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INDUSTRIES

EdTechMarketing&GrowthAIforBrighton

You built a platform that genuinely helps learners, but student acquisition costs keep climbing while free alternatives and well-funded competitors eat your lunch. If your edtech startup cannot afford to keep buying every enrolment through paid ads, it is time to build an acquisition engine that compounds.

EdTech founders in Brighton are caught in a squeeze: student acquisition costs have risen 40%+ since 2022, free content from YouTube and AI tools keeps raising the bar on perceived value, and well-funded competitors can afford to lose money on growth while you cannot. Brighton's "Silicon Beach" is the UK's creative startup capital — highest agency and creative business density outside London, a thriving indie gaming scene, and a community of founders who chose quality of life without sacrificing ambition. At Haben, we have worked on 1,600+ projects across nearly two decades, and we know that edtech growth comes down to three things: acquiring learners efficiently, activating them quickly, and retaining them long enough to build a sustainable business. We build AI-powered marketing and automation systems for education startups — not the kind of brand awareness campaigns that look impressive in a deck but never translate to enrolments. We focus on SEO content that captures students mid-search, nurture sequences that convert free users to paid, and retention systems that keep learners engaged long enough to complete courses and recommend you to others.

CHALLENGES

Key EdTech Challenges

Obstacles facing growing edtech businesses — and how to overcome them.

1

Student Acquisition Costs Keep Rising

Google Ads for education keywords have become brutally expensive, and Meta's targeting limitations make it harder to reach the right learners. EdTech founders who built their growth model on paid acquisition are watching their unit economics deteriorate. Every pound you spend on ads is a pound that disappears the moment you stop spending — and your competitors with VC backing can outspend you indefinitely.

2

The Completion Rate Crisis

The average online course completion rate is below 15%. That means 85%+ of your acquired students never finish what they started — killing your NPS, your referral potential, and your ability to upsell advanced programmes. Low completion is not a content problem. It is a communication and engagement problem that automation can solve.

SOLUTIONS

How Haben Solves EdTech Challenges

AI-powered solutions for growing edtech businesses.

Compounding Student Acquisition

We build SEO-first content strategies that rank for the searches your ideal students type into Google — "best data science course UK," "online PGCE alternatives," "learn UX design." These pages generate enquiries month after month without incremental ad spend. We layer in email nurture sequences that convert interested visitors into enrolled students over 7-14 day cycles, and referral programmes that turn completed students into your best acquisition channel.

AI-Driven Retention & Completion Systems

We deploy automated engagement systems that catch at-risk students before they drop off: progress-triggered emails, re-engagement sequences for inactive users, milestone celebrations, and community prompts. Improving completion rates from 15% to 30% does not just improve outcomes — it doubles your referral potential and dramatically improves student lifetime value.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about our AI services.

We shift your acquisition mix from purely paid to a blend of organic and paid — with organic doing the heavy lifting over time. That means SEO content targeting the exact searches your prospective students make, lead magnets that capture email addresses for nurture (free workshops, sample lessons, career guides), and automated email sequences that convert interested visitors over 7-14 days. We also build referral and ambassador programmes that turn your best students into acquisition channels. The result: 30-40% lower blended CAC within six months, with the organic component continuing to improve as your content library grows.

Brighton should be treated as a Brighton and Hove creative, education, visitor-economy and professional-services market, not a generic coastal page. Local context includes agency and digital-studio density, university-linked demand, independent retail, hospitality, financial services, sustainability-led businesses, Sussex buyer reach and London-linked competition. Buyers compare providers on creative-sector fluency, response speed, local proof, review signals, campaign clarity and whether the page understands Brighton business pressure beyond tourism. Edtech pages should connect course, skills, training, college, apprenticeship or workforce-development demand to enrolment journeys, demo booking, parent or employer communication and nurture workflows.

Brighton proof should include creative and digital buyer language where relevant, university or skills context for education pages, visitor and hospitality demand for tourism or retail pages, review capture, enquiry routing, consultation or quote ownership, CRM stages, channel attribution and follow-up across Google, maps, LinkedIn, email, phone and web forms. A useful Brighton funnel captures buyer sector, service area, urgency, current operational leak, proof required, follow-up owner and next action.

The first sprint should fix one measurable commercial leak before adding more campaign activity: missed enquiries, slow quote response, weak local visibility, poor review capture, manual reporting, unclear CRM ownership, thin service pages or follow-up that depends on memory. The page should make that sequence clear so buyers and answer engines understand the practical next step.

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