1. Burbio maintains a database of district checkbook registers covering over 20 million PreK-12 students. Information is searchable down to the district level, and clients use the information for competitive intelligence. This week we present a profile of select vendors highlighting the difference in the sizes of their school district customers. For this analysis we went through these steps:
The exercise allows us to look at some example vendors whose customer bases skew larger or smaller in the market. In the chart below with the raw figures we bolded some numbers for emphasis. You will note that Kendall Hunt and Solution Tree have the highest skew towards larger districts, while Wilson Language's customer base skews smaller:
Below is a stacked bar chart showing the same data:
2. One of the capabilities of Burbio's AI-powered Signals Tracker is to identify when new district administrative staff in highly specific positions are appointed to positions. This week we look at the role of Assistant Superintendent, a key decision maker in many client purchasing categories:
The position of Assistant Superintendent can vary in responsibilities, and here are three different positions recently filled:
We often see Principal positions being promoted to Assistant Superintendent roles. Two recent examples:
Signals from Burbio's data, regardless of the question, can be integrated into go-to-market strategies via CRMs.
3. Burbio's database of school board meeting minutes, strategic plans, and state grants include highly specific discussions of English Language Learning programming and funding opportunities. This week we take a look at discussions of ELL, Multi-Language Learner, Bilingual Learner, and related terms in school board meeting minutes. The following chart shows the percentage of districts that mention these terms at least once in the indicated quarter. The data indicates that discussion of the topic has not changed over the last eighteen months:
There is a broad area of service providers in ELL, and discussions cover everything from programming, outsourced staffing and training, to budgetary issues. From our Signals Tracker, we find the following examples: