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K12 EdTech Connection

Author: Peter Polygalov & John Faig

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K12 EdTech Connection is a candid, no-fluff podcast about how K-12 schools and EdTech companies can work better together.

Hosted by Peter Polygalov, CEO & Founder of EdWave Marketing, and John Faig, Director of Technology at St. Patrick’s Episcopal Day School, each episode brings both sides of the table together: the vendor trying to reach schools, and the K-12 administrator deciding what to buy, pilot, or ignore.

If you care about building EdTech that truly serves teachers and students and about buying it wisely, you’re in the right place.

7 Episodes
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Our first guest episode. Ryan Patenaude co-founded FEV Tutor, built it from zero to $50 million in revenue with no outside funding, and scaled to 5,000 employees before the company was acquired in 2022. He now runs RP Impact Partners, helping mission-aligned EdTech companies accelerate growth.Ryan tells the story of an early Zoom call with the CEO of a 200,000-student district where he led with a 15-slide feature deck and learned the hard way: in K-12, you sell results, not features.We dig into why free pilots train districts to invest nothing, and how FEV's ICP evolved from "anyone who would buy" to a disciplined filter on district size, Title I status, and decision-making speed. Ryan walks through a pricing journey that took 15 years, from pay-as-you-go tutoring hours to a subscription model that finally cleaned up their books. He also reframes the "we don't have budget" objection: a former chancellor of NYC schools told him that if a superintendent sees value, they can find any money they want.
You had a great demo. They said they'd follow up. Then... nothing.We open with two ghost stories. John's: a CEO who demoed three times over 18 months and never sent a quote. Peter's: an executive who over-communicated so aggressively that he drove an internal champion to ghosting and lost a six-figure renewal.Then we dig into the real reasons buyers disappear: shifting priorities, budget reallocations, comparing vendors, or just the awkwardness of saying no to someone who spent an hour demoing.What makes John hit delete? "Just checking in" emails and guilt trips. What makes him respond? Useful content, acknowledgment that timing might be off, and the "permission to close the file" email—Peter's favorite tactic that removes pressure and often triggers a reply.The uncomfortable truth: K-12 sales cycles run 6-18 months. Silence after one demo usually means "not yet," not "never." The question is whether you'll still be top of mind when the timing is right.
Most EdTech vendors either blast the same generic message to everyone, talk to only one person, or try to leapfrog the tech director straight to the superintendent. All three approaches fail.K-12 purchases aren't made by a single buyer—they're made by informal coalitions. Curriculum directors, tech directors, teacher champions, principals, and sometimes counselors all have to align before anything moves forward. And here's the uncomfortable truth: "Every vendor feels like a stalker," says John, "unless their brand building has piqued my interest to the point where I reach out to them."We break down which channels actually reach which personas, why your touchpoint strategy might look like an incomplete charcuterie board (all cheese, no meat), and the expensive mistakes we keep seeing—like the higher ed vendor who sponsored an after-hours event at a K-12 conference. Great for free drinks. Terrible for pipeline.We also cover what signals you should actually be capturing, why awards don't mean much in 2026, and why John hasn't had a single salesperson reach out after changing companies in 15 years.
Episode 3, Part 2: Make Your Website an Inbound Lead Generation MachineTraditional SEO still matters, but it's declining. In 2026, your content needs to answer questions, not just rank for keywords. Welcome to AEO—Answer Engine Optimization.In Part 2, we get into what actually makes buyers give up their email (hint: not "The Future of K-12 Education in 2026"). John shares that out of ~100 cold email CTAs he received, exactly 2 worked. The difference? Tangible value—ROI calculators, implementation templates, standards alignment guides—not generic ebooks full of stock images.We also cover why your website needs to serve the whole buying committee (not just your ICP), why asking the same form questions twice is "data collection so rudimentary it's rude," and the uncomfortable truth that this takes 6-18 months to pay off. But when it does, it compounds—Peter shares how one site hit 70-80 qualified inbound leads per month, driving 40-50% of ARR.Plus: a lightning round of do's and don'ts to audit your site this week.Related: John's breakdown of good vs. bad EdTech CTAs: https://johnfaig.medium.com/outbound-edtech-marketing-c1cc194c8eec
Episode 3, Part 1: Make Your Website an Inbound Lead Generation MachineMost EdTech websites are expensive digital brochures. They look great, list features, and generate zero qualified leads.In Part 1, we dig into why: the "curse of knowledge" that makes vendors speak jargon instead of solving problems, and the vanity metrics trap that confuses traffic with actual buyers. Your curriculum director doesn't care about "adaptive scaffolding and standards-aligned computational thinking frameworks." She wants to know if this helps her struggling sixth graders.We also break down what qualified traffic actually looks like—and why 9,000 of your 10,000 monthly visitors might just be students trying to log in.Part 2 covers SEO in the age of AI, lead magnets that work in K-12, and conversion optimization.Related: John's breakdown of good vs. bad EdTech CTAs: Outbound EdTech Marketing
It’s a new year—and for K–12 EdTech teams, 2026 is not the year to “do more.” It’s the year to get sharper.In this episode of K–12 EdTech Connection, Peter Polygalov (EdWave Marketing) and John Faig (K–12 tech director) build a practical planning framework for founders and lean teams who want clarity, traction, and repeatable momentum—without wasting months on channels that don’t convert.You’ll learn how to set the right success metrics based on your stage, pressure-test your ICP before you spend a dollar, and run a simple two-week learning loop that forces real progress.What we coverWhat outcome you actually need this semester (and how it changes for early vs late-stage teams)The 6-question ICP + GTM risk checklist (clarity, pain, reachability, readiness, anti-ICP, messaging)Why brand building has no clean ROI—and why you still need to do it anywayJohn’s blunt take on outbound: “Cold email is dead.” What does work insteadEvents in 2026: why conferences are a confirmation channel, not a prospecting channelWhy LinkedIn is the best “vendor + educator in the same room” platformSponsorships and small community groups: how to be a big fish in a small pondThe two-week learning loop: the fastest way to stop “busy work” and start compounding winsExperiments to run in 2026, including pricing tests (and the “double the price until it breaks” story)Plus a lightning recap: 5 Do’s + 5 Don’ts for 2026If this episode helped, share it with a founder or marketer who’s trying to sell into K–12 this year—and follow the show so you don’t miss what’s next.
Are K–12 EdTech conferences actually worth it for vendors—or just an expensive field trip? In this episode, we break down how to show up at conferences so buyers actually want to talk to you.EdTech marketer Peter Polygalov and school tech director John Faig share real stories and hard-won lessons from both sides of the booth. They unpack why conferences still matter in 2025, why the real ROI comes from prep and follow-up, and how to think about conferences as brand-building and qualification, not quick closes.You’ll learn how to:Decide which K–12 EdTech conferences to attend (and which to skip)Use conferences to deepen warm relationships instead of chasing cold trafficAsk simple, BANT-style questions to qualify leads quicklySpot the difference between buyer-heavy and PD-heavy eventsMeasure success beyond badge scans and swag grabs🎧 Listen if you’re:An EdTech founder, marketer, or seller betting big on conferences this yearA K–12 leader who wants vendors to use your time more wisely👉 If this episode helps you rethink your conference strategy, follow K12 EdTech Connection on your favorite podcast platform and share it with someone on the other side of the booth.
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