是的,我辞职了。
三年零10天,我在Idapted完成了自己青春时候最重要的蜕变。
友情,激情,爱情..
拧巴,混乱,劳累..
从此,我要开始一段新的旅程。
再见,Idapted。
是的,我辞职了。
三年零10天,我在Idapted完成了自己青春时候最重要的蜕变。
友情,激情,爱情..
拧巴,混乱,劳累..
从此,我要开始一段新的旅程。
再见,Idapted。
记得两年前收到Idapted Offer的时候,自己还是有些不踏实,因为不管是技术还是英语,大概自己都不够自信,那时候JP跟我讲了一句话,让我受益良多,那就是: what’s more important are focus and efforts. 就这样,一句很简单的话鼓励着我一直在Idapted的舞台上面尽情施展。
在进入Idapted之前,我几乎要放弃继续做技术,似乎总觉得自己在市场和策划方面应该有天赋,或者做销售应该也会是一个不错的选择。后来,有朋友做生意或者开公司让帮忙做点分析或者市场方面的东西,才发现其实并不是想象般的简单。直到今天,我一直投入在Ruby on Rails的开发一线,倒也不亦乐乎。渐渐的爱上了这种敏捷的开发方式,技术本身的提升也让我更加游刃有余于手头的各种工作。
再说英语,一开始相当没有底气,开会时候话也比较少,但是每天被Boss和同事锻炼,理所当然的就在听说读写方面都有长足的进步,现在在英语方面投入的比较少,每天除了大量的mail要处理以外,也会经常看看外国的技术性文章或者文档。英语方面还算比较有Focus,即使在日企的时代,也每天都会阅读英语新闻和收听CRI。
今天突然想到FOCUS这个词,觉得这些年茫然的时候往往就是缺少focus,而开心和充实的时候,往往就是因为正在专注于某些事情。所以,专注应该是一件快乐的事情,所谓专注,大概就是再耐心一些,再努力一些。
亲爱的大家伙:
今天基于大多数吃货的强烈要求,我们决定成立腐败联盟,简称FBA(Fu Bai Association of Idapted)。联盟的目标是本着交通方便,物美价廉的原则,组织大家尝遍北京美食。
联盟将定期组织聚会,首先以公司附近的美食餐馆为目标,以后逐渐扩大到全北京市。目前的目标包括,巫山烤鱼,京港百汇海鲜。欢迎大家推荐好的餐馆。联盟的好处1.共享,发现美食:任何人都可以推荐自己最喜欢的餐馆。推荐获得大家认可会有相应奖励。
2.相对便宜:人多价格相对便宜,同时可以享受更多种类的美食。
3.方便快捷:可以一起拼车出发,免去寻找的麻烦;会有指定人提前排队等候,可以节省时间。
4.加强交流:通过共同享受美食熟悉同事,朋友。
5.留下美好回忆:我们每次合影留念,记下美好的瞬间。
6.更好地熟悉北京:很多北京美食里都包含北京文化在里面。
7.其他 …联盟会暂时每人收30元作为储备经费。而每次活动预计金额会控制在50-60元左右,多退少补在储备经费里。
联盟秘书——超级谨慎的andy同学会负责保存活动经费,并在每次活动后汇报经费余额。呱唧呱唧…基于煮蛋协会经营不善,业已关闭,我决定将剩余30元左右煮蛋基金,打入FBA作为初始基金。同时感谢兄弟联盟篮球协会和台球协会的大力支持:各捐赠三十元作为互助基金。
联盟目前加入成员包括:denny, seven, guolei, andy, buzz, sonic, sherry, angela, scott, gary。 热烈欢迎大家加入。想加入请在后面跟贴说明即可:)
联盟首次活动定在下周(或大下周),地点为交大的 江边城外巫山烤全鱼。图片见附件。我可以很负责任的说,这是我目前吃过的最好吃的烤鱼,太好吃了。强烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈烈推荐!!! 由于很难定位子,我们需要sherry同学帮忙提前定位子。呱唧呱唧…
如果有任何不清楚,请告诉我。欢迎大家提出宝贵意见。
—— BY GARY ZHANG IN THIS AFTERNOON
引子:介绍EQEnglish产品的文章出现在环球时报上面,为之骄傲!原文如下:
From Global Times By Michele Scrimenti and Cong Mu
Zhang Ying had studied English for years and even lived abroad, but she just couldn’t get a seven on the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) used by universities and companies around the world to measure English proficiency. Zhang had managed to score 6.5 twice, which meant her English was pretty good, but not good enough to nail down a job as a nurse overseas. A salary increase and a new life in another country were just half a point away.
Millions of Chinese around the country cram into large classrooms and pay high fees for one-on-one lessons at major well-known schools like New Oriental and English First, but Zhang opted for EQEnglish.com, a Beijing-based IT start-up that plans to revolutionize language-learning through the Internet the way Amazon overturned the book industry.

EQEnglish, founded in Zhongguancun, China’s Silicon Valley, in 2005 by Jonathan Palley and Adrian Li, solves a basic supply and demand problem.
According to Reuters, the number of Chinese students enrolled at English teaching industry-leader New Oriental exceeded 1.5 million as of May 31. And that’s just one company. The People’s Daily reported in 2006 that as many 300 million Chinese people are learning English. While that might be an inflated figure that included cab drivers and street vendors who were learning basic phrases in the build-up to the Olympics, the number of people taking the IELTS, which EQEnglish is currently focused on, is expected to exceed 300,000 in 2009, up 15 percent from 260,000 in 2008.
But the number of native English speakers teaching in China cannot begin to sate this demand, leading to exorbitant tuition fees, with a one hour one-on-one session ranging from 150 ($22) to 600 yuan ($88).
While companies like English First and New Oriental pay foreign teachers’ plane fares to meet demand, EQEnglish gets around this problem by hooking up Chinese students with teachers in America over their own Skype-like interface designed specifically for teaching English. Students can connect with teachers anywhere they can get an Internet or phone signal.
The lack of overhead costs for classroom space and the cheaper costs of American labor (part-time teachers in the US get paid one-fourth of their counterparts in China), EQEnglish is able to cut fees down to about 60 yuan ($8.80) per lesson, giving the company a major competitive edge over traditional brick-and-mortar schools.
Unlike most firms, EQEnglish has actually benefited from the financial crisis. With massive layoffs plaguing the US, more people are trying to find part-time jobs from home. According to Palley, EQEnglish’s co-founder, they are tapping into a growing pool of over 40 million Americans looking to work from home.
And they seem to be having no problem getting enough teachers. Of the thousands of people who fill out their 40-minute online application, EQEnglish only accepts 1.7 percent. But instead of having human resources staff pour over thousands of applications, the firm can pick out the best of the bunch with its custom-designed technology that vets the applications automatically.
“And we can do this at scale,” Palley said. “That’s why we can do it at low cost.”
Using technology is not constrained simply to the hiring process. It runs through the entire company.
EQEnglish employs only around 30 people in Beijing and yet is able to coordinate hundreds of teachers in the US and give thousands of lessons across China. How?
“That’s where technology comes in,” Palley said. “It’s all custom-built.”
EQEnglish has developed its own advanced technology to take care of almost everything the company does, including monitoring thousands of lessons to maintain quality control.
Palley says the start-up is part of an emerging industry, “technology-powered services,” which is part of the idea of Web 2.0: using data to make the service better. Google tracks every search and uses the data gathered to improve the quality of its search engine, and EQEnglish records every lesson and follows variables like the amount of material covered to evaluate teachers and lesson plans.
While online competitors have sprung up across the globe, including Wall Street English and New Oriental in China, EQEnglish is the only one that extensively develops its own technology.
“Everyone else just puts what they have in real life online,” Palley said. “We are the only one that took a step back and said, ‘Let’s completely rethink the language-learning experience for the online medium.’”
Currently, the company focuses exclusively on the IELTS exam so that they would have a way to measure how effective their classes are. The company partnered up with the British Council, the maker of the test, to help students improve their scores.
So far results have been promising. In January the company will launch a money-back guarantee of a 0.5-point increase, a significant jump, after just 30 lessons.
A problem for any budding IT company is funding, but EQEnglish has been able to get enough money to keep developing, sometimes from surprising sources.
In 2006, Palley was discussing his business model with Bill Trenchard, CEO of LiveOps, a telemarketing giant that also utilizes the same workforce of part-time American workers that EQEnglish now relies on. Trenchard was so sold on the idea that he became an angel investor in the company.
An angel investor gives capital to a start-up normally in return for debt or partial ownership.
Another angel came from New Oriental, one of its competitors. Xu Xiaoping, cofounder of the English teaching giant, has invested in the firm and is convinced that this “innovative and revolutionary” model will work, according to the foreword of an IELTS test prep book EQEnglish is releasing next month. Xu is also planning on going around the country to promote the company at universities, according to Palley.
More recently, venture capital firms have invested in the firm. Gobi Partners, a Chinese VC firm, and Ambient Sound Investment, founded by one of the four lead engineers at Skype, have put an undisclosed amount of money into the firm over the last three years.
One major challenge still remains for the company: marketing. EQEnglish has yet to fully throw itself into the market, where they will have to face experienced and well-recognized foreign and domestic competitors.
“You’ve got New Oriental on one hand, and English First and Wall Street on the other,” John Holsapple, founder of an English-teaching company in Beijing, “New Oriental’s got the money and connections, while EF and Wall Street have the great branding because they’re foreign companies, which is obviously a plus for English teaching. It’s a very hard market to break into.”
Despite the clear difficulties ahead, Palley is confident EQEnglish will succeed.
“We have a product that can teach you faster and more effectively than anything else in the world,” Palley said. “Once people realize that, they’ll use our service.”
As EQEnglish begins its first major marketing push next month, perhaps the most effective means of passing along the message are satisfied students like Zhang, the nurse.
Zhang, who is planning to work in America, said, “After a lot of hard work, I got the seven I needed to go abroad. I don’t think that would have been possible so fast without EQEnglish.”
Photo: CFP
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