Yu Minhong
Yu Minhong, founder and president of New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc.
Born (1962-09-04) September 4, 1962
Xianggang Subdistrict, Jiangyin, Jiangsu, China
Other namesMichael Yu
Alma materPeking University
Occupations
  • Founder and President of New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc.
  • Vice President of the Education Committee of Central Committee of China Democratic League
  • Member of Standing Committee of China Youth Federation
  • Vice President of Chinese Young Entrepreneur Council
  • Co-founder of Hong Tai Fund
  • President of council of Gengdan Institute of Beijing University of Technology
Known forThe Relentless Pursuit of Success
Political partyChina Democratic League
Children2
Awards
  • China's 50 Most Influential Business Leaders (2012)
  • CCTV Annual Economic Figures (2009)
Chinese name
Chinese

Yu Minhong, or Michael Yu (Chinese: 俞敏洪; born 4 September 1962) is the founder and president of New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc., and a member of the central committee of China Democratic League. As the owner of one of the largest private educational services, Yu is known as the "richest teacher in China", and "Godfather of English Training".[1] On Hurun Report's China Rich List 2013, he had an estimated wealth $1.1 billion and was ranked No. 245 on the list.[2] On the same list of 2015, he had an estimated wealth of $1.09 billion and was ranked No. 487. Also he was ranked No.1759 on Hurun Global Rich List 2015, with an estimated wealth of $1.1 billion.[3] As of November 2018, he is ranked #148 on Forbes China Rich List 2018 and #1020 on Forbes Billionaires 2018, with an estimated net worth of $1.7 billion.[4]

Approximately 70% of Chinese students studying in the United States and Canada have taken English classes from the firm. In addition, the online education section has attracted more than 2 million registered users since beginning in 2003. New Oriental was the first Chinese private education company to list shares on the New York Stock Exchange.[5]

Yu stated, "My biggest dream is to found a private university, and for it to be one of China's top educational institutions after 40–50 years of development. When applying for higher education, my dream is for the best high school graduates to take my university into consideration, along with the likes of Tsinghua and Beijing University."[6]

Yu is a member of the Standing Committee of the China Democratic League.[7]

Early life

Yu Minhong was born in a rural family in Xiagang Subdistrict of Jiangyin, Jiangsu on September 4, 1962.[8] He has an elder sister.[9] Unlike for the time, Yu's mother encouraged him to go to school. Yu twice failed the university qualification exam and lost a year from illness.[6] Yu was eventually admitted to Beijing University.[10]

Yu was placed in a class for sub-standard students, because he couldn't speak standard Chinese. Yu was a poor student, both financially and academically. In his junior year, pneumonia forced him to take a year off. After graduation in 1985, many classmates went abroad for further education, Yu began to apply for US universities while teaching English in Beijing University. After three years, Yu was accepted by a university. His requests for overseas study visas were repeatedly denied.

New Oriental

As the largest provider of private educational services in China, New Oriental offers educational programs including English and other foreign languages, overseas and domestic test preparation courses, tutoring, primary and secondary school education and online education. New Oriental's instruction combines humorous, interactive teaching techniques with traditional Chinese educational values.[11] Yu Minhong once emphasized his idea of "rediscovery", which included New Oriental's self-positioning among the private sector of China's education area, and Chinese international students' discovering and rediscovering of themselves and their homeland. All of these have been based on the background of overseas tide and China's unprecedented development in the past decades. Yu Minhong with his New Oriental has always been arguing that they not only provide students with academic training, but also give inspirations.[12]

Foundation

New Oriental School was established on November 16, 1993. Yu Minhong was the only English teacher at the beginning. As enrollment grew, Yu persuaded some of his former classmates to work with him. One of them, Wang Qiang has a master's degree from the State University of New York. "I took Yu Minhong to Princeton University to show him around the campus. To my surprise, almost every Chinese student recognized him. They would call him 'Teacher Yu'. I was amazed to see how famous he was." Said Wang Qiang.

Development

Yu converted the business into the New Oriental Education and Technology Group. In 2010 it was the largest private educational enterprise in China, with approximately 10.5 million enrollment, 465 learning centers in 44 cities and 29 bookstores. As of November 30, 2015, New Oriental had a network of 63 schools, 720 (includes 63 schools) learning centers, 25 New Oriental bookstores and over 5,000 third-party bookstores and over 17,000 teachers in 53 cities, as well as an online network with approximately 11.9 million registered users.[13] Many start-up online education companies claimed they would overthrow New Oriental, whose advantages lie mainly in offline education. Facing the challenge, New Oriental and Yu Minhong have confidence in participating in innovations.[14]

On September 7, 2006, the New Oriental Education and Technology Group listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Yu was then labeled "China's richest teacher" with wealth of US$800 million. Other early founders who returned from abroad, and educators in New Oriental with employee stock rights also got rich overnight. To get listed, Yu Minhong initiated reforms on corporate governance aimed at downplaying his personal influence on New Oriental, establishing himself as a professional manager with the group. On the other hand, the listing of New Oriental represented a trend of education industrialization in China. Yu Minhong held that New Oriental's model would not be a get-rich-quick scheme, while mixed responses had been aroused.[15][16]

Other careers

Private higher education

Yu Minhong started carrying out his ideal to found a top private university by taking over Gengdan Institute of Beijing University of Technology. The institute was founded in July 2005 under the joint sponsoring of Beijing University of Technology and Beijing Gengdan Education Development Center. It is an independent undergraduate institution which operates under a new education mechanism and a mode of private tertiary education in China.[17] Yu Minhong was elected as the president of council with Gengdan Institute on August 6, 2013, and entered private sector of Chinese higher education based on New Oriental's existing strength.

Angel investment

After investments in several Chinese funds (including the other two of the founders of New Oriental-Xu Xiaoping and Wang Qiang's Zhenfund), Yu Minhong didn't feel the joys of investment, so in 2014, he decided to set up an angel investment fund together with Sheng Xitai, an old hand in PE industry. The fund was named Hong Tai Fund (or Angel Plus[18]) and focused on the angel and early-stage projects in media, culture, education, entertainment as well as high-tech and mobile Internet industries. It also had plans to invest in Silicon Valley.[19]

Anecdotes

Film: American Dreams in China

In 2013, a Chinese film named American Dreams in China was released and became a hot topic across China. The movie was directed by famous Hong Kong director Peter Chan and was allegedly based on the self-development and entrepreneurial experience of Yu Minhong ("Cheng Dongqing"), Xu Xiaoping ("Meng Xiaojun"), and Wang Qiang ("Wang Yang"), under the context of China from the 1980s till now.[20] Yu Minhong admitted that basically, he was the prototype of Cheng Dongqing, but denied that the character based on him was common. He claimed that no investment was made to the film by New Oriental.[21]

First film show

Yu Minhong appeared as a guest performer in a Chinese documentary film named Mr.Deng Goes to Washington, which was released in 2015. The film recorded the nine days beginning on Jan 29, 1979, when China's leader Deng Xiaoping made his historic visit to the United States, only one month after that country established diplomatic relations with China. On April 24, 2015, at the film's press conference, and in his office building in northwest Beijing, Yu Minhong promoted this documentary film, by promising that both his employees and he, himself would buy tickets to watch it.[22]

Personal life

Yu is married and has a son and a daughter.[23] His wife and daughter immigrated to Canada in 1995.[23]

Speech

In a speech Yu stated:

Hew a stone of hope out of a mountain of despair and you can make your life a splendid one.

In the beginning, there were no roads in the world; only as people began traveling did roads come into being. Successful roads are formed not when people roam aimlessly, but when they are headed in the same direction. The same is true for New Oriental; it was formed as people gathered to study. And like a successful road, it did not achieve its success by chance. People who shared dreams and aspirations worked together to forge an exciting trail.

The road ahead will be even longer and more arduous, because our goals are even grander. But with a clear mission, dedicated hearts and the pioneering spirit that has driven us from the beginning, we're certain that our strength, wisdom, and energy will enable us to write a new page in the records of China's educational undertaking.[24]

References

  1. "'American Dream' in China: Yu Minhong Goes from Rags to Riches". Xinhua News Agency. 30 October 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  2. 胡润百富 – www.hurun.net
  3. 胡润百富 - www.hurun.net. www.hurun.net. Archived from the original on 2014-06-06. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  4. "Yu Minhong". Forbes. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  5. Yu, Minhong (2007). The Relentless Pursuit of Success. Singapore: Cengage Learning Asia. ISBN 978-981-4195-48-5.
  6. 1 2 "Yu Minhong". Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  7. 中国民主同盟第十二届中央委员会主席、副主席、常务委员名单. xinhuanet (in Chinese). 10 December 2017. Archived from the original on February 16, 2018. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  8. 俞敏洪:真正的后悔来自于从来不选择. sina (in Chinese). 19 December 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2019. 我的身份证上是10月6日,后来我问了一下我妈,说那天是报户口的日子(众笑)。我妈说我真正的生日大约在八月初六,老一辈算阴历,我查了一下发现是9月4日。
  9. Yu Minhong (2011), p. 113.
  10. Yu Minhong (2011), p. 4.
  11. "New Oriental Education & Technology Group". Retrieved 5 May 2011.
  12. Yu, Minhong (Spring 2004). "Rediscovery at New Oriental". Harvard China Review.
  13. "Overview of "Who We Are"". New Oriental Education& Technology Group. New Oriental. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  14. Su, Zhou (9 September 2015). "New Oriental not worried by competition". Chinadaily.com.cn. Chinadaily. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  15. Lan, Xinzhen (2006). "Enriching Education". Beijing Review.
  16. "TEDxEDUcn – Yu Minhong". Youtube. TEDx Talks. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  17. "About the Institute". gengdan.cn. Gengdan Institute of Beijing University of Technology. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  18. "About Us". Angelplus.cn. Angelplus. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  19. "Yu Minhong's Second Startup: Hong Tai Fund Raises RMB200M from Tens of LPs". PEdaily.cn. China Business News. 19 November 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  20. Kerr, Elizabeth (May 17, 2013). "American Dreams in China: Film Review". hollywoodreporter.com. The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  21. Wong, Siu Tan (30 May 2013). "The Problem with Entrepreneur Biopics". eeo.com.cn. The Economic Observer. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  22. Zhang, Wan (27 April 2015). "Chinese Entrepreneur Acts in Film Mr. Deng Goes to Washington". crjenglish.com. CRJ. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  23. 1 2 Yu Minhong (2011), p. 109.
  24. "Chairman's Words". Retrieved 5 May 2011.

Bibliography

  • Yu Minhong (2011). 俞敏洪口述:在痛苦的世界中尽力而为 [Yu Minhong: Do Your Best in the Painful World] (in Chinese). Beijing: Contemporary China Publishing House. ISBN 978-7-5154-0094-5.
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