Seattle Startup Koru Takes On Tech Training, Hiring for Recent Grads

Think of Koru, a Seattle startup bridging the worlds of education and high-tech recruitment, as akin to a study-abroad program paired with a high-powered internship for recent graduates looking to burst into tech, but facing a dismal employment picture.

The company landed a $4.35 million investment, which we reported in October when it was going by the name Kairos. It’s now releasing the big names backing it, and its plans for taking on a complex challenge at the place where students step out of the confines of college and into the workforce, facing a job market in which 44 percent of their peers take jobs that don’t require their debt-laden bachelor’s degrees.

Maveron, where co-founder and CEO Kristen Hamilton was most recently entrepreneur-in-residence, led the round with participation from Battery Ventures, First Round Capital, a16z seed, and individual investors.

College seniors and recent graduates apply to Koru for placement in a competitive program comprised of an “employer-embedded experience” and an online education component. “Our campus is the campus of our partner employers,” says Hamilton, pictured above with co-founder Josh Jarrett.

For example, an upcoming program will place students at Seattle e-commerce company Zulily for eight days in early January. In subsequent programs, students may rotate through multiple companies. Working in teams, they will be presented with real challenges put forth by the host employers, learning relevant skills in the process of solving them.

Part of the underemployment problem, Hamilton says, is that students are coming out of college without skills that high-tech employers are demanding. This includes competency with modern tools such as Google Analytics, Omniture, or Salesforce.com, as well as less tangible skills like “personal effectiveness,” teamwork in an office environment, and the ability to hit short, sudden deadlines.

“It’s just not what students are learning in college,” she says.

Through Koru, students are encouraged to “fail fast and cheap,” Hamilton says, which is a big change from the classroom, where they spend a lot of effort trying to avoid failure.

“Success in the workplace is doing things for years, imperfectly, and learning from them,” she says. “We try to shorten that learning curve.”

Koru LogoAt the end of the program, the student teams will present their results to company executives, who are eager to hear the perspectives of Millennials on their businesses, Hamilton says.

Koru aims to accomplish lots of things for both the students and the companies. It also has plans for its relationship with colleges and universities, but Hamilton says it’s too early to talk about them.

At a high level, the idea is to create an immersive experience inside a company, similar to a study-abroad program. As chief operating officer of World Learning, Hamilton visited students who were “completely transformed” by even relatively short stints studying in places like Morocco and Ecuador.

Parents who are willing to invest in study-abroad programs for their children, Hamilton’s thinking goes, should have an easy time investing in an experience designed to be equally transformative, and that offers a career boost.

Koru is still working out its pricing model. The Zulily program will cost students $425. Hamilton points for comparison to programs like the Tuck Business Bridge Program at Dartmouth, which runs four weeks during the summer and costs $10,200, including room and board.

It would be easy to dismiss this as merely an internship program, just another way

Author: Benjamin Romano

Benjamin is the former Editor of Xconomy Seattle. He has covered the intersections of business, technology and the environment in the Pacific Northwest and beyond for more than a decade. At The Seattle Times he was the lead beat reporter covering Microsoft during Bill Gates’ transition from business to philanthropy. He also covered Seattle venture capital and biotech. Most recently, Benjamin followed the technology, finance and policies driving renewable energy development in the Western US for Recharge, a global trade publication. He has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication.