The next ELT leader in your country may not be today’s biggest name

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8 Min Read

Across many countries, the signals are impossible to miss: international study has moved from elite aspiration to mainstream ambition, parents are planning global futures, professionals are studying migration routes, universities want applicants who can handle academic communication, employers are placing a premium on English proficiency, and governments are redrawing study, visa and work rules.

Together, these forces are turning language preparation into something far bigger than test prep. It is becoming a critical layer of the study abroad and global mobility ecosystem.

The organisation that captures this shift may not be today’s biggest test-prep brand. It may be a national education group, an online learning company, a study-abroad platform, a university network, a migration services brand, a digital marketplace or a new partnership built around the opportunity itself.

The next leader in language preparation may simply be the one that reads the shift first and moves before the market catches up.

For years, English test preparation ran on a simple promise: attend classes, take mock tests, get corrected, practise again. That promise still has value. But it is no longer enough.

A student preparing for IELTS, PTE, TOEFL, DET, LanguageCert or any other high-stakes English exam now wants more than a result. With one-skill retakes, new speaking tasks, online-first formats and changing score models reshaping the landscape, test choice itself has become more strategic. Which test fits my profile? Why am I losing marks? How close am I to my target? Should I book the exam now, or fix one more weakness first?

That is not a request for more practice. It is a demand for readiness.

The English Language Training market is moving in the same direction, valued by Research and Markets at $95 billion in 2026 and projected to reach $122.7 billion by 2030.

At the same time, the tests themselves are changing fast: TOEFL iBT has announced a new 2026 format, IELTS is moving away from paper-based delivery from mid-2026, PTE Academic added new speaking tasks and scoring updates in 2025, LanguageCert offers secure online exams with live remote invigilation, and the Duolingo English Test is accepted by thousands of institutions worldwide.

The message is clear: English preparation is no longer about drilling for one exam. It is about helping learners make confident decisions in a faster, smarter and more complex testing world.

This is where AI earns its place, not by replacing teachers, but by making practice speak.

For too long, practice has ended with a score. It should reveal the cause behind that score. A writing task should show whether the issue is ideas, structure, grammar, vocabulary, coherence or task response. A speaking attempt should expose hesitation, pauses, pronunciation gaps, rhythm and confidence patterns. A mock test should not just report performance. It should show what to fix next.

That is the real value of AI in language preparation. It turns practice into evidence and evidence into action.

Credibility still matters. Automated scoring is useful, but not infallible. AI works best when it supports expert judgement, follows recognised scoring criteria and helps students make better readiness decisions before they spend money on the real exam.

Used responsibly, its value spreads across the ecosystem. Students know what to fix. Parents see progress. Counsellors advise with more confidence. Teachers intervene with greater precision. Institutions maintain quality across locations, products and learner segments.

The next phase of language preparation will not be won by adding more tests, videos or question banks. It will be won by those who connect content, assessment, AI diagnostics, expert judgement, learner dashboards, analytics and readiness tracking into one intelligent system.

The sharpest opportunity lies in countries where demand is growing faster than the local preparation infrastructure. This is especially visible across APAC and, within it, South Asia, where student mobility ambitions, agency networks and family-led study-abroad decisions are expanding fast.

QS projects around 8.5 million international students by 2030, while ICEF’s 2025 Agent Voice survey shows that affordability and ease of getting a study visa remain central to student decisions. The signs are clear: agencies are expanding, online learning is rising, and families are asking sharper questions before committing money.

The deeper gaps are even more important. Students are unsure which test to choose. Digital learners have content but little guidance. Consultants influence decisions but often lack strong preparation support. Parents want proof, not promises. Organisations may have reach, but not the academic technology to turn demand into a scalable preparation business.

These are not just market gaps. They are signs of a country waiting for someone to organise the opportunity.

That is why language-preparation partnerships should be seen as far more than software distribution. The real opportunity is to help build a country’s readiness layer for study abroad and global mobility: realistic test engines, AI-led speaking and writing evaluation, learner dashboards, expert reports, mobile practice, predictive readiness, analytics and continuous improvement.

But this is not a plug-and-play technology project. It is a specialised academic, assessment and platform business. Building it from scratch means creating content, scoring logic, test interfaces, analytics, feedback systems and academic update cycles, all while the market is already moving.

So the strategic question is not simply, “Can we build it?” It is, “Where does our real strength lie?”

If an organisation already has student reach, brand trust, online distribution, university relationships, counsellor networks, migration pathways, regional presence or national market access, building every academic and technology layer internally may cost time the market will not wait for.

At TCYonline, our work with English test-prep and education partners across markets for more than two decades has shown us how quickly this conversation has moved from mock tests to intelligent preparation infrastructure.

For organisations with reach, trust or national distribution, the opportunity is no longer just to offer English test preparation. It is to help build the readiness layer that modern student mobility now requires.

Every major transition creates new leaders. AI is already influencing language preparation, but influence alone does not build a market. Organisation does. The next ELT leader may be the one that organises this shift first.

About the author

Mukta Gogia leads global partnerships and strategic collaborations at TCYonline, working with education institutions, study-abroad networks and assessment organisations across international markets. Her work focuses on student mobility, English-language readiness and educational technology, with particular experience in building large-scale learning and assessment ecosystems through strategic country-level partnerships and distribution networks.

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