『B2Education Unpacked - The Education Growth Podcast』のカバーアート

B2Education Unpacked - The Education Growth Podcast

B2Education Unpacked - The Education Growth Podcast

著者: Stella James
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

B2Education Unpacked — The Education Growth Podcast

The gap between pitch decks and playgrounds.

Between what gets built, what gets sold, and what happens when it meets children.

Hosted by Stella James — former EdTech founder, commercial leader, and someone who's sat on both sides of the table — each episode unpacks why the gap between selling into education and succeeding in it is wider than most people admit.

Real conversations with the founders building products, the leaders buying them, the implementers dealing with the fallout, and the people asking whether any of it actually works.

If you sell into schools, lead an EdTech business, or work in education procurement — this is the show that doesn't pretend it's simple.

2026 Seventh Sibling
エピソード
  • Episode 1: Aatif Hassan | THE BUILDERS
    2026/05/07

    Aatif Hassan was expelled from school. He has dyslexia and ADHD. He now runs one of the largest private education groups in the UK — Dukes Education — with over twenty UK schools, twenty-five international schools across Europe, and a deliberate refusal to use the word 'SEND'. This conversation is about why.

    Aatif Hassan is founder, Chair and CEO of Dukes Education and founder of Cavendish Education, the fastest-growing group for children with what Aatif calls 'unique learning profiles'. He sits on boards for charities supported by the King and Queen, including the British Asian Trust. Before founding Dukes he worked in the military, in the City, in banking and in private equity — and none of those careers prepared him for the morning he stood outside a derelict former police dog school in Girton holding the keys and burst into tears at the weight of what he'd taken on.

    IN THIS EPISODE

     Why he has never been able to answer the 'is there a number' question on selling Dukes — and what permanent capital allows him to build that fixed-life investors cannot

     The deliberate refusal of the word 'SEND' — why Cavendish uses 'unique learning profiles' and why the language of labels cuts against what the schools are actually trying to do

     The 100% mission at Cavendish — that every child ends up in sustained employment, vocational training or university

     Dyslexia as a superpower — simplicity of thought, and the 'if I can't explain it, nobody else can understand it' principle that shapes how the group is run

     The fifteen-captains-on-the-pitch test — why he believes any of his top team could run the organisation, and how he built toward that

     Why he hired Professor Mark Bailey (former high master of St Paul's), David Goodhue (Latymer) and Libby Nicholas (GDST, MAT CEO) — and what 'positive capitalism' had to demonstrate to win them over

     How Dukes and Cavendish got their names — Cavendish Road, Dukes Meadows in Chiswick, and the letter from the Queen granting permission to use a royal name

     From care homes and vets to education — why the loss of his older son, losing his mother young, and being thrown out of school himself made education the only direction he could go

     The Duke's Diploma and Duke's Plus — an original character-and-virtues curriculum sitting alongside IB and A-level, and the 'cradle to Cambridge' vision for developing the whole child outside the classroom as well as inside it COVID as a near-death moment — paying staff 100% when 80% was the option, the bank negotiations that ran into the small hours, and the 'Hartington School' homeschooling assembly he wrote every night at eight o'clock

     The £114 million Institute of Education investment, Cardiff Sixth Form College (named best in the world by A-level results), and the £100m Cardiff Bay project being built while everyone else is running out of the UK over VAT

     The Portugal expansion — ULIS (United Lisbon International School), British School in Lisbon, Braga and Porto — and how an open-armed welcome broke his 'two-hour rule'

     The world's first ski-in ski-out school in Verbier — European Champions, 250 pupils, 3,000 metres above sea level

     The acquisition that almost broke the company — Cardiff Sixth Form College, taken on at Charities Commission and Welsh Government request with no access to the P&L

    Episode 1 opens THE BUILDERS block of Series One — and the entire series.

    LINKS

    Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and everywhere via Podbean

    Full episode and transcript: https://podcast.co/b2educationunpacked

    EdTech Sales Mastery course: https://seventhsibling.co.uk/self-paced-courses

    Website: https://seventhsibling.co.uk

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