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Wall Street English to further expand, targets 20 Thai branches in five years


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Wall Street English to further expand, targets 20 Thai branches in five years

By THE NATION

 

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Jim McGowan, second from right, managing director of Wall Street English International; Wall Street English Thailand's Chairman Matthew Kichodhan, second from left, and CEO Olarn Phirintharangkoon, left, at the press conference yesterday.

 

WAVE Entertainment Plc, the licensed operator of Wall Street English (WSE), Thailand’s largest premier provider of English language instruction, is celebrating its 15th anniversary in the Kingdom with an ambitious five-year expansion scheme targeting 20 branches nationwide and a jump in revenue from Bt700 million to Bt2 billion within five years.
 

The company yesterday signed a contract with Wall Street English International for the right to open Wall Street English’s branches in Laos and Cambodia this year. It plans to open four to five schools in the two neighbouring states to cash in on huge domestic demands.

 

Wall Street English remains Thailand’s biggest provider of English language training courses for students and adults with a 35 per cent market share. In Thailand, Wall Street English has produced around 190,000 graduates over the past 15 years. 

 

Wall Street English Thailand operates 13 branches located mostly in shopping malls in Bangkok, Chiang Mai and Rayong, including two new ones in Maya Chiang Mai and Bangkok’s Central Plaza Rama II, which is slated for opening this month.

 

Jim McGowan, managing director of Wall Street English International, says that Wall Street English is the world’s leading English training school steeped in history. Wall Street English has been providing language training for adults in 28 countries worldwide since its inception in Milan, Italy 45 years ago. Ever since, it has graduated around three million students. 

 

“Wall Street English is No 1 on the market thanks to its global Multimethod learning technique that has received certification by the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom and the internationally recognised CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference). Globally Thailand represents the second biggest market for Wall Street English after China,” said McGowan.

 

Wall Street English Thailand’s domestic expansion has in recent years been inflated by substantial student growth, helped by high enrollment rates and global brand recognition. Aggressive expansion is in the pipeline, according to Wall Street English Thailand’s Chairman Matthew Kichodhan. 

 

Wall Street English plans to open new branches in the next five years, hoping to take the total to 20 with a projected revenue rise of nearly 300 per cent to BT2 billion from Bt700 million within five years. 

 

Kichodhan bases his optimism on favorable assessments of Thailand’s growth outlook: rising demand for English language training, freer movement of trade and labour in the Asean Economic Community (AEC), and the current boom in tourism and hospitality. 

 

“With the rise of the AEC, it’s all the more important that we need to communicate in English. Otherwise, our jobs in hospitality for example might soon be taken over by those from other countries like the Philippines and Myanmar. Without English, we cannot compete in the AEC. Let’s not forget: English proficiency in Thailand is among the lowest in the AEC,” he added.

 

Olarn Phirintharangkoon, CEO of Wall Street English Thailand, concurs, saying “Wall Street English is not just a school, but ‘an English learning and lifestyle centre. Studying at Wall Street English carries great prestige. It feels exclusive to be a part of Wall Street English. That’s why it appeals to the younger generation. This is Thailand’s No1 - the most premium provider of English language instruction. The new-look classrooms at Central Plaza Rama II will attract even more people to come to study here because we’ve got digital learning tools and teachers who are all native English speakers.”

 

 In keeping with the country’s Thailand 4.0 development plan, WSE promotes innovation by introducing digital learning tools , such as digital classrooms. The provision of social clubs in which English is the sole medium of communication is part of WSE’s innovative learning environment, too.

 

“What Gen Y learners want is speed and convenience. In recent years, Wall Street English's learning development has been aligned with Digital Age 4.0 as evident in our digital classrooms and online lessons that are conveniently accessible at all times, as well as the necessary updates via the WSE Mobile App,” Olarn added. 

 

The target groups of Wall Street English Thailand are divided into three age groups of 17-22, 23-29 and 30 plus, including “new millennials” who consider English as a tool to enhance their independent overseas travels. 

 

The second group is made up of salaried employees of companies from the banking, export, logistics, & hospitality sectors as well as other businesses who need to improve their English proficiency as part of the process for climbing the corporate ladder. Forming the last group are first jobbers, experienced professionals and business owners who are looking to improve their English language skills.

 

 “With such premium learning modules, who wouldn’t want to join Wall Street English. I’d say not learning English at Wall Street English is a mistake, because the best you can find is Wall Street English” he says, adding Wall Street English has called upon Chanon “Non” Santinatornkul, a teen heart-throb, as Wall Street English’s new brand ambassador. 

 

He will represent the new generation and their determination to learn and develop themselves relentlessly in order to achieve their goals in life. 

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Corporate/30340255

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-03-06
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48 minutes ago, CelticBhoy said:

Are there any teachers left for Wall Street in Thailand?

The ones I know who taught there give it a bad rap  . . .  :sad:

The concept of Wall Street is quite good in that students are encouraged to speak everyday conversational English during the social classes. I was teaching a tourism subject at the university when I noticed two girls had books from Wall Street. I asked them why on earth they wanted to pay a fortune when then could practice English as much as they wanted to at the university. They replied that they felt uneasy speaking English at the university and none of the other students would. 

 

The young good looking teachers are only there to attract young females. I spoke to one last year and asked him a lot of questions about grammar and he could only answer a few of them correctly. 

 

 

Edited by petedk
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6 hours ago, Samui Bodoh said:

This seems more like an advertisement than a news story. For example, what reporter wrote "...Thailand’s largest premier provider of English language instruction.."?

 

If the Nation is going to publish paid nonsense from PR hacks like this, it should be labeled as an ad.

 

To do otherwise is dishonest and misleading.

 

Agreed. Smells like some kind of contra deal.

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7 hours ago, petedk said:

The concept of Wall Street is quite good in that students are encouraged to speak everyday conversational English during the social classes. I was teaching a tourism subject at the university when I noticed two girls had books from Wall Street. I asked them why on earth they wanted to pay a fortune when then could practice English as much as they wanted to at the university. They replied that they felt uneasy speaking English at the university and none of the other students would. 

 

The young good looking teachers are only there to attract young females. I spoke to one last year and asked him a lot of questions about grammar and he could only answer a few of them correctly. 

 

 

A lot of people use grammatically correct english simply because that's what they learned at home.

I don't see the need or use in teaching grammar rules to someone who is just starting to learn english.

Understanding the correct use of past, present and future is enough to start with.

When the student can hold a conversation easily, or should I say easily hold a conversation?, that's the time to start the boring grammar lessons.

Shades of Star Trek there, boldly go or go boldly. ??

What thinkest thou?

Edited by overherebc
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