3 Little Known Factors That
Prevent 6-12th Graders From
Getting Into The Colleges
They Deserve

(even with good GPAs & SATs)

*this is a free webinar, no payment or prior commitment is required

During this webinar, you will learn the 3 critical factors that are preventing 6-12th graders from getting into the colleges they deserve.

You will be in a much better position to provide your children with the necessary guidance and advice they need to get into a good college, even if you think they may still be too young. In fact, most 11th and 12th grader parents we meet express their regret for not starting earlier.

Why Do Parents Listen To Us?

After spending the last 10+ years building a reputation as award-winning experts in college admissions and having over 2,000+ people attend our in-person seminars, we decided to make our strategies available to parents/students from all around the world.

We also own Modern Career Advice, which is ranked as the #1 lecturer/speaker at UC Berkeley's Alumni Association. Our lessons are broadcasted and taught to over 450,000+ UC Berkeley Alumni

What You'll Discover

Presented by:

Frank Song
CEO & Founder

Frank Song is a nationally recognized expert in college admissions, child education, and career strategy, with a specialization in engineering, business/finance, and science/healthcare. Additionally, Frank has been ranked the #1 lecturer at UC Berkeley's Alumni Association, where he was selected to teach the 450,000+ graduates of UC Berkeley strategy, negotiation, and career advice. Prior to founding Zenith, Frank was a Venture Capital Investor at Accel-KKR, one of the only private equity firms, with $4 billion under management, dedicated exclusively to investing in software companies, where he focused on the healthcare technology space. Prior to joining Accel-KKR, Frank was a Technology Investment Banker at a top 50 investment bank, Stifel Nicolaus Weisel, where he advised and executed on $516.1 mm worth of mergers and acquisitions, initial public offerings, and leverage buyout transactions for publicly traded technology companies.Additionally, Frank worked at Kayne Anderson, a $30 billion alternative asset manager (co-founded by John Anderson for whom the UCLA Anderson School of Management is named after) where he focused on structuring private equity investments with founders and CEOs of growing private companies.