Culture Office

High Point University has turned ‘life skills’ into a magnet for the Wall Street elite, with a 99.2% job placement rate


As Gen Z graduates enter one of the toughest job markets in recent memory, doubts about the return on investment of a college degree are intensifying. Many young professionals report sending out countless applications with little response, while employers voice concerns that new hires lack the readiness to thrive in real-world workplaces.

But in suburban North Carolina, one private university is posting outcomes that defy the national narrative.

At High Point University, 99.2% of the Class of 2024 were employed or enrolled in graduate programs within six months of graduation—14 percentage points above the national average. 

The school's leadership says the difference isn't found in traditional academics alone. Instead, High Point has branded itself as the nation's "premier life skills university," betting that the future of higher education lies not just in what students know, but in how they show up.

> "It's clear that students and parents expect maximum return on investment from a college education," a High Point spokesperson told *Fortune*. "It's also clear that employers need graduates who have not only technical skills but also life skills that outlast technical skills, which are constantly changing."

 Life Skills 101: The Curriculum That Teaches Confidence

At High Point, career readiness isn't an elective—it's embedded in the core experience.

Every student takes **Life Skills 101**, a required course taught personally by University President Nido Qubein. The syllabus covers confidence-building, effective communication, personal branding, and professional presence—competencies that employers consistently rank as critical but rarely see in entry-level candidates.

The university also brings industry icons directly to campus. Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak serves as High Point's "innovator in residence," mentoring students and offering a real-world perspective on innovation and entrepreneurship.

While similar programs at other institutions are often reserved for seniors or business majors, High Point has made soft skills development universal—starting in year one and reinforcing it throughout all four years.

> "HPU is about more than degrees; it's about life skills," the school's pitch reads. "Our students learn practical wisdom and career skills that prepare them for success in any field."

What Employers Say Gen Z Is Missing—and How HPU Responds

High Point's curriculum is built around six traits leadership says employers actively seek in new hires:

- Motivation

- Emotional intelligence  

- Coachability

- Technical competence

- Temperament

- Work ethic


These aren't abstract ideals. They're reinforced through workshops on crafting elevator pitches, navigating workplace dynamics, and turning internships into job offers. Students practice networking in a mock airplane cabin, learn to present with poise, and receive feedback on their professional demeanor—not just their résumés.

The demand for this kind of preparation is real. A report from tech education company General Assembly found that fewer than half of all workers—and only 12% of mid-level executives—believe entry-level employees are adequately prepared for the workforce.

Business leaders are vocal about the gap. Jon Gray, president and COO of Blackstone, told employees in 2025:

> "Most of you went to elite universities. You did really well; you were at the top of your class. You are people who are successful by nature and hardworking. But when I look around at the people who truly succeeded at Blackstone, it's not the 'good enough' crowd. It's the people who are like, 'I'm gonna make sure I get this absolutely right.'"

Even tech visionaries are questioning the status quo. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently remarked on the *This Past Weekend* podcast:

> "It would be one thing if [college] was just kind of like a social experience, but you started off neutral. The fact that it's not preparing you for the jobs that you need and you're kind of starting off in this big [financial] hole—I think that's not good."

For High Point, these critiques aren't setbacks—they're validation of their model.


 Growth, Amenities, and the "Wall Street Pipeline"

Located in the Piedmont Triad region of North Carolina, High Point competes for students in a state dense with respected public and private institutions. Since March 2020, more than 80 nonprofit colleges nationwide have closed or merged—a stark reminder of the financial pressures facing higher education.


Under Qubein's two-decade leadership, High Point has not only survived but expanded: its student body has tripled, and last fall welcomed its largest first-year class and highest total enrollment in history—6,550 students.


A key pillar of that growth has been attracting families with greater financial means.


> "Half of Wall Street sends their kids to this school," Qubein told *The Wall Street Journal* in 2025.


Like many private institutions, High Point uses full-pay students to subsidize aid for others. The average financial aid package is approximately $23,000, while the total annual cost of attendance exceeds $71,000.


For that investment, students access distinctive resources:

- Complimentary car inspections before holiday breaks

- An on-campus steakhouse for professional dining practice

- Six heated outdoor pools, each with a hot tub

- A mock airplane cabin for practicing "chance encounter" networking at 30,000 feet


Critics might call these luxuries. Qubein disagrees.


> "As far as I'm concerned, we have no amenities," he told the *Journal*. "We are not in the business of pampering students. We are in the business of preparing our students."


 The Bigger Question: Can Life Skills Scale?

High Point's results are impressive, but they raise broader questions about accessibility and replication. With a price tag exceeding $70,000 per year, this model isn't feasible for most families or institutions. Can the emphasis on soft skills, mentorship, and experiential preparation be adapted to public universities or community colleges with tighter budgets?


Moreover, while life skills undoubtedly matter, they don't replace technical proficiency. The most successful graduates likely benefit from both: domain expertise *and* the emotional intelligence to apply it effectively.


Still, High Point's approach offers a compelling counterpoint to the growing cynicism about higher education. In an era where algorithms screen résumés, and AI drafts cover letters, the human elements—confidence, adaptability, communication—may be the ultimate differentiators.


As one administrator put it: technical skills get you the interview. Life skills get you the job—and help you keep it.


Whether other institutions follow High Point's lead remains to be seen. But as Gen Z continues to navigate a complex, competitive labor market, one thing is clear: the definition of "college readiness" is evolving—and the schools that recognize that may be the ones that thrive.

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