EdTech Connect

Ep. 76 - Fiona Hayes: Why Perspective Is the Most Underrated Skill in Higher Education

22 min
Feb 27, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Fiona Hayes, CEO of Viewpoint Simulations, discusses how immersive role-playing simulations are transforming higher education by shifting students from passive content consumption to active interpersonal learning. The episode explores her unconventional path from clinical audiologist to ed-tech founder, the company's rapid growth to 30,000+ students across top institutions, and the critical importance of educator-centered design in scaling ed-tech adoption.

Insights
  • Information overload has caused student disengagement; the solution isn't more content but peer-to-peer connection and perspective-taking through active learning experiences
  • Educator adoption is the bottleneck in ed-tech scaling—building systems that excite teachers and position them as partners, not users, is essential for sustainable growth
  • Perspective-taking through role-play (e.g., taking opposing political positions) creates deeper, longer-lasting learning retention than traditional lecture-based instruction
  • Organic, educator-to-educator referral networks outperform traditional ed-tech sales models when the product genuinely solves classroom problems
  • LMS integration and relationships with institutional teaching/learning centers are mission-critical for ed-tech adoption, not optional features
Trends
Shift from lecture-based to experiential, active learning models driven by institutional and student demandGrowing emphasis on interpersonal and soft skills (perspective-taking, negotiation, collaboration) as core learning outcomesEducator-led distribution and peer referral networks becoming primary growth channels in ed-tech, replacing traditional sales modelsIntegration of business/industry partnerships with academic programs to bridge theory and real-world applicationRemote-first, globally distributed teams becoming competitive advantage in ed-tech for serving international educator communitiesPublisher partnerships as distribution channel—embedding interactive simulations into existing case study and textbook contentPlatform V2 development cycles driven by educator feedback loops rather than feature-first product roadmapsCross-disciplinary adoption of simulation tools beyond policy/business into STEM, healthcare, law, and interprofessional educationLMS integration (Canvas LTI) as table-stakes requirement for institutional ed-tech adoptionGovernment funding and institutional mandates for experiential learning creating tailwinds for simulation-based platforms
Topics
Active Learning and Experiential EducationRole-Playing Simulations in Higher EducationStudent Engagement and Information OverloadPerspective-Taking and Empathy DevelopmentEducator Adoption and Change ManagementLMS Integration and Canvas LTIInterpersonal Skills DevelopmentEd-Tech Go-to-Market StrategyPublisher Partnerships in Ed-TechRemote Team Leadership and Global DistributionClinical Education and Healthcare TrainingPolicy and Political Science EducationBusiness School Case Study IntegrationInterprofessional EducationHigher Education Digital Transformation
Companies
Viewpoint Simulations
Subject company; platform converting lecture content into immersive role-playing simulations for higher ed
Harvard University
Named as top-tier institution using Viewpoint Simulations platform
Stanford University
Named as top-tier institution using Viewpoint Simulations platform
UC Berkeley
Named as top-tier institution using Viewpoint Simulations platform
University of Michigan
Co-founder Dr. Elizabeth Gerber's home institution; original development site for Viewpoint technology
University of Utah
Where Fiona Hayes taught clinical audiology and co-founded Viewpoint; early customer and partner
George Mason University
Conducted immigration reform policy simulation case study demonstrating perspective-taking outcomes
William Davidson Institute
Publishing arm of University of Michigan; 2024 partnership to integrate case studies with simulations
Canvas
LMS platform; Viewpoint prioritized LTI integration as mission-critical for institutional adoption
People
Fiona Hayes
CEO and co-founder of Viewpoint Simulations; licensed audiologist with doctorate and executive MBA
Dr. Elizabeth Gerber
Co-founder of Viewpoint Simulations; educator at University of Michigan Ford School; original developer
Jeff
Host of EdTech Connect podcast; conducted interview with Fiona Hayes
Quotes
"students have so much content thrown at them right now, whether that is, you know, on their own phones at home or in the classroom. And a lot of them have just honestly checked out. Like we are in an age of information overload at every corner."
Fiona Hayes
"I think I learned more being in the shoes of somebody who I very vastly disagree with, but I can understand a little bit better why that person might come to that conclusion."
George Mason University student (quoted by Fiona Hayes)
"the only way this scales really effectively is if the educators are really excited to use it, because we know this is a tough market of individuals to adopt new tools that take a lot of time to implement."
Fiona Hayes
"I think that playing to your strengths. And when I started Viewpoint, I also started an executive MBA at the same time. So it was the best and the worst decision I've ever made."
Fiona Hayes
"giving them more practical application skills or even more practical application examples for how do we take the theory that we're learning in the classroom and translate this into what we'll do in our day to day."
Fiona Hayes
Full Transcript
Number one thing, students have so much content thrown at them right now, whether that is, you know, on their own phones at home or in the classroom. And a lot of them have just honestly checked out. Like we are in an age of information overload at every corner. If I want to learn something online, there's probably a million different platforms I could use to do that. What we see is from the students in the classroom, once they get the opportunity to connect with one another, maybe be thrown a little bit outside of their comfort zone, it challenges them. Welcome to another episode of the EdTech Connect podcast. Today's guest is someone who embodies what it means to bridge innovation, education, and impact. I'm thrilled to be joined by Fiona Hayes, CEO and co-founder of Viewpoint Simulations, a platform bringing immersive, ready-to-run role-playing simulations into the classroom. With a career that spans clinical healthcare, academic teaching, and ed tech leadership, Fiona has scaled viewpoint from an academic tool to a globally adopted SaaS solution, now used by institutions like Harvard, Stanford, and UC Berkeley. Under her leadership, the company achieved 225% year-over-year revenue growth and reached over 30,000 students. A licensed audiologist with a doctorate and executive MBA in progress, Fiona blends operational excellence with educator empathy, turning complex learning goals into real world scalable tools. Her mission, making education more engaging, accessible, and impactful for learners everywhere. Thank you. Welcome to the show, Fiona. It is great to have you today. Thanks for having me, Jeff. I appreciate it. Well, I want to kick things off by finding out something maybe most people don't know about you that's helped shape your journey in edtech. Yeah, so I don't know if I can say that most people don't know about this. I was an audiologist in my first life. And I think now that I have transitioned out of that role, it's a little bit of a lesser known fact. So as an audiologist, when I first started my career, I got the opportunity to open a satellite clinic. And I got the opportunity to help advance a couple of different operational processes at some of the clinics that I worked with. So for me, that was really critical in just getting experience working in different environments across the same field, but with different people and on the operational side of things. And I think when I did transition to starting my own business, that had given me a lot of foundational background that you might not expect from a traditional healthcare field. Yeah, I can see that. And your background spans healthcare, higher ed, now ed tech. What was the spark that led you to co-found Viewpoint Simulations? Yeah, so I taught at the University of Utah for about five years. I was clinical faculty, so I taught students how to see patients for hearing loss. And one of the biggest challenges I had was during the pandemic, we went to Zoom teaching. And so I had to give clinical experiential learning hours to students now in a remote setting, and we just didn't have really great tools to do that. So that was one piece of it. I also have always loved teaching and I wanted to go back to school myself. So I went back for an MBA. I got connected to my co-founder at that point and it just kind of all came full circle. We said, you know, I think there's some better ways to approach this. And here we are. You've had a pretty uncommon path into tech. You've worked directly with students, patients. You've been in the classroom, not just the boardroom. I'm curious how that background shows up today when you think about your time as a clinical audiologist and educator. What lessons from those roles most shaped how you lead a tech startup? You know, I think a lot of it is patience and creativity and how you communicate is what I've taken away. What I learned while I was teaching is that just because you say something in a way that makes sense to you doesn't mean that it makes sense to everybody who's listening. And so for me, being able to take a step back, think about, okay, how can I think about this? How can I express this in a different way that might translate or come across better to that individual has been really useful both in my teaching career but then now in running a team of individuals who are all creating and contributing in ways that are different than I do as well Yeah For folks who may not know the company yet can you walk us through viewpoint simulations at a high level? How does the platform actually work in practice? What do you think really sets it apart in the crowded ed tech space? Yeah. So we take educator lecture content and we turn it into active learning, engaged, role-playing debate negotiation exercises. So we can do that either for or on behalf of educators, but they can also use our platform to do that on their own. So we have a series of frameworks educators can pick from and design their own custom role-playing activity for their classroom, or they can pick from a library of existing content, or they can build their own from scratch. One of the things that we find really is a focus of ours that doesn't seem to be very common in the current landscape is we are really focused on the interpersonal piece of that. So right now it feels like a lot of companies are going all in on how do we replace some of those interpersonal skills with VR, AR, augmented reality type tools. And we are really leading into how do we get these students to connect with one another better? How do we get them to understand perspectives that are different than their own? And how can we get them to come to common decisions with all of that? I think simulations get talked about a lot. I recently talked to Christy Hyde, who does a nursing VR simulation. The real test, what I think is actually what changes for students and faculty when classrooms adopt viewpoint? What kinds of transformations are you seeing and how students learn and engage and think differently? I think the number one thing, students have so much content thrown at them right now, whether that is, you know, on their own phones at home or in the classroom. And a lot of them have just honestly checked out. Like we are in an age of information overload at every corner. If I want to learn something online, there's probably a million different platforms I could use to do that. what we see is from the students in the classroom, once they get the opportunity to connect with one another, maybe be thrown a little bit outside of their comfort zone, it challenges them. And so we see better engagement, better interaction in the classroom. But then we also see those same students revisiting these topics later down the road, later down the semester, maybe a semester past, and they're still thinking about some of those conversations that came up in that context. One of my favorite things I've heard, we did an activity with George Mason University about a year and a half ago. And we asked the students, they were working through an immigration reform policy simulation. We had asked the students to take on the roles of different senators. And I think my favorite comment in that was there was one student who took on a role that was completely opposite of his political beliefs at the onset. And it was just really cool to hear him say at the end, you know, I think I learned more being in the shoes of somebody who I very vastly disagree with, but I can understand a little bit better why that person might come to that conclusion. And for me, that was the light bulb. Wow, that's powerful. You've moved from idea to traction, real traction, pretty fast. You were generating revenue within your first three months, I think, and now support more than 30,000 students across some top tier institutions. what decisions or strategies do you credit most for that early momentum? So we pulled our technology out of the University of Michigan. So my co-founder, Dr. Elizabeth Gerber, is an educator at University of Michigan in the Ford School, and she had actually built Viewpoint for use in her own classroom. So over the course of probably about eight to 10 years, she had had the opportunity to test that in her classroom to really use it in several different situations. So we had a pretty strong foundation coming out of the university in Michigan. When we commercialized, we also really leveraged our relationships as faculty and professors to reach out to colleagues to say, you know, here's what we're working on. What can we do better? Tell us how we can make this better product for your teaching needs, because we have very different fields and we're finding that it's applicable across very different fields. So where can we, where can we improve? It's always the first question we ask. As you grow, there's always a pull between scale and staying close to the people actually using the product. How do you think about building systems that can scale while still keeping the educator experience kind of front and center? Yeah. So in my mind, the only way this scales really effectively is if the educators are really excited to use it, because we know this is a tough market of individuals to adopt new tools that take a lot of time to implement. So for me, I think having that educator feedback and that open feedback loop and thinking of our customers as partners and how we develop this, how we better this system is going to be really integral. So I don't necessarily think that there's a trade-off in that. I think at some point we'll have to offer more self-serve features. But for the short term, I think it's really just getting people onboarded and excited and seeing what they can do. And then the message spreads itself. You've built a global, fully remote team, right? Yes. Which is no small feat Different time zones different cultures different work rhythms all while you trying to move fast and stay creative As a leader what core principles help you foster that innovation and genuine collaboration when the team rarely shares the same working physical space You know, that is something I'm not sure I can quite put my finger on it. But we realized really early on that we needed individuals in multiple time zones because we serve educators in multiple time zones. And one of our very early customers was based in Rwanda. And we needed to be able to serve them when it's 9am there and 1am here in my time zone. So it was a natural progression to hire somebody in that time zone. And it's kind of just compounded since then. We've had really great experiences for some reason, which is awesome. Viewpoint seems to attract really creative, really mission driven individuals and people who want to have better teaching and learning experiences within their home areas. And so I think that's just really enriched the ideas and the creativity that have come out in many, many ways. And it's really been fun watching that unfold. So I don't know that that answered your question, but that's what I see. Yeah, that was great. Early stage startups rarely are a straight line. There's highs, there's setbacks and pivots and a lot of decisions made with imperfect information. As you look back on that roller coaster so far, what leadership traits have been the most essential in helping you navigate it and keep the team moving forward? I think the biggest thing I see is knowing what my strengths are and knowing what my team's strengths are. So being able to recognize what the individuals on my team excel at and where we all could use a little bit more support. And so I think that's the one thing that playing to your strengths. And when I started Viewpoint, I also started an executive MBA at the same time. So it was the best and the worst decision I've ever made. But point being that, you know, they spend a lot of time trying to help you think about what you're really good at. And I have tried very intentionally to complement my skill set with individuals on our team who have opposite, very complementary skill sets. Yeah, yeah. And you've spent enough time in higher ed to see both how change happens and how it gets slowed down. And when you look at experiential learning tools like simulations, where do you see the biggest opportunities for adoption and where do you still see the most resistance on campus? I think there's so much opportunity for adoption right now. We are in this huge shifting landscape towards experiential learning. You know, the government's pouring funding into it. Educators are being requested to provide experiential learning opportunities, both from the administrators at their institutions as well as the students. Education's become really competitive landscape over the last one to two years. And so I just think there's so much opportunity to take, you know, how we've been teaching for the past 100 years, these lecture based methods and turn them into more active learning opportunities and help students really practice that interpersonal piece. So that's what I see as far as opportunity. The biggest challenge that we bump up against is getting educators who have been teaching for a very long period of time to adopt a new technology. We know that very often administrators are asking their teams to take on new technology. We know that's a steep learning curve in a lot of cases. And if you've been teaching the same class for 15 years and you finally got it where you want, it's really hard. It's really hard to change that and reshape that and teach it in a different way. So I think as we continue to have more educators who are really excited about this and sharing it with their colleagues, we will see that part of the process become a little bit easier. But I think we're kind of at the very beginning, early stages of helping educators see how they could maybe enhance the way they're teaching or augment the way they're teaching to get their students really engaged in the learning process. If you could strip it down to one practical move, something institutions could start doing right now, what's one thing higher ed could change to better prepare students for real world challenges after graduation? Yeah, I think giving them more practical application skills or even more practical application examples for how do we take the theory that we're learning in the classroom and translate this into what we'll do in our day to day. One of the things I see is there's not a whole lot of partnership between the business sector and the education sector in many fields. I was very fortunate in my program at the University of Utah when I was teaching because I was partnered with a research faculty member. to teach a two-part course. And so we spent a lot of time connecting between the two of us, understanding what her research priorities were, what my clinical priorities were, and how we merged those. And I think there's so much potential to do that across programs and give students a better idea of what that's going to look like, both from that, you know, we're researching, this is innovative, but then how do we apply this in our day-to-day settings and vice versa? How do we take this back and ask the right questions So I think more of that integration between that private public or business and educational sector is really important for getting students to know what they'll do in their fields post-graduation. Yeah. You've taken an interesting approach with publisher-integrated models and educator-to-educator distribution, which isn't how most ed-tech platforms go to market. Can you walk us through how that actually works in practice and why you chose that model? Yeah, so this was not necessarily a conscious choice. We find that the bulk of our customers at this stage come very heavily from referrals. So as we have more and more colleagues using the platform, we get more and more colleagues who want to use the platform. So for example, when we started, we thought, oh, we'll start with policy and political science. That's what the platform stemmed out of. That should be, you know, pretty easy fit. And we realized pretty quickly that there's need in other fields. So interprofessional education, business, public policy, law. We're working on engineering, crisis simulations. We're working with the geology department right now on what happens in the event of a natural disaster. So from that perspective, the educator to educator just kind of spread like fire. And that was a really exciting opportunity for us. With the publishers, we can take existing content and case studies and turn it into those active learning role playing experiences that complement the content that they have already designed. It gives them a leg up because there's now an interpersonal component to that case study. And what we also know is that every time a case study gets published, it's immediately, you know, there's new information that might be released about that scenario. The educators can then go in and update that and tailor it to their own classrooms. and we have enabled the ability, not with the publisher case studies so much, but for the educators can share peer to peer with one another. So if they're passing on a class or maybe they want to collaborate across institutions with colleagues, there's an opportunity for them to share the activities that they've created with one another while redacting student information. So we just made it really easy and very shareable for both the educators and the publishers and seems to be working. Yeah, yeah, that's, that's great. LMS integration can either accelerate adoption or quietly become a blocker. Canvas LTI seems to have played a meaningful role in how Viewpoint got traction on campuses. How critical was that integration to your, to your growth? And what advice would you give other ed tech teams thinking about integrating with LMS platforms? Yeah, I think integration with LMS platforms is mission critical. That was one of the very first early priorities that we had because we knew everybody would ask that question. And again, that comes from our experience being in the education space. The piece of advice that I would probably give is to make sure that you have some really great contacts at the teaching and learning or instructional design center within that university, because they can really help you navigate that process a lot faster than trying to do it as an outsider. So we have some really, really fantastic individuals that we connected with early on at the University of Michigan, University of Utah, who helped us in that process. And I think that made it a lot easier for us to get our foot in the door that way. Well, I want to look ahead a bit. As you think about what's next for viewpoint simulations, what's on the horizon? Any new directions, partnerships, or tech shifts you're excited about as you keep building? Two really big ones right now. So this year we partnered with the William Davidson Institute, which is the publishing arm of the University of Michigan, and they partner really closely with the business school. So it's been really fun to collaborate with some of those colleagues over there and match the existing case studies that they're doing with a viewpoint simulation that's complimentary. The other thing we're really excited about is we are working on platform V2. So we should have a new improved version taking all of the feedback we've gotten from educators over the past year and a half and compiling it and enhancing the existing platform. So all the existing functionality will stay, but we have a brand new platform with some feature updates coming out for fall 2026. Excellent. That is exciting to hear. Well, I want to thank you, Fiona, for being on the show. I will put links to Viewpoint Solutions in the show notes and links to your LinkedIn as well. So thanks again. It was really great talking to you today. Awesome. Thanks, Jeff. I appreciate your time. Good to see you. You too. As we wrap up this episode, remember EdTech Connect is your trusted companion on your journey to enhance education through technology. Whether you're looking to spark student engagement, refine EdTech implementation strategies, or stay ahead of the curve in emerging technologies, EdTech Connect brings you the insights you need. Be sure to subscribe on your favorite podcast platform so you never miss an inspiring and informative episode. And while you're there, please leave us a review. Your feedback fuels us to keep bringing you valuable content. For even more resources and connections, head over to edtechconnect.com, your hub for edtech reviews, trends, and solutions. Until next time, thanks for tuning in. you