Strategic Performance Drivers
Our analysts just identified a stock with the potential to be the next Nvidia. Tell us how you invest and we’ll show you why it’s our #1 pick. Tap here.
-
Management attributes the 19.5% student start growth to a structural shift in the skilled trades market, driven by rising middle-class salaries and white-collar job insecurity related to artificial intelligence.
-
Performance was balanced between organic growth from established campuses and contributions from 2025 relocations and program expansions, validating the company’s dual-track expansion strategy.
-
The Lincoln 10.0 hybrid teaching platform is cited as a primary driver of instructional and space efficiencies, allowing for faster graduation times and improved organizational productivity.
-
Operational simplified strategies and the scalability of the current model led to the first positive first-quarter operating cash flow in 10 years.
-
Management highlighted a strategic focus on student outcomes, investing efficiency gains into emotional and life support services to improve retention and graduation rates.
-
The company is actively diversifying its reach through the ‘high school share’ program and workforce training partnerships, such as the new agreement with New Jersey Transit.
Outlook and Strategic Roadmap
-
Full-year 2026 revenue guidance was raised to a range of $590 million to $600 million, reflecting sustained momentum in student population growth.
-
The company reaffirmed its 2030 strategic targets of $850 million in revenue and $150 million in adjusted EBITDA, supported by a newly expanded $125 million credit facility.
-
Future growth assumes a steady cadence of approximately two new campus openings per year, with Hicksville, NY, and Roulette, TX, currently on schedule for late 2026 and early 2027 starts.
-
Management expects to maintain a 10% to 14% student start growth rate for the full year, with organic sources projected to account for approximately half of that growth.
-
Guidance methodology for adjusted EBITDA has been updated to include approximately $10 million in new campus losses, reflecting a shift toward reporting fully consolidated operational performance.
Operational Risks and Structural Adjustments
-
Rising laptop costs for students are expected to create an incremental expense of approximately $750,000 per quarter, as management has decided not to pass these costs on to students.
-
The company successfully reenrolled students in the Paramus nursing program in January, reversing a previous decline in healthcare starts and achieving a 90% NCLEX pass rate.
-
A discrete tax benefit related to stock vesting lowered the Q1 effective tax rate to 22%, though management expects this to normalize to around 9% in future quarters.
-
Capital expenditures for the year are heavily weighted toward the second quarter due to the timing of construction and expansion projects.

