Global Eduworking Group

BEYOND STUDY

What happens after the diploma.

For most international students, the years after admission matter as much as the ones before. Our work does not end at enrollment — and the roadmap below is what that commitment looks like in concrete terms.

VISION

A diploma is the beginning, not the destination.

Most study-abroad agencies frame their work as ending at acceptance: visa secured, plane boarded, commission earned. The real challenges — settling in, navigating a new working culture, deciding whether to stay — start the day after.

We are building a set of services that travel with the student through those years. Not all of them are live today. The roadmap below describes what is available now, what is coming next, and the timing we are committing to.

ROADMAP

What we are building, and when.

Four services that complete the path from arrival to settled life. The dates below are commitments, not aspirations — though they remain subject to scope and team availability.

PHASE 2 · TARGET Q3 2026

Part-time work matching

We connect students who hold appropriate visa eligibility — typically TOPIK 3 or higher — with vetted part-time roles. Language tutoring, café and service positions, light office work tied to the student's program. Hours that fit an academic load, employers that have agreed to work with international students.

Currently in scoping with the first cohort of partner universities.

PHASE 2 · TARGET Q4 2026

Internship and field placements

Structured internships at companies that have signed on to host international students. Coordinated through our university partners and tied where possible to the student's degree path — engineering students into engineering teams, business students into business teams.

Initial pilot with three partner universities planned.

PHASE 3 · TARGET 2027

Post-graduation employment matching

We connect graduating students with Korean employers actively hiring international talent — particularly in IT, engineering, finance, design, and the creative industries. Matching, interview preparation, and visa transition support together.

Building the employer side of this network now.

PHASE 3 · TARGET 2027

Long-term settlement support

Visa transitions through D-10, E-7, and F-2. Housing, healthcare, and the longer-tail decisions that come with making a life in Korea. We do not plan to be a relocation firm — but we plan to be the team a student can call when those decisions arrive.

Scope to be defined with our first cohort of long-staying graduates.

WHY THIS MATTERS

Most agencies disappear after the visa.

The standard agency model ends at the visa stamp. Commission paid, file closed. Students arriving in Korea after that moment are largely on their own — in a country whose language they may not yet speak, navigating banking, housing, and university systems for the first time.

The hardest year for an international student is often the first year after graduation. Visa transitions, work search, lease renewals, the question of whether to stay or return. That is exactly when the agency that placed them has typically moved on to next year's cohort.

Building services for the years after admission is harder than building services for the years before. Fewer agencies do it, which is precisely why we believe it is worth doing well.

PARTNER WITH US

Build a partnership that thinks past graduation.

Open partner applications take ten to fifteen minutes. We respond within five business days.

Become a partner