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MyRichUncle's Under-the-Radar Buy

March 12, 2007

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The e-mail message last month from the president of Embark, a company whose software colleges use to process online applications from students, promised big changes for its customers. The company's management team, said Adam Park, had, "with the help of outside funding," bought Embark from the Princeton Review, its owner since 2001. "The infusion of fresh capital," Park wrote, "will allow us to dramatically improve the products you are using, improve all of our services (including our accounting services), and provide the most stable and user friendly website in the business."

What Park's e-mail did not mention is that Embark Corp., the new entity that owns the enrollment software service, is a "wholly owned subsidiary" of MRU Holdings, Inc., the parent company of MyRichUncle, an upstart student loan company that has made its name by marketing directly to students and not-so-subtly questioning the ethics of college financial aid directors. Although the sale of Embark to MRU was quietly reported in a filing that the Princeton Review made to the Securities and Exchange Commission last month, it largely escaped the attention of even Embark's customers until one of the company's competitors drew attention to it in an e-mail last week.

The sale of Embark to a company that is viewed with suspicion (and often intense dislike) by campus officials -- and the fact that Embark officials seemingly sought to hide that fact -- has made some of its college partners extremely angry . And it adds a new twist to the increasingly tangled web of relationships among lenders, college admissions companies, and colleges, a subject that grew white-hot last week amid a controversy involving a new partnership between the Princeton Review and MyRichUncle.

"The whole concept of student lending is one that is being very carefully reviewed, or perhaps carelessly reviewed, by Congress and others," said Jeff Zellers, vice president of enrollment at Muskingum College, which uses Embark. At a time of intense scrutiny of entanglements involving lenders and college officials, he said, "all this does is muddy those waters tremendously."

The Sale of Embark

Embark is one of several companies (others include Hobsons and Apply Yourself) whose software colleges use to accept online applications from students. In 2001, the Princeton Review, the test preparation and college guide company, bought Embark, which had been freestanding, but analysts and others say the company has seemed to stall out in recent years under Princeton Review's control. (Embark officials did not respond to telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment.) The market for these companies has been altered somewhat in recent years by the growth of the Common Application online, which attracted its one-millionth user last week.

Princeton Review decided to sell Embark to “keep us more focused on test preparation and K-12 services,” said Harriet Brand, a spokeswoman. So last month, Princeton Review revealed in the 8-K filing with the SEC, the company sold the online application company to Embark Corp., a “wholly owned subsidiary” of MRU Holdings, for $7 million. “We sold to MyRichUncle,” said Robert Franek, vice president for publishing at Princeton Review.

That may be news to many of Embark’s scores of college customers, which include dozens of graduate schools and undergraduate colleges alike. They got word of the sale of Embark in a February 21 e-mail message from Park, in which he trumpeted the fact that the sale would allow the company to invest $2 million in new and improved services. But nowhere did it – or a brief discussion of the sale on the company’s Web site -- mention MyRichUncle or MRU Holdings.

Last week, though, as financial aid directors blasted the Princeton Review for implying that their institutions had a relationship with MyRichUncle (details on that below), at least some Embark customers received an e-mail from an official at Hobsons, another student recruitment firm, saying that they “may be aware that Embark -- the company best known for providing online applications to higher education institutions -- was acquired in February by MRU Holdings, Inc., parent company of student loan corporation MyRichUncle.”

In an e-mail response to a reporter's questions late Sunday evening, Park wrote: "To clarify your understanding of Embark and MRU, we are not an operating subsidiary of MRU Holdings, rather we are a separate company that is run independently of its financial investors, and as such, we are not part of MyRichUncle."
 
Asked why his February e-mail to Embark clients did not mention MRU or MyRichUncle, Park said: "[W]e did not mention MRU simply because it is not relevant. When we raised capital before, we did not publicize the names of our investors; it did not not seem to be of significance to our clients, and we have not seen our competitors publicize their investors in their communications. The concern of our clients is the structure of Embark, particularly the products and services we offer, which is exactly what we addressed in our communication."

But Embark's ties to MRU Holdings are likely to be relevant to the many college administrators for whom MyRichUncle is a dirty word. The company has sought to carve out a niche in the cutthroat student loan market by portraying itself as an advocate for students, an honest broker that not only sells loans to student but tries to arm them directly with information they need to make thoughtful, intelligent decisions about their options.

In the course of doing that, though, the company, through eye-catching full-page advertisements in national newspapers and other marketing, has harshly criticized the relationships in which colleges make lists of “preferred” lenders for their students, sometimes through arrangements in which financial aid offices receive services or other benefits from student loan companies. The implication is that other lenders are offering -- and colleges are accepting -- payoffs as part of these relationships.

MyRichUncle’s campaign has earned it praise from advocates for students, and it has been effective on the national level by at least one measure, adding fuel to the push by Congress, the U.S. Education Department and officials in several states to consider toughening restrictions against and limitations on such arrangements.

But in addition to infuriating other lenders, it has also angered many student aid officials, who have argued that the company has unfairly tainted college administrators by painting with an overly broad brush and implying that financial aid offices are putting their own interests above students. In the world of student services, there is no more serious charge, and many campus officials have vowed never to do business with MyRichUncle.

The e-mail from Hobsons hinted at that controversy, inviting those who might be displeased by Embark’s new owner to give its competitors a look: “In the event that you decide to transition away from your relationship with Embark during this potentially unstable time, Hobsons will be happy to work with you on competitive pricing to make the transition financially viable for your institution, and also to ensure that shifting to a new solution provider is as seamless and non-disruptive to your current admission activities as possible.”

In Park's e-mail message Sunday, the Embark president suggested that he was not worried about fallout from a perceived relationship with MRU or MyRichUncle.

"[W]ithin the universe of college administration, we work with admissions offices and have not had much interaction with financial aid administrators," he wrote. "Embark is a software tool used by admissions offices. Our client relationships have been uninterrupted, and moving forward, we are excited to introduce several product enhancements and improved services, not only to strengthen our current relationships, but to form new ones. Our focus remains on running and growing the Embark business and as questions arise, whether caused by competitive innuendo or otherwise, we will openly answer them."

But the early reaction from Embark customers and others suggested trouble ahead for Embark and MyRichUncle. Zellers of Muskingum, which uses Embark to process its online applications, said he feared that the enmity with which many college administrators view MyRichUncle could lead them to drop Embark.

“What are the implications for the Embark product itself if a whole bunch [of colleges] say, ‘We don’t want any part of this, this is not what I’ve bargained for?' " Zellers said. “There is such strong feeling about MyRichUncle that there could be implications … for Embark at a level that might render their product useless. I have no interest in switching to another vendor, but something like this would at least cause us to reconsider that relationship.” Several other Embark customers expressed similar views.

Barmak Nassirian, associate executive director at the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, said that many of the admissions and enrollment management officials who use Embark’s services may not be familiar with MyRichUncle’s reputation among financial aid officers. But he said that “as soon as word gets out that MRU is the parent company of Embark,” he envisioned scenarios in which financial aid directors at Embark’s client colleges would wander down the hall and encourage them to “take a second look” at alternatives.

Nassirian and others framed MyRichUncle’s purchase of Embark as consistent with the blurring of lines between the worlds of admissions and financial aid, which has led numerous companies, seeking “synergy” between college applicants and would-be borrowers, to enter both markets: Sallie Mae owns Noel-Levitz, a consulting company that specializes in student recruitment and enrollment management, for instance, and the National Education Loan Network recently purchased Peterson’s, which competes with the Princeton Review in the realms of testing and college guides. In some cases, the companies hope that the relationships they build with applicants (or their parents) will give them a leg up when those students are looking for loans. (Some student aid officials raised the question of whether MRU will seek to use the information about students -- and their finances -- that it collects through Embark's online application process to market its loans. Because MRU officials did not respond to repeated requests for comment, it was unclear whether those concerns are valid.)

But MyRichUncle’s purchase of Embark, Nassirian said, is “complicated by the fact that MRU, for better or worse, has decided to poke a finger in the eye of institutions,” arguing that the “intermediation of schools has not been helpful in advancing the best interests of students.” He added: “It may well end up being the case that they bought something that had a certain market value, and the very act of their ownership of that could end up diminishing the value of that asset.”

Princeton Review and MyRichUncle

Princeton Review officials just got their own sense of the powerful reaction that MyRichUncle provokes. Franek, the Princeton Review vice president, said that during the company’s negotiations with MRU Holdings over the sale of Embark, Review officials became enamored of MyRichUncle’s “student advocacy approach,” which he said seemed consistent with the Review’s own.

“It seemed very clear that their mission statement of student advocacy and just providing good loan products for students was their No. 1 priority,” Franek said. Although the Review had struck previous partnerships with lenders, he said, “we had never had a loan provider that we thought (1) provides great loans to students and (2) tries to demystify the financial aid process [in the same way that] the Princeton Review does” in admissions.

So last Thursday, the Princeton Review began promoting a relationship in which it has dubbed MyRichUncle its “partner lender.” (Franek said that the arrangement is a traditional advertising deal, in which MyRichUncle is paying Princeton Review an undisclosed sum in return for visibility on its Web site.)

The problem, to many college financial aid officers, is that Princeton Review promoted the MyRichUncle partnership on its profile pages for individual colleges, in which it appeared to list MyRichUncle as the “partner lender” of the institutions themselves, not of Princeton Review. Financial aid officers unleashed a blizzard of criticism on the Review.

Some of them said they were upset that the Review had implied that they had struck a deal with any lender at all, given the intense federal and state scrutiny of such relationships now. (Princeton Review officials noted that the Web site has long included a “partner lender” link on individual college profile pages, and that the only change last week was that Chase, which had been its previous partner,’ was replaced by MyRichUncle.)

That surprised some financial aid officers, who said they just didn’t pay very close attention to the Princeton Review pages for their institutions. But it also suggested the depth of the dislike for MyRichUncle in many financial aid offices, as exemplified by one message representative of the many posted on the Finaid-L listserv: “The Princeton Review has in one fell swoop created an implied endorsement from every school in their database for a lender that has repeatedly attacked the financial aid profession and is actively trying to remove the financial aid professionals from the process of providing researched information to our students….

“Yes, they probably made a lot of money from this lender to do what they did, but at the same time they have estranged most of the schools they claim assist with this Web site. As another colleague said, ‘shame on them,’ and I hope it does them no good in the long run. Way to be in the pocket of the lender and not thinking of the students and parents first.”

Friday and over the weekend, Review officials made a series of cascading changes to the Web site to respond to the changes. First, they changed the link on each institution’s page to say that MyRichUncle was “Princeton Review’s partner lender,” not the institutions’. Insufficient, college aid officials complained.

Saturday, the Review eliminated the “partner lender” line entirely from the financial aid section of each campus’s page, and instead placed a box on the right-hand side on each institution’s page that pointed interested readers to a “Princeton Review Featured Partner” page about MyRichUncle.

Several college officials who had criticized the Princeton Review said they thought the company's quick response would probably shield it from any longterm damage. But the imbroglio offered yet more proof of just how combustible the terrain surrounding student loans, admissions and money is.

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Comments on MyRichUncle's Under-the-Radar Buy

  • Legitimate Arguments
  • Posted by Gene S. on August 9, 2007 at 11:25pm EDT
  • First off, "myrichuncle" is a reference to having a rich uncle who either a) helps pay for school, or b) leaves you an inheritance to help pay for school. As for the controversy over "MyRichUncle" accusing state institutions of taking "kickbacks" the accusations could be legitimate. Think about it.
    State institutions are federally funded (or underfunded) and the schools are constantly looking for ways to make a little money on the side. An example you might ask? Take a look at the soda machines that are offered at Universities. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaigne was exclusively a CocaCola campus until last week. (http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0708/S00205.htm)
    Coke gave the university money in order to have the exclusive rights to sell their product. What is the difference between a soda company and a student loan company? But this whole assumption that the actual financial aid employees get the money is just rediculous.
    Universities would receive the money to put into the budget where it chose. I'm sure that these "kickbacks" were given and the reason there was such an uproar from the FA officials is because they never see the money and have no idea the university has a partnership. What is so hard to believe that a university tries to get money from any place they can get it.
    The negative ad campaign that MyRichUncle put out wasn't a lie, but shouldn't have been used as a negative ad campaign. The use of the negatvie ad campaign was a sly way to attack FA and other loan companies at the same time. Because "myrichuncle" advertises they are for the student does not necessarily mean they are supplying the best interest rates.
    Sometimes just telling the truth about competators and their hidden relationships with universities does more for a student than supplying a 1% lower interest rate from their competators.

  • Student Loans, Admissions, and Money
  • Posted by Michael Lopata , CPA, CCPS at The Education Path on March 12, 2007 at 9:55am EDT
  • We have seen a significant increase in the use of student loans to fund the cost of an educaton. The reported figures on the increase in non-federal loans is alarming. This is a trend that will not change in the near future. It's also likely there will be more corporate dollars chasing these business opportunities. So where does this lead us to? Everyone that is paying for the cost of an education has options. There are choices on the lender one can use and also how they will pay for school. By reducing the debtload that parents and students are taking on will open up doors for the graduating students. The focus needs to be shifted from paying for college with loans or whatever is available at the last minute to planning for the cost of an education.

  • MyRichUncle
  • Posted by Tom H on March 12, 2007 at 10:15am EDT
  • Doesn’t anyone find this scenario hypocritical? Isn’t MyRichUncle the one that wants the students to have choices? But (1) behind everyone’s back purchases a company and doesn’t disclose this to anyone? and (2) is now the sole lender being offered and (3)doesn’t disclose to the student its relationship with Princeton Review or Embark

    I think true colors are starting to be shown.

  • My Rich Uncle
  • Posted by LAW on March 12, 2007 at 1:15pm EDT
  • Integrity and trustworthiness are not words that come to mind when I read this article. Nor when I went out to the Princeton Review and found that my institution, which is a Direct Loan School, has MyRichUncle listed as a preferred lender.

    If MyRichUncle is going to stoop to this type of practice to break into the student loan business, what type of tactics will it take when trying to collect payments from our students?

    I believe it is time to 'question the ethics'of MyRichUncle. Perhaps it's time for Congress to look into the practices of this lender.

  • Posted by MRUAZAN on March 12, 2007 at 4:10pm EDT
  • Like Embarks officials say that their competitors purchased subsidiaries or bought entities and never disclosed it, Embark then has the right to not disclose it, neither does MyRichUncle.

  • My, Aren't We Sensitive?
  • Posted by robere on March 12, 2007 at 6:25pm EDT
  • The moans and complaints from financial aid folks about MyRichUncle suggest these young upstarts may have a point. The fact that some institutions do have arrangements with preferred lenders isn't exactly a secret within higher ed, just to students and their parents. Which does seem unfair, especially in an age when we all seek greater transparency.

    Why not put everything out in the open, if it's all on the up-and-up? Make it transparent.

    Honest and complete information is not only the best defense against unfounded charges, it puts the power where it belongs. No, not in the hands of financial aid officers but in the hands of the borrower.

  • who pays for those finaid boondoggles?
  • Posted by Concerned Parent on March 12, 2007 at 8:30pm EDT
  • this is so petty that its amusing. what are these financial aid people defending - their right to dictate which lender my family chooses? who is going to pay back the loan - me or them? they sound more like used car dealers than the torch bearers of integrity in higher education. take this lemon loan:

    "i didn't do any research on it, don't know what it will cost you,i don't know if it's the best deal for you but, trust me, my trip to the carribean sponsored by Sallie Mae depends on it!"

    come on.

  • Posted by Beverly on March 13, 2007 at 12:10pm EDT
  • Dear "Concerned Parent" and Robere,

    I have never had a paid trip paid by a Lender. Hmmmmm.........

    I have an idea......... why don't YOU research Lenders for your kid, and pick the one that you believe will provide the best service. Then....... I want you to track that service, and if your kid DEFAULTS on his/her student loan (primarily because of BAD SERVICE), then you loose your HOUSE. Sounds fair to me. See Concerned Parent.... there are a lot of issues that aren't shared with the general public, and if they were..... you'd be thanking your stars that someone out there is willing to work for less to protect YOU and YOUR KID from schemers. Check the incentives or My Rich Uncle. They don't offer anything special. They're mad because they can't get to you through Financial Aid Officers. Wise up

    A "concerned" FA Professional

  • Posted by The Good Guy on March 13, 2007 at 9:35pm EDT
  • What a joke. Congress is going to look into financial aid staff getting kickbacks like... a stapler, a desk clock, maybe a nice leather portfolio... why are they wasting money on this topic? Perhaps a couple FA Directors got to go to a nice destination for some meetings... I don't know the details but I gather that's what the comments suggested. Ask your congressman or woman where they've been courtesy of lobbyists. Now THERE's where attention needs to be focused! I won't hold my breath waiting for that to happen.

    Raza should have heeded the hint from the adage: "Hell hath no fury like that of a [financial aid officer] scorned!" I wish him better luck in his next occupation. And hope he learns that the best way to succeed in business is NOT to piss off your clients!

  • Posted by cblaze on March 14, 2007 at 2:21pm EDT
  • I learned everything i need to know about the student loan business on the internet, not from a college aid official. What other information is out there that I am missing from a simple google search?
    A basic search says that there are many competitors out there in the student loan business, which is good for me. I will do my own research because it is my money in the long run.
    This industry needs to be turned upside down, which is why Congress is so concerned. A lender (maybe MRU) is needed to be a voice of the student. I believe the CEO is in his early 20s, so he can relate more to me than a financial aid counselor. What are the qualifications to be a financial aid counselor? Do we have information on whether these counselors are saving anyone any money?

  • WOW
  • Posted by Keepin It Real , Keep it real folks on March 15, 2007 at 5:50am EDT
  • From the hostility of these comments, I think it only confirms why congress and various lenders are targeting the financial aid office. Look, if we all are truly concerned about the student/borrower two things will/should happen.

    1. University Officials along with elected officials (both state and federal) will demand the financial aid office to stop using a preffered lender list. Or, at least make all known lending options available to students. This includes lenders in which the financial aid office disagrees with i.e. marketing campaigns. By eliminating a cost savings lender out of the list of options for student borrowers over personal issues with a lender is a disservice to the student, university and alumni. If you can't agree on that, maybe its time seek other employment. After all, it is we "The Financial Aid Counselor" that has and will continue to have the obligation of looking out for our students. If we know of cost saving options for the student and do not disclose such information, shame on us!

    2. University Officials along with elected officials (both state and federal) will show the same passion towards reducing the cost of tuition at colleges and universities across the country that has been shown toward MyRichUncle. Pause, I'm not saying I agree with everything they have done, but what I am saying is if we use the same passion to attack tuition cost, we just might get to the root of a major problem.

    Keep it real

  • You people are so full of shit I want to vomit.
  • Posted by Alan Collinge , Founder at Studentloanjustice.org on March 15, 2007 at 5:50am EDT
  • So I interviewed random students a couple of weeks ago in Chapel Hill, NC. It could have been anywhere.

    The first student I quizzed thought her student loans were from FAFSA.

    The second student correctly identified her lender (Sallie Mae), but wrongly stated that it was a public organization, as opposed to a private entity. Didn't know anything beyond that.

    The third student wasn't even sure if he had student loans, although he was "pretty sure" he did.

    This is the type of egregious non-information that you financial aid people are providing to our youth?

    You all make me want to vomit.

  • Houston, we have a problem ....
  • Posted by Robere on March 15, 2007 at 1:50pm EDT
  • Dear Beverly and The Good Guy (?)—

    If your views and attitude represent even a fraction of "FA Professionals" then methinks there'll be quite a few changes heading your way.

    And you're not going to like them.

    Threats don't necessarily make for good customer service. And from what you've both posted here, it's obvious you have no idea of who you are supposedly servicing, or who a lenders' clients really are.

  • Glass houses, stones, etc.
  • Posted by Tom Fiorello on March 16, 2007 at 12:30pm EDT
  • I'd like to see the FA community get their own respective houses in order: http://www.oag.state.ny.us/press/2007/mar/mar15a_07.html.

    Transparency and competition, folks, that should be your goal.

  • Posted by Tamara Desh on March 23, 2007 at 10:05pm EDT
  • Does everyone think that MyRichUncle really do all this exposure just for the sake of students? I believe the answer is NO. MyRichUncle attempted to disrupt the student loan industry so it can entered the student loan industry and became one of the largest student loan companies. As a student myself, when I compared MyRichUncle with other lenders, MyRichUncle DOES NOT offer the BEST benefits for the borrowers as its CEO has claimed. One of the obvious reasons is that MyRichUncle charges 2% of the origination fees while my current lender does not. The repayment benefit from my current lender is also MUCH superior than MyRichUncle. When I called MyRichUncle, the customer service try to push me to get private loan to bridge the gap between my Stafford loans and my cost of educaction. As you all know private loan is the WORST financial aid available for the student. When I told MyRichUncle that I was not interested with its private loan, suddenly the rep became less "friendly" and tried to keep the conversation short. If everyone questions the morale of people that work in Financial Aid office, do you think we should also question a lender rep such MyRichUncle???

  • Posted by Greg H , What? on April 7, 2007 at 7:25am EDT
  • Just shut up. Sallie Mae is correct in all its statements (google is a great research tool), Myrichuncle is NOT an expert or even a reliable source when it comes to information concerning the student loan industry.

    I am supposed to trust the word/ buisness ethics, of a company whose name sounds like a stripper/adult website.

    The name "myrichuncle" -
    enough said.