Three years. Still the wrong universities.
Three years. That is how long I spent trying to find a university abroad on my own. I searched Google, scrolled through Facebook groups, and combed through ranking websites. I applied to programs that seemed like a fit and paid application fees I would never get back. I got rejected — not because my profile was weak, but because I was applying to places that did not match me, and I had no reliable way to know the difference.
Eventually, I gave up searching on my own and paid a consultant. Within weeks, he found me Universität Passau in Germany — a respected university with strong programs, reasonable fees, and a welcoming international community. It was the right fit. It had never appeared in any of my searches.
That experience became the reason I built University Explorer, a free mobile app that helps international students search universities across 100+ countries, filter by degree level and field of study, estimate city living expenses, and get personalised course recommendations. The problem I solved for myself — and that millions of students across South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East still face — is not a lack of information. It is a breakdown in trust, visibility, and guidance.
To understand why technology has not yet replaced consultants for this audience, I reached out to educators, founders, and advisors for their perspective. Here is what they told me.
The consultant model persists not because technology is failing — but because the right technology has not yet been built at scale for students who cannot afford to get the decision wrong.
The Real Problem Is Trust, Not Search
Most education technology platforms approach the university discovery problem as a search-and-filter challenge. Build a big enough database, add enough filters, and students will find their fit. But the experts I spoke with pointed to something deeper: students from underserved markets are not looking for more options. They are looking for assurance.
— Kuldeep Kundal, Founder & CEO, CISIN
This framing reframes the entire problem. A student deciding where to study abroad is not browsing for options the way they might search for a restaurant. They are making a decision that will shape their finances, their career, and years of their life. In that context, a list of results feels inadequate — even risky.
— Louis Ducruet, Founder and CEO, Eprezto
Ducruet runs a digital business in the insurance sector — another market where consultants dominate over digital tools — and he identified the same root cause: people pay for certainty, not information. A search tool returns options, but a first-generation applicant cannot tell which options are credible. A list of universities they have no way to evaluate feels riskier than a consultant who simplifies it.
The implication for EdTech: The opportunity is not just to index more universities. It is to make the right universities findable for the right students — and then layer in the context that converts a search result into a confident choice.
The Visibility Gap: Good Universities Don't Rank in Search
Even when students are willing to search independently, the results they find are skewed. The universities that dominate search results are the ones with marketing budgets, English-language search engine optimisation strategies, and international recruitment offices. The smaller, excellent institutions — particularly in Germany, the Netherlands, Eastern Europe, and parts of Asia — are often invisible.
— Wayne Lowry, CEO, Scale By SEO
This is the gap that cost me application fees and years of frustration. The consultant who found me Passau was not smarter than Google. He had institutional knowledge — relationships, experience, and pattern-matching across hundreds of student profiles — that no search algorithm had been trained to replicate.
— Runbo Li, CEO, Magic Hour AI
Li draws a direct parallel to how his own immigrant family navigated unfamiliar systems — through word-of-mouth, not search engines, because they lacked the cultural fluency to know what keywords would unlock the right answers. The same dynamic plays out for first-generation international students every day.
The Decision-Support Gap: Too Many Options, No Confidence
Even when a student finds a useful list of universities, the discovery process often stalls at the next step: deciding. With no way to validate whether a university is the right fit — for their budget, their profile, their goals, their visa pathway — students experience what one product founder described as a breakdown between access and confidence.
— Kruno Sulić, Founder & SaaS Product Builder, Cliprise
The underlying data problem compounds this. Important admissions details are fragmented across university websites, PDFs, and local portals in multiple languages. Two students searching for the same country may need completely different answers based on their nationality, budget, and academic background. And the cost of a wrong decision — lost application fees, wasted time, a mismatched visa — is high enough that defaulting to a human advisor feels rational, not lazy.
— Mohammed Kamal, Business Development Manager, Olavivo
The takeaway: The problem is not that students cannot find information. It is that they cannot evaluate it. Without a trusted filter, more information creates more anxiety — not more confidence.
What Technology Needs to Do Differently
The experts I spoke with were not pessimistic about technology's role — they were precise about what it still lacks. The consistent theme: platforms need to stop competing with consultants on database size and start competing on the thing consultants actually provide, which is curated, personalised confidence.
— Rory Keel, Business Owner, Equipoise Coffee
The implication for tools like University Explorer is clear: the opportunity is not just to index more universities, but to make the right universities findable for the right students — and then layer in the context that converts a search result into a confident choice. That means verified outcome data, alumni pathways, realistic admission odds, and direct guidance on cost of living, language requirements, and visa realities.
One adviser offered a clear strategic direction: build education, not just a tool. Create the most comprehensive resource in the market so students arrive already informed. Lead with direct, concise answers to the exact questions people ask before deciding — not just a list of options.
The goal is not to replace consultants with a database. It is to give students the knowledge a good consultant would share — before they ever need to pay one.
The gap is real — and closeable
I built University Explorer because I lived this problem. I know what it feels like to search for months and come up empty, to lose application fees on mismatched programs, and to finally find the right answer through a human connection that no app could replicate at the time.
The consultant model persists not because technology is failing — but because the right technology has not been built at scale for this audience yet. The students who rely on word-of-mouth in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, and Egypt deserve the same quality of guidance that a paid college counsellor provides to a prep school student elsewhere in the world. The only difference should be access.
What this means if you are searching right now
Use technology as a filter and a map — but verify every serious option through official sources and real student communities. A database can show you what exists. It cannot yet tell you what fits. Until it can, the verification step still requires human judgment — your own, your peers', or an advisor's.
And if you are building in this space: the data layer, the visibility layer, and the trust layer are all still wide open. The market is enormous, the problem is real, and the students who need it most are still waiting.