Incorporated, Private | |
Industry | Early Childhood Education |
Founded | Montgomery, Alabama, U.S. (July 14, 1969 ) |
Founders | Perry Mendel |
Headquarters | Portland, Oregon, USA |
Number of locations
|
1,700 locations (2014) |
Key people
|
Tom Wyatt, CEO of Knowledge Universe Dr. Elanna Yalow, CEO Early Learning Programs |
Number of employees
|
24,000 |
Parent | KinderCare Education, LLC |
Website | www |
KinderCare Learning Centers is an American operator of for-profit child care and early childhood education facilities founded in 1969 and currently owned by KinderCare Education. The company provides educational programs for children from six weeks to 12 years old. Some 200,000 children are enrolled in more than 1,600 early childhood education community centers, over 600 before-and-after school programs, and over 100 employer-sponsored centers in 39 states and the District of Columbia. KinderCare Education employs approximately 30,000 people in the United States; its headquarters are in Portland, Oregon.
Perry Mendel, a real estate developer, founded KinderCare after speculating that increasing numbers of women entering the work force would increase demand for preschool child care. The company began as Kinder-Care Nursery Schools, and the first facility was opened on July 14, 1969 accommodating 70 children
The idea behind the firm was to provide child care in bulk using economies of scale. Other companies such as La Petite Academy has the same idea, but Kinder-Care executed the concept most aggressively.
A second facility was opened in 1970, and the company changed its name to Kinder-Care Learning Centers, Inc. n. By 1971, 19 centers were in operation and the first infant care was offered.
The firm went public in 1972 and established a new corporate headquarters in Montgomery. To help with marketing, Mendel employed Richard Grassgreen, an IRS attorney and tax expert. He would later become CEO.
By 1974 the company had 60 centers located in 17 states and over 500 employees nationwide. The company's first major acquisition came in 1977, when it purchased the 15 facilities of Playcare. In 1979, it acquired Mini-Skools, Living and Learning, and American Pre-Schools. In 1985, the company opened its 1,000th center.
In 1987, it was reported annual revenues of $900 million, and analysts were remarking on the company's rapid growth, observing that stock had soared from 12 cents a share to $20 at its high in mid-1987. During this time, Kinder-Care was expanding at the rate of one new center every three days.
In 1987, Kinder-Care acquired Sylvan Learning Centers, a provider of supplemental instruction to children and adults, and the largest franchiser of its kind.
Chief Executive Grassgreen led the company on an ill-conceived diversification plan in the late 1980s. The idea was suggested by Michael Milken, an investor from the firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert. In the 1980s, Kinder-Care acquired a wide variety of companies such as American Savings for $188 million. They also purchased photo studios, shoe stores and even invested in a foreign fertilizer manufacturer. As a result, the company's debt load increased from $10 million to about $620 million in 1988. The company found itself in deep financial trouble after the stock market crash in October 1987.