Press Release
CONTACT: ROSSANA L. LLENADO
426-0029 to 30/920-4492
ANOTHER A+ FOR AHEAD TUTORIAL & REVIEW
Amidst the tutorial
centers that have recently mushroomed in the metro’s school
districts, one name stands out—AHEAD Tutorial & Review Center.
For one thing, they’re the most visible. Their billboards,
featuring celebrity students Maxene Magalona and Andrei Felix, are
lodged along EDSA, Katipunan, and even North and South Expressways.
They have two branches in shopping malls, one in SM Megamall and the
other in Robinsons Galleria. For another, they’re distinguished by
experts.
Just last May 1, 2004, AHEAD was
named “Most Outstanding Learning Center” by the Asia-Pacific
Awards Committee at the AFP Theater. The award is AHEAD’s
third recognition from a consumers group. Late last year, it received
citation from the National Consumer Affairs Foundation and the
Consumers League of the Philippines.
Operating since 1995, AHEAD has
helped create Filipino interest in supplementary education and
test preparation. Before it came into the scene, tutoring
was basically offered at home by retired teachers and moms
with free time. College entrance review classes were conducted
once a year by small outfits.
What AHEAD did was to dissolve
people’s perception of tutorials as only for slow learners and
underachievers, projecting tutorial and review students
as winners—class leaders and honor students. Review classes for
college entrance tests have now become a trend among young
people. Students from competitive private schools, in
particular, have discovered the advantage of advancing their lessons
and guided study.
In 2002, AHEAD organized a “school
fair-in-a-mall” at Glorietta, Makati City to celebrate their review
students’ admission to Ateneo, La Salle, and UP. Inviting school
bands and MTV veejays, AHEAD projected itself as a hip,
youth-oriented learning center where youngsters can have a lot of fun
while studying. For its marketing effectiveness, the event merited the
prestigious Gold Quill award from the International
Association of Business Communicators the following year.
One ingredient of AHEAD’s success is
their delivery of results. It is the first and only center in the
country to publish a passers’ list in national dailies. Since its first
year, it has maintained the highest passing rate in the
college entrance exams of top universities. Tutees who do not
achieve improvement in their grades can even get their money back.
AHEAD believes in value for money. It is not afraid to charge
higher than most review centers because it is confident of its
services. It doesn’t compete on price, only on quality.
AHEAD also leads in
individualized service. It tries to accommodate each client’s unique
needs and learning style. This is why customer satisfaction is
very high, with 60% of their students referred by previous clients.
Parent organizations and school administrators also recognize the
effectiveness of AHEAD’s programs. A few years ago, the
parent councils of Ateneo and Xavier chose the review center to
prepare their sons for college entrance exams. La Salle Greenhills, St.
Mary of the Woods, Lourdes School of Mandaluyong, and Brent School have
likewise endorsed AHEAD.
The Asia-Pacific excellence award is
an addition to the review center’s roster of awards in education,
business, and marketing communication.
BOX-IN:
An Entrepreneur in Education?
Seldom do we purposefully mix business
and education. Perhaps it is because we have been taught to view
education as a service, a vocation even. Few of us realize,
however, that schools and other learning centers need to
earn money in order to survive. Without income, they would not be able
to hire good teachers, improve facilities, and develop
a sound curriculum for their students. Education’s nobleness is not
diminished even as many schools achieve financial stability.
Rossana Llenado, president of
AHEAD Tutorial & Review, is not ashamed to say she uses business
smarts to run her learning center. “It’s not exploiting
education for profit,” she explains. “It’s using practical business
sense to maximize what you have so you can give students what they
need.”
Indeed, operating an academic center
these days is not all heart. A school administrator, aside from
being service-oriented, has to know what to invest on, where to
put her money. She has to know how to use her resources wisely so that
she can extend the highest quality instruction to her enrollees.
Llenado’s contribution to the advancement
of quality education through tutorials and review
classes was recognized last May 1, 2004 by the Asia-Pacific
Awards Committee at the AFP Theater. She was given the
Asia-Pacific Excellence Award for Young Professionals in Education.
For Llenado, the recognition is another motivation for her to strive in
her chosen line of service. “Many may still not be convinced by
tutorial and review courses, but I know we are on the right track
when our students start getting better grades and
qualify to good schools,” she says.
Under her leadership, AHEAD has
extended to review book publishing, foreign language teaching,
and test preparation for U.S. exams such as SAT, TOEFL, GMAT,
GRE, and IELTS. It now has branches in Loyola Heights, Greenhills, SM
Megamall, and Robinsons Galleria and conducts college review classes
in Makati, Alabang, and Manila.
Apart from AHEAD, Llenado is also
directing WorldPrep, a preschool in Loyola Heights, Quezon City.
Fuelled by her desire to further develop her educational services,
she recently enrolled in the educational administration graduate program
of the Ateneo de Manila University.
Llenado is
also the recipient of Philam Life’s Ilaw ng Karunungan award,
Ulirang Ina award, Gintong Sikap award
for education, and Entrepreneur Magazine’s Entrepreneur
10 award. Five years from now, when she’s 40, she dreams of sending
scholars to teacher-training colleges.