are Using Technology To Up Their Game

One company that bridged that gap wasSchoology. The company's learning management system facilitated a one-to-one iPad implementation program for a school district in Pennsylvania. With Schoology's program, teachers could provide customized instruction for their students, making use of the tech they'd been provided.

Don't make the "build it and they will come" mistake with teachers. Without a proven product that fulfills a need of theirs or their students, anyattempts to sell to teacherswill tank. Teachers know what they do and don't need in the classroom, and no amount of venture investment will change that.

Wavy Line
Jodie Pozo-Olano

Principal strategist at MDR

Jodie Pozo-Olano is the principal strategist atMDR. MDR, a division of Dun & Bradstreet, provides education marketing data, services, sales tools and digital marketing solutions to the education industry and Fortune 500 brands.

Editor's Pick

Lock
A Majority of Workers Despise Annoying Corporate Buzzwords.So Why Do We Keep Using Them?
The Real Reason You Procrastinate andExpert Strategies to Overcoming It
Lock
Queen Latifah Says Female Leaders Must DoThese Four Things If They Want to Succeed
Lock
Want to Make Money as a Freelancer?Avoid This Mistake That Can Cost You Clients.

Related Topics

Marketing

3 Powerful PR Tools Small Businesses Can Use to Soar to New Heights

Discover the key tactics and best practices for leveraging social media, content marketing and paid media in your PR endeavors to catapult your small business to new levels of success.

Living

Save More Than $80 Off These Bamboo Sheets During Our Version of Prime Day

Can't wait for Prime Day? Get this 6-piece set of bamboo sheets for just $27.97.

Business News

Taylor Swift, FTX Had a Massive Fallout Before Its Collapse, According to a New Report

The singer narrowly escaped what could have been the loss of millions of dollars.

Real Estate

How to Start Investing in Real Estate With as Little as $5,000

Getting started with real estate investment might be easier than you think.

Business Ideas

55 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2023

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2023.