ApplyBoard | |
Type: | Private |
Foundation: | Waterloo, Ontario, Canada (2015) |
Location City: | Kitchener, Ontario, Canada[1] |
Area Served: | Worldwide |
Founders: | Martin Basiri Meti Basiri Massi Basiri[2] |
Key People: | Martin Basiri (co-founder and Chairman) Meti Basiri (co-founder and CEO) Massi Basiri (co-founder and President) |
Industry: | Software |
Num Employees: | 1,000 (June 2021)[3] |
ApplyBoard is a Canadian educational technology company founded in 2015 in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.[2] It offers an "artificial intelligence-enabled recruitment platform" that helps international students apply for post-secondary studies abroad.[4]
ApplyBoard was founded by three brothers Martin Basiri, Massi Basiri and Meti Basiri. Martin was originally from Iran.[2] In 2018, the company maintained partnerships with 750 high schools, colleges and universities in Canada and the U.S. In 2019, the company had 170 employees and partnerships with 1,200 secondary and post-secondary institutions in North America; the company also moved its headquarters to its current location in Kitchener, Ontario.[5]
In 2020, the company had 500 employees and expanded its partnership with secondary and post-secondary institutions in United Kingdom. In February 2020, Jo Johnson, the former Minister of State for Universities, Science, Research and Innovation of the United Kingdom, joined the company as the chairman of the Advisory Board.[6] In October 2020, the company announced a partnership with Times Higher Education.[7]
In June 2021, ApplyBoard secured $300 million in its Series D funding round, elevating its valuation to $3.2 billion.[8]
In November 2022, the company laid off 6% of its global workforce.[9]
ApplyBoard is centred around its application platform that has a listing of more than 1,500 colleges, universities, and K-12 schools in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. Schools have a listing of their institutional details, programs, and application information. International students and recruitment partners, often called agents, then apply directly through the ApplyBoard platform to these programs.[10]
In October 2019, ApplyBoard launched a secondary technology platform called ApplyProof that supports peer-to-peer verification of Letters of Acceptance (LoA) from a university. The aim being to establish trust in the documents being shared with immigration and visa officials.[11]
The offerings from ApplyProof were expanded in May 2021 to include verification of English language proficiency tests through separate partnerships with IELTS and Pearson Education who administer TOEFL and PTE scores, respectively.[12]
Described as "international-student recruiting on steroids", ApplyBoard has been criticized for the consequences of not adequately supervising agents under Canadian legislation, specifically when agents sell "empty promises" (incomplete or inaccurate guidance) or biased information to applicants.[13] Co-founder Meti Basiri insisted in 2022 that the company’s standards are sufficient to meet the regulations and that ApplyBoard is now fielding fewer complaints thanks to its efforts to weed out bad actors.[14]