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As Washington Pours Billions Into Quantum Computing, One Company Says the Real Race Is Defending the Data

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Issued on behalf of Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. (CSE: QSE) (OTCQB: QSEGF) (FSE: VN80)
A wave of U.S. government investment is accelerating quantum computing — and with it, the urgency for organizations to protect data that must stay confidential for years or decades to come.

NEW YORK, June 4, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — USA News Group News Commentary – There is a quiet contradiction running through the most exciting technology story of the decade. The same breakthroughs that make quantum computing so promising — the ability to solve problems that would stall the most powerful classical machines — also threaten to unravel the encryption that protects nearly every sensitive digital record in existence. As governments rush to fund the race for quantum capability, a smaller field of companies — among them Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. (CSE: QSE) (OTCQB: QSEGF) (FSE: VN80) — is making a pointed argument: the more powerful these machines become, the more urgent it is to defend the data they could one day break.

That argument moved into sharper focus in late May, when Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. (CSE: QSE) (OTCQB: QSEGF) (FSE: VN80) — a post-quantum cybersecurity company focused on quantum-resilient data protection, identity security, secure storage and cryptographic migration readiness — weighed in on a major signal from Washington. The company commented on reports that the U.S. Department of Commerce had entered into nine letters of intent to provide approximately US$2 billion to support the U.S. quantum computing sector, an investment QSE framed as evidence that quantum has crossed from research curiosity into national technology strategy.

“Government investment at this scale sends a clear message: quantum computing is moving from research into national technology strategy,” said Ted Carefoot, Chief Executive Officer of QSE. “That progress is exciting, but it also accelerates the need for organizations to understand and address their post-quantum cybersecurity exposure. Sensitive data encrypted today may need to remain confidential for years or decades, which is why preparation cannot wait.”

The “Harvest Now, Decrypt Later” Problem
Carefoot’s point about data that must remain confidential for years or decades gets at the heart of why post-quantum security is not a problem organizations can comfortably defer. Encrypted information that is intercepted today can be stored cheaply and indefinitely, waiting for the day a sufficiently capable quantum computer can unlock it. For records with long shelf lives — government files, financial data, healthcare records, critical-infrastructure systems and other long-lived sensitive information — the threat is not theoretical to the institutions responsible for protecting them. The clock on confidentiality starts the moment the data is created, not the moment quantum machines mature.

It is against that backdrop that the U.S. funding commitment reads as something more than an industrial-policy headline. Each dollar accelerating quantum capability is, in QSE’s framing, also a dollar shortening the runway organizations have to get their cryptographic houses in order. The company has argued that quantum investment and post-quantum readiness are, in Carefoot’s words, “two sides of the same transformation” — and that as governments accelerate one, enterprises must accelerate the other.

From Awareness to Action
What sets QSE’s recent messaging apart from the broader chorus of quantum commentary is that the company says it has already moved past the product-development stage and into commercial deployment. In a corporate update earlier in May, QSE described itself as operating a fully built, commercially available post-quantum cybersecurity platform — one designed to help organizations move, as the company puts it, from awareness to action.

The update carried specifics that are unusual for a company at this stage of a frontier market. QSE said it is generating revenue, currently serves 262 customer accounts, and is seeing growing pipeline activity across enterprise, government and regulated-industry channels. The company characterized this as a shift into a commercial scaling phase, following a period of product development, platform integration, certification milestones and strategic partner expansion.

“QSE is now operating from a position of commercial strength,” Carefoot said in that update. “Our product suite is fully built, our technology is in market, and our focus has shifted decisively toward scaling revenue, expanding customer relationships and converting a growing pipeline of enterprise and government opportunities. We believe the combination of regulatory urgency, market readiness and QSE’s differentiated platform creates a significant growth opportunity for the Company in 2026 and beyond.”

The platform itself is organized around three plain-language functions. The first, Assess, helps organizations understand where their data and encryption may be vulnerable to future quantum threats. The second, Protect, secures sensitive data using quantum-resilient encryption, secure storage and deployment tools designed to work alongside existing systems. The third, Control Access, governs who can reach sensitive systems and data through quantum-secure login and identity tools. Taken together, QSE says, those functions support customers across the full post-quantum security lifecycle — from initial assessment and planning through deployment, identity protection, secure storage and ongoing security infrastructure.

Crucially, the company emphasizes that its approach is designed to strengthen existing security infrastructure without requiring a disruptive rip-and-replace process. For large institutions with sprawling legacy systems, the prospect of swapping out cryptography wholesale is daunting enough to encourage paralysis; QSE’s pitch is that quantum resilience can be layered onto what organizations already run, lowering the barrier to getting started.

A Multi-Stream Commercial Model
Behind the three-function framework is a revenue model built to capture demand in more than one way. QSE has said its commercial model is generating recurring SaaS revenue while continuing to scale enterprise deployments, usage-based entropy and secure storage services, and on-premises hardware deployments for customers that require greater data autonomy and internal key control. That last category matters in sectors where institutions are unwilling — or, for regulatory reasons, unable — to hand control of their most sensitive keys to an outside cloud.

The company is also pursuing a partner-led expansion strategy, working through value-added distributors, resellers, system integrators and regional partners with established access to enterprise, government and regulated-industry customers. Management has said it believes this channel approach can accelerate market penetration, expand geographic reach and help convert pipeline opportunities into long-term customer relationships — a route that lets a relatively young company extend its reach without building out a massive direct sales force first.

Deepening the Bench
Scaling a frontier-technology company is as much about people as product, and QSE moved on that front in late May with the appointment of Michael Massing as Chief Technology Officer, effective June 1, 2026. Massing brings more than 30 years of experience across cybersecurity, cryptography, secure data management, artificial intelligence, blockchain, network architecture and advanced computing systems — a breadth that maps closely onto the technical demands of a post-quantum platform.

His résumé reads like a tour through the modern security industry. Massing previously served as CTO and VP of Engineering at TokenX Labs and LifeSite Inc., where he led the development of zero-knowledge authentication and secure digital asset management systems. He also served as Executive Director of Engineering at Dell SonicWall, where he managed the Unified Threat Management business unit and helped scale enterprise cybersecurity product lines to approximately US$400 million in annual sales. Earlier, he founded SecureCom Networks, later acquired by SonicWall, and Mass Technology Inc., providing technical solutions to organizations including Cisco, Sophos and NASA — with work on advanced computing systems and real-time operating systems supporting NASA’s SETI initiatives. He holds eight issued patents in cryptography, networking and cybersecurity, and earned a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Santa Clara University.

“Michael’s appointment is an important step in QSE’s next phase of growth,” Carefoot said. “He brings deep cryptography expertise, enterprise cybersecurity experience and a proven record of building technologies that can scale into large commercial markets. As demand for post-quantum security accelerates, his leadership will be valuable as we continue expanding our platform, supporting customer deployments and pursuing larger commercial opportunities.”

The appointment comes as QSE continues expanding its enterprise post-quantum security platform, including its QPA migration readiness system, qREK entropy infrastructure, QAuth identity platform, and decentralized encrypted storage architecture — the named building blocks that sit beneath the Assess, Protect and Control Access functions the company markets to customers.

A Crowded, Fast-Moving Field
QSE is not alone in racing to meet the post-quantum moment, and the breadth of the field underscores how seriously markets are taking the threat. On the cryptography-hardware side, SEALSQ Corp (NASDAQ: LAES) builds quantum-resistant semiconductors and public-key-infrastructure trust services, positioning itself as a pure-play in quantum-safe chips for connected-device, identity and IoT markets. On the software side, Arqit Quantum Inc. (NASDAQ: ARQQ) has pioneered a symmetric-key agreement platform designed to keep networked devices and data at rest secure against both conventional and quantum-enabled attacks, and has been expanding into telecom and enterprise channels through partnerships.

The urgency these security firms describe is, of course, driven by the progress of the quantum-computing builders themselves. IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) remains the bellwether among publicly traded quantum-hardware companies, developing trapped-ion processors and quantum-networking systems — the very class of machines whose maturation defines the timeline security vendors are racing against. And at the enterprise level, established cybersecurity giants such as Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ: PANW) frame quantum readiness as an emerging extension of the broader security mandate they already serve, a signal that post-quantum protection is migrating from niche concern toward mainstream enterprise requirement.

Within that landscape, QSE’s pitch is one of practicality and timing: a fully built platform, already in market, that layers quantum resilience onto existing systems. Readers can review the company’s positioning in more detail on its USA News Group profile page.

Why It Matters Now
QSE’s read on its own market is that post-quantum cybersecurity is quickly becoming a board-level, compliance-level and national-security priority. The company points to a convergence of forces — regulatory pressure, cryptographic migration requirements and enterprise demand — that it believes positions it to capitalize on the accelerating global transition toward post-quantum security infrastructure. Governments, regulators and large enterprises, the company argues, are no longer treating post-quantum security as a future consideration; they are beginning to demand concrete action, including cryptographic inventories, preparedness assessments, migration roadmaps and the implementation of quantum-resilient controls.

“Post-quantum cybersecurity is quickly becoming a board-level, compliance-level and national-security priority,” Carefoot said. “With a solid client-base and revenue generation established, a fully built platform in market and a growing pipeline of enterprise and government opportunities, QSE is now focused on scaling aggressively across the sectors where quantum-resilient security is becoming mission-critical.”

The story Washington is telling with its US$2 billion in letters of intent is, on its surface, a story about building quantum machines. QSE’s contribution to the conversation is to flip the lens: every advance toward that capability is also a countdown for the data that quantum could one day expose. Whether the company’s 262 customer accounts and multi-stream model prove to be an early foothold in a vast market or simply an early chapter, its central premise is hard to dismiss — that in the quantum era, building the machine and defending against it are not separate races, but the same one.

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SOURCES:
[1] Quantum Secure Encryption Corp., “Quantum Secure Encryption Provides Corporate Update as Company Scales Commercial Deployment,” May 12, 2026 (Newsfile Corp.).
[2] Quantum Secure Encryption Corp., “Quantum Secure Encryption Highlights Post-Quantum Cybersecurity Urgency Following U.S. Quantum Computing Investment,” May 22, 2026 (Newsfile Corp.).
[3] Quantum Secure Encryption Corp., “Quantum Secure Encryption Appoints Cybersecurity and AI Technology Veteran Michael Massing as Chief Technology Officer,” May 26, 2026 (Newsfile Corp.).
[4] U.S. Department of Commerce / NIST, “Department of Commerce Announces Letters of Intent With 9 Companies for $2 Billion to Accelerate U.S. Leadership in Quantum Computing,” May 2026.

DISCLAIMER:
Nothing in this publication should be considered as personalized financial advice. We are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular financial situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decision. This is neither an offer nor recommendation to buy or sell any security. We hold no investment licenses and are thus neither licensed nor qualified to provide investment advice. The content in this report or email is not provided to any individual with a view toward their individual circumstances. USA News Group is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Market IQ Media Group, Inc. (“MIQ”). MIQ has previously been paid a fee for QSE – Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. advertising and digital media from the company directly which has since expired. There may be 3rd parties who may have shares QSE – Quantum Secure Encryption Corp., and may liquidate their shares which could have a negative effect on the price of the stock. Previous compensation constitutes a conflict of interest as to our ability to remain objective in our communication regarding the profiled company. Because of this conflict, individuals are strongly encouraged to not use this publication as the basis for any investment decision. The owner/operator of MIQ own shares of QSE – Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. which were purchased as a part of a private placement, and in the open market. MIQ reserves the right to buy and sell, and will buy and sell shares of QSE – Quantum Secure Encryption Corp. at any time hereafter without any further notice. We also expect further compensation in the future as an ongoing digital media effort to increase visibility for the company, no further notice will be given, but let this disclaimer serve as notice that all material disseminated by MIQ has been approved by the above mentioned company; we own shares of the mentioned company that we will sell, and we also reserve the right to buy shares of the company in the open market, or through further private placements and/or investment vehicles. While all information is believed to be reliable, it is not guaranteed by us to be accurate. Individuals should assume that all information contained in our newsletter is not trustworthy unless verified by their own independent research. Also, because events and circumstances frequently do not occur as expected, there will likely be differences between any predictions and actual results. Always consult a licensed investment professional before making any investment decision. Be extremely careful, investing in securities carries a high degree of risk; you may likely lose some or all of the investment.

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Hedgeye Capital Allocation ETF (HECA) and Hedgeye Quality Growth ETF (HGRO) Now Available Through LPL Financial

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STAMFORD, Conn., June 4, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Hedgeye Asset Management, a provider of actively managed exchange-traded funds built on Hedgeye’s proprietary research, macro process and risk management framework, today announced that the Hedgeye Capital Allocation ETF (NYSE: HECA) and the Hedgeye Quality Growth ETF (NYSE: HGRO) are available through LPL Financial, expanding accessibility for LPL’s more than 22,000 financial advisors and their clients.

LPL Financial is the largest independent broker-dealer in the United States and a leading provider of investment and business solutions to financial advisors across the country.

HECA: Macro-Driven Capital Allocation With a Risk-Managed Approach

HECA is an actively managed ETF designed to allocate capital across asset classes using Hedgeye’s proprietary macro framework. Managed by David Salem, HECA seeks to deliver a rules-based, drawdown-aware approach to portfolio construction.

The strategy evaluates the macro environment across growth, inflation and policy conditions, with the ability to adjust exposures as market regimes evolve. By combining Hedgeye’s top-down research process with a disciplined capital allocation framework, HECA is designed to help investors navigate changing market conditions over a full market cycle.

HGRO: Quality Growth With a Long-Term Investment Horizon

HGRO is an actively managed ETF focused on large-cap quality growth companies. Managed by Sam Rahman, HGRO seeks to identify durable businesses with strong competitive positions, attractive long-term growth prospects and high-quality financial characteristics.

The strategy emphasizes business quality, management execution, balance sheet strength and long-term earnings power. HGRO is designed for investors seeking exposure to companies that can compound value over a multi-year horizon.

“The availability of HECA and HGRO through LPL Financial is an important step in broadening advisor access to Hedgeye’s actively managed ETF lineup,” said John McNamara, Chief Investment Officer at Hedgeye Asset Management. “Both strategies are built to give advisors differentiated tools for client portfolios, combining Hedgeye’s investment research, disciplined process and focus on risk management in an efficient ETF structure.”

About Hedgeye Asset Management

Hedgeye Asset Management delivers investment strategies built on Hedgeye’s proprietary research, macro process and risk management framework. The firm’s ETF lineup is designed to provide investors and advisors with transparent, actively managed strategies across equities, capital allocation and risk-managed market exposure.

Media Contact:
Dan Holland
dholland@hedgeye.com 

Important Information

Before investing in the fund, the investment objective, risks, charges and expenses must be considered carefully before investing. The statutory prospectus contains this and other important information about the fund. Copies of the fund’s prospectus may be obtained by visiting www.hedgeyeam.com or calling +1 (888) 711-8292. Read it carefully before investing.

Investing involves risks including the risk of principal loss. The Adviser is newly formed and has not previously managed an ETF. Accordingly, investors in the Fund bear the risk that the Adviser’s inexperience may limit its effectiveness. 

Diversification neither ensures a profit nor guarantees against loss in a declining market.

The Fund is a recently organized management investment company with no operating history. As a result, prospective investors do not have a track record or history on which to base their investment decisions.

As an actively managed investment portfolio, the Fund is subject to the Adviser’s investment decisions about individual securities impact on the Fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective. there is no guarantee that the Adviser’s investment strategy will meet it’s investment objective or produce the desired results. Large cap companies may be less able than mid and small capitalization companies to adapt to changing market conditions. Investments in stocks of mid-capitalization companies may be subject to more abrupt or erratic market movements

The Fund’s investment strategies may employ quantitative algorithms and models that rely heavily on the use of proprietary and non-proprietary data, Models may also have hidden biases or exposure to broad structural or sentiment shifts. There can be no assurance that use of a quantitative model will enable the Fund to achieve positive returns or outperform the market.

When the Fund uses derivatives, there may be imperfect correlation between the value of the underlying instrument and the derivative, which may prevent the Fund from achieving its investment objective.

ETFs are subject to additional risks that do not apply to conventional mutual funds, including the risks that the market price of an ETF’s shares may trade at a premium or discount to its net asset value, an active secondary trading market may not develop or be maintained, or trading may be halted by the exchange in which they trade, which may impact an ETF’s ability to sell its shares. Shares of any ETF are bought and sold at market price (not NAV) and are not individually redeemed from the ETF. Brokerage commissions will reduce returns.

Non-Diversification Risk. The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it may invest a greater percentage of its assets in a particular issuer than a diversified fund. Non-diversification increases the risk that the value of the Fund could go down because of the poor performance of a single investment or limited number of investments.

In addition, the fund’s principle risks include derivative risk, options risk, levering risk, counterparty risk, depositary receipts risk, securities lending risk, and short-term treasury and cash holding risk. For additional information about these and other fund risks, please refer to the “Principal Investment Risks” section of the prospectus.

The Distributor is Foreside Fund Services, LLC.

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SOURCE Hedgeye Asset Management

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Canada’s National AI Strategy: Mila Welcomes an Ambitious Vision Propelling Canada Toward Scientific and Technological Leadership

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MONTRÉAL, June 4, 2026 /CNW/ – Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute enthusiastically welcomes the government of Canada’s newly unveiled national artificial intelligence (AI) strategy: “AI for All.” Built around six comprehensive pillars including protecting Canadians, safeguarding technological sovereignty, building international alliances, and scaling Canadian champions, this roadmap establishes a decisive framework for Canada’s technological future that reflects the vision Mila has championed since its inception.

As one of the world’s largest and most renowned academic AI research centers, Mila views the new strategy as a critical, high-stakes turning point that secures Canada’s global competitive edge.

“This strategy reflects the core values Mila has always championed: driving scientific excellence, propelling impactful innovations, ensuring the safety and responsible deployment of AI, and attending to the cultural and linguistic relevance of the technology,” says Valérie Pisano, President and Chief Executive Officer of Mila. “Canada has a world-class AI ecosystem and the foundations needed to lead. At this pivotal moment, we must deploy this vision with an acute sense of urgency. This new strategy allows us to anchor in our core strengths while building technology that reflects our values and serves our collective interests. By staying true to who we are, we can build a prosperous future that asserts Canada’s place as a global leader in this new era for AI.”

Canada’s new national AI strategy marks a structural evolution in the country’s innovation ecosystem, elevating frontier capabilities to critical national assets. The strategy explicitly highlights domestic champions like Cohere and LawZero, the safe-by-design AI organization founded by Yoshua Bengio and incubated at Mila. In doing so, it underscores Canada’s position as one of the few nations with the domestic capacity to build and scale world-leading commercial solutions.

The government’s strategic expansion of the Canada CIFAR AI Chairs program, alongside dedicated funding for Founders-in-Residence initiatives, public-interest open-source projects, Indigenous-led AI and large-scale AI literacy programs, provides a powerful blueprint for national success.

Via these initiatives, the strategy highlights several of Mila’s flagship projects as national models for impact, including the First Languages AI Reality program for Indigenous leadership. In alignment with the strategy’s emphasis on developing tools adapted to Canada’s diverse, multicultural society, Mila is also advancing Quebec French language AI and multilingual evaluation through its new partnership with Cohere. Furthermore, Canada’s commitment to public-interest AI and open-source technology directly aligns with Mila’s recent partnerships with Mozilla and Robust Open Online Safety Tools (ROOST), which advance inclusive AI development and youth online safety to help ensure AI benefits for everyone. At the same time, the strategy’s focus on capital scaling mirrors initiatives like Mila’s Venture Scientist Fund, created alongside Inovia Capital to bridge research with investment, accelerate commercialization, and turn lab-born AI into global companies.

“Seeing AI research play such a central role in Canada’s renewed AI strategy is excellent news,” adds Hugo Larochelle, Scientific Director of Mila. “The expansion of the Canada CIFAR AI Chairs program strengthens the cornerstone of our scientific ecosystem. By connecting this research backbone to high-impact projects that deliver significant public good, as well as initiatives like the Canadian AI Safety Institute and our own AI Safety Studio, Canada is ensuring it can guide AI development responsibly and on our own terms.”

Looking ahead, Mila will leverage this momentum to deepen its collaboration with trusted global allies. By working hand-in-hand with international partners, governments, industry, and the other national AI institutes, Amii and the Vector Institute, Mila is prepared to implement this national vision with the urgency the moment demands, ensuring AI builds shared prosperity that works for all Canadians.

About Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute
Founded by Professor Yoshua Bengio, Mila – Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute is the world’s largest academic AI research center specialized in deep learning, home to a community over 1500 strong. Based in Montreal, Mila was created out of a unique partnership between Université de Montréal and McGill University, dedicated to advancing scientific breakthroughs that drive innovation and ensure AI benefits everyone. A non-profit organization, Mila is strongly supported by the Government of Canada through the Pan-Canadian AI Strategy and by the Government of Quebec. Internationally recognized for its influential research, global innovation partnerships, and leadership in multilateral efforts on responsible AI, Mila continues to shape the future of AI worldwide. For more information, visit mila.quebec.

SOURCE Mila – Quebec AI Institute

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EducationDynamics Acquires Net Natives, Creating a New Growth Partner for Higher Education

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The combination unites two of higher education’s most trusted and innovative partners at a pivotal moment for the sector

LENEXA, Kan. and BRIGHTON, United Kingdom, June 4, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — EducationDynamics (“EDDY”), a 40-year higher education marketing, reputation, and enrollment management firm, today announced it has acquired UK-based Net Natives, a global technology-enabled enrollment marketing agency known for its fast, intelligent, and measurable approach to institutional growth.

The combined organizations serve more than 400 institutional clients across more than 50 countries, backed by almost six decades of collective higher education expertise. Together, they give institutions what the sector has lacked: a single growth partner that uses integrated strategies to move from insight to action, not a patchwork of separate solutions.

“Higher education is not dealing with incremental change. It is dealing with structural disruption,” said Brent Ramdin, CEO of EducationDynamics. “The demographic pressures are real, AI is rewiring how students find institutions, and almost every part of the higher education model is evolving. This acquisition allows us to broaden our impact to the market with a genuinely unique model—one that connects strategy, execution, and intelligence in a way that gives institutions a sustainable path forward, not just better tactics.”

A Partner for a Sector Under Structural Pressure

Higher education is not having a bad year. It is navigating a defining decade.

Demographic shifts, changing perceptions of higher education’s value, and the rapid rise of AI are reshaping how institutions attract students, build reputation, and demonstrate their worth. Prospective students, families, and policymakers increasingly form judgments about an institution before any direct contact, and that reputation is now more visible, measurable, and influential in real time.

These are no longer isolated enrollment or marketing challenges. They are institution-wide growth problems that require a more integrated approach, one built around how today’s audiences and modern learners actually form judgments, engage, and act.

What the Combination Creates

The combined organization pairs EducationDynamics’ depth in institutional strategy and reputation with Net Natives’ technology, data, and global audience reach, giving institutions a single partner equipped for the full growth equation. Net Natives, headquartered in Brighton, UK, with offices in New York, has earned a reputation for helping institutions understand, engage, and grow key student audiences across undergraduate, graduate, and international. Its proprietary Akero platform helps institutions better understand the relationship between investment, engagement, and growth outcomes, providing a level of visibility and accountability rarely available in higher education.

EducationDynamics brings four decades of experience helping US colleges and universities solve their hardest growth problems, from enrollment and reputation to institutional transformation. Its EDDY Intelligence platform brings AI and data to allow its clients to make informed decisions in a rapidly changing environment. In the months ahead, the combined organization will introduce integrated offerings that pair Net Natives’ platform and audience capabilities with EducationDynamics’ strategic and reputational expertise, giving institutions a replicable path from insight to enrollment.

“We have always believed institutions deserve greater visibility into what drives results and how investments translate into outcomes,” said Steve Evans, Founder and CEO of Net Natives. “Joining EducationDynamics allows us to extend our global reach even further, combining our technology and audience expertise with their scale and sector experience to give more institutions a path to growth.”

About EducationDynamics 

EducationDynamics is a leading growth partner to higher education institutions, helping colleges and universities drive revenue and strengthen reputation through strategic growth advisory services, technology, marketing, enrollment management, and communications solutions. Headquartered in Lenexa, KS, the company serves institutions across the United States and internationally. For more information, visit educationdynamics.com.

About Net Natives 

Net Natives is a global higher education marketing and technology company providing data-driven advertising, creative services, and enrollment strategy to institutions across the U.S., and Europe. Its proprietary Akero platform enables advanced attribution and performance optimization across the student recruitment funnel. Headquartered in Brighton, UK, with offices in New York. For more information, visit www.netnatives.com.

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SOURCE EducationDynamics

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