Section 1
What We're Measuring
This analysis treats every distinct section as a SKU — a unit of inventory a consumer can purchase. We then characterize the catalog by its four structural dimensions: program population/age band, program line, course length, and school of origin. The goal is to quantify the choice set that a prospective student or parent encounters, and to compare that complexity against the competitive landscape.
⚠
Framing note for this analysis
Flat enrollment is not a marketing spend problem — it is a conversion and decision-support problem. Awareness and conversion are parallel workstreams. This analysis addresses only the catalog complexity dimension of conversion: the number of choices, decision layers, and cognitive steps a parent must complete before they can even select a program. It does not address pricing, value perception, or date availability, which are separate levers.
Section 2
OBUSA Inventory Profile (2025–26 Average)
The following figures represent an average of the 2025 active inventory (241 sections) and the 2026 working draft (269 sections), the most representative "typical year" baseline available. Each row in the source data is treated as one SKU — one purchasable section.
~255
Avg annual sections (all programs)
The total purchasable inventory on the shelf each year
~86
Avg unique course titles/yr (all)
Distinct named programs before factoring in date/section
~60
Classic program titles/yr
The core open-enrollment youth & adult catalog
7
Regional schools
Each contributing its own distinct catalog under the OBUSA umbrella
13
Distinct age ranges
Granular age cuts a parent must navigate (12-13, 12-14, 13-14, 14-16, etc.)
19
Distinct day-lengths (2025)
Unique course durations from 4 to 80 days
OBUSA School Contributions — 2025 Classic Program
NCOBS
North Carolina OB School
21 titles63 sections
HIOBS
Hurricane Island OB School
19 titles39 sections
CAOBS
Outward Bound California
17 titles32 sections
COBS
Colorado OB School
11 titles50 sections
VOBS
Voyageur OB School
10 titles33 sections
CBOBS
Chesapeake Bay OB School
8 titles17 sections
POBS
Philadelphia OB School
4 titles7 sections
Each school's catalog is independent and geographically distinct — but all appear under a single outwardbound.org browsing experience, multiplying the apparent choice set.
OBUSA SKU Matrix — Age Band × Length Type (2025)
This matrix shows how many sections exist at each population/length intersection. Blank cells represent combinations OBUSA does not offer. Competing organizations typically present a much smaller, denser version of this matrix — fewer rows, fewer columns, fewer blanks.
| Age Band |
Short (≤6 days) |
1-Week (7–9 days) |
2-Week (10–15 days) |
3-Week (16–23 days) |
Month (24–31 days) |
Long (32+ days) |
Row Total |
| Middle School |
— |
19 |
15 |
— |
— |
— |
34 |
| High School |
— |
42 |
69 |
11 |
4 |
— |
126 |
| Young Adult |
— |
5 |
4 |
1 |
12 |
9 |
31 |
| Adult |
1 |
41 |
2 |
— |
— |
2 |
46 |
| Family |
4 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
— |
4 |
| Column Total |
5 |
107 |
90 |
12 |
16 |
11 |
241 |
2025 data. "High School" includes Intercept for Teens. Sections only; does not distinguish unique titles within each cell.
Section 3
Competitive Landscape — Catalog Size & Structural Complexity
The competitor dataset covers 1,031 course sections across 17 providers scraped from their public catalogs in 2025. Two providers — Much Better Adventures (adult travel) and Active Adventures/Backroads — serve the adult adventure travel market and are excluded from youth-program comparisons but included here for catalog depth reference. The relevant youth competitor set consists primarily of NOLS, Overland, Moondance, Rustic, Wilderness Adventures, Bold Earth, ARCC, Adventure Treks, and The Road Less Travelled.
| Provider |
Unique Titles |
Annual Sections |
Age Bands |
Length Buckets |
Age × Length Combos |
Primary Market |
Complexity |
| ⬛ OBUSA (all programs) |
~86 |
~255 |
5 |
6 |
16–17 |
Multi-market |
HIGHEST |
| ◻ OBUSA (Classic only) |
~60 |
~211 |
5 |
5 |
13 |
Multi-market |
HIGHEST |
| Much Better Adventures |
236 |
237 |
1 |
5 |
5 |
Adult travel |
LOW |
| NOLS |
107 |
193 |
3 |
5 |
11 |
Youth + YA |
MEDIUM |
| Kroka |
39 |
39 |
3 |
4 |
7 |
Youth |
LOW |
| Wilderness Adventures |
34 |
62 |
3 |
5 |
7 |
Youth |
LOW |
| The Road Less Travelled |
34 |
43 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
Youth HS |
LOW |
| Rustic |
32 |
85 |
3 |
4 |
6 |
Youth |
LOW |
| ARCC |
26 |
30 |
3 |
4 |
6 |
Youth |
LOW |
| Moondance |
26 |
78 |
2 |
2 |
3 |
Youth |
LOW |
| Overland |
26 |
66 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
Youth |
LOW |
| Bold Earth |
19 |
28 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
Youth HS+MS |
LOW |
| Adventure Treks |
17 |
31 |
4 |
4 |
7 |
Youth + Adult |
LOW |
| Dragons |
22 |
32 |
2 |
4 |
8 |
Youth + YA |
MED |
Complexity rating reflects Age × Length combos relative to catalog size, not absolute title count. NOLS's 11 combos at 107 titles is medium complexity because the titles are distinct locations/activities with a clean navigation structure across one organization. OBUSA's combos are multiplied by school-level fragmentation.
Unique Course Titles — Youth-Focused Competitors (HS + MS only)
OBUSA youth Classic is the primary apple-to-apple comparison. NOLS has more youth titles but operates as a single institution.
Age × Length SKU Combos — Full Catalog Comparison
OBUSA's 16–17 combos understates actual complexity because the same combo (e.g., "High School 2-Week") is offered by up to 7 different schools simultaneously.
Section 4
Where OBUSA's Complexity Exceeds the Market
Raw title count and Age × Length combos only tell part of the story. OBUSA's structural complexity is driven by three compounding factors that no single competitor replicates: school-level fragmentation within a shared catalog, granular age-range segmentation, and high day-length variability. Each one imposes an additional decision layer on the shopper; together they create a compounding burden.
Driver 1
School Fragmentation
7 schools each present their own catalog under a shared brand. A parent searching for "High School, 2-Week" can encounter results from up to 7 different schools — each with distinct geography, activities, and pricing. No competitor operates this way. NOLS has one identity; Overland has one catalog.
The High School Classic 2-Week SKU is offered by all 7 OBUSA schools simultaneously — the most-offered single SKU type in the catalog, with 69 sections. For a parent who doesn't already know what "CBOBS" or "NCOBS" means, this creates confusion before they even read the first program description.
Driver 2
Age Range Granularity
OBUSA uses 13 distinct age ranges in the 2025 catalog: 12-13, 12-14, 12+, 13-14, 14-16, 14-17, 16-18, 17-21, 18+, 18-25, 20+, 21+, 30+.
A parent with a 14-year-old may technically qualify for ranges labeled 12-14, 14-16, 12+, and 14-17 — four distinct pools with different programs, prices, and peer groups. Competitors almost universally collapse to simple bands: "Middle School," "High School," "College Age." The OBUSA granularity implies precision; it also implies ambiguity and extra navigation effort.
Driver 3
Day-Length Variability
OBUSA offers 19 distinct day-lengths (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 22, 28, 30, 40, 50, 55, 65, 72, 80 days). Most competitors standardize at 3–5 lengths.
Overland offers only 14 or 21 days — 2 choices. Bold Earth: 4 choices. Moondance: 4 choices. Even NOLS, the most complex competitor at 25 distinct lengths, bundles those clearly into 5 named buckets. An 8-day vs. a 9-day vs. a 10-day OBUSA program appears as three separate SKUs with different prices and no obvious decision logic to the external shopper.
The Decision Burden — Steps Required Before Selecting a SKU
OBUSA Journey
5–6 decisions
1
Which of the 7 schools? Depends on geography, but a parent new to OBUSA doesn't know this schema. They see 7 sub-brands on one site.
2
Which age range? 13 ranges to potentially filter by; overlap is common (a 14-yr-old fits 12-14, 14-16, 12+, and 14-17).
3
Which program line? Classic, Pathfinder, Intercept, Semester, Veterans, Outdoor Educator — each with different intent and audience.
4
Which length? Up to 19 distinct day-lengths; loose labels like "two-week" can mean 12, 14, or 15 actual days depending on school.
5
Which course title? Up to 32 distinct HS Classic titles across schools in the same length category.
6
Which section/start date? Multiple sections per title, each with different fill rates and availability.
Typical Competitor Journey2–3 decisions
1
Which age group? 2–3 simple bands: Middle School, High School, Young Adult. No overlap; one clear answer.
2
Which length? 2–4 clearly named options: 2-week, 3-week, month. No ambiguity about actual day count.
3
Which program/destination? A filtered list of 5–15 options at most — manageable. Parent picks the one that matches their interest area or geography.
✓ Shopper reaches a specific program page in 3 steps or fewer
A parent shopping for a competitor encounters 2–3 decision points and lands on a specific program page. A parent shopping outwardbound.org encounters 5–6 decision points before they've identified a single SKU — and then still faces date selection on top of it.
— Derived from catalog structure analysis, 2025–26 data
Section 5
The Core Youth Market in Detail
The High School Classic segment is OBUSA's largest and the most direct competitive battleground. It is also where catalog complexity is most acute. Below is what a parent shopping this segment encounters across the OBUSA network vs. the next closest competitors in this space.
123
HS Classic sections (2025)
32
Distinct HS Classic titles
7
Schools offering HS Classic
7
Avg HS titles/school (2025)
HS Classic — Unique Titles per OBUSA School (2025)
The combined 32-title HS Classic set is larger than the entire catalog (all ages) of most individual competitors — yet a parent must sort through all 7 schools to see the full picture, since there is no single page that contextualizes "here are all HS options for your geography."
Section 6
Implications for Enrollment Planning
Catalog complexity is not intrinsically bad — it reflects OBUSA's genuine geographic range and programmatic depth, which are real competitive assets. The issue is the gap between structural complexity and the decision support available to parents navigating it. Below are the inventory-side implications for the planning process.
-
The most comparable youth competitors — Overland, Moondance, Rustic — run 26–34 titles with 2–4 age × length combos. Their decision paths are dramatically shorter. To the extent that OBUSA's conversion lag exists at the course-detail page step (~3.7% observed), catalog complexity is a plausible contributing factor: a parent who has already invested significant cognitive effort reaching the catalog page may abandon when faced with another layer of school-selection or age-range ambiguity.
-
NOLS is the only structural peer in terms of catalog size, but operates as a single institution with a single navigation system, a single pricing model, and a single enrollment flow. A parent at NOLS navigates one organization. A parent at OBUSA navigates what appears to be 7 organizations.
-
The 13-age-range system is a hidden complexity driver. Competitors use 2–3 age bands. OBUSA's precision creates real eligibility ambiguity (e.g., a 14-year-old fitting four ranges) and no current mechanism on the site resolves this proactively before the parent self-identifies into a sub-catalog.
-
Day-length variability (19 distinct lengths) fragments the "comparable options" experience. An 8-day vs. 9-day vs. 10-day course looks like three different SKUs and likely has three different price points — but a parent shopping on "about 2 weeks" has no clean filter to resolve this. Competitors who standardize at 14 or 21 days make the decision easy.
-
Within the HS Classic 2-Week bucket alone, a parent can encounter programs from 7 schools, with different titles, at different price points, running on different dates, in different states or countries. The choice set within a single "comparable" row of the catalog is itself as large as some competitors' full catalog.
-
The planning implication is not "reduce the catalog." OBUSA's geographic breadth is a genuine differentiator. The implication is: the decision support layer (filtering, comparison, age-matching, school-selection guidance) must be calibrated to a catalog of this complexity. A simplified competitor's interface layered over OBUSA's catalog will produce friction. The merchandising investment required is proportional to the complexity of what's being sold.
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Summary for inventory planners
OBUSA's open-enrollment catalog is structurally more complex than any single competitor — not by title count in isolation, but by the compound effect of school fragmentation × age-range granularity × day-length variability. A parent completing the full OBUSA shopping journey navigates 5–6 decision layers before reaching a date-selection screen; the industry norm is 2–3. This complexity is the upstream condition that makes conversion at the catalog and course-detail steps difficult to improve through marketing alone. Reducing decision load — through better filtering, progressive disclosure, or targeted reduction of redundant SKUs — is the lever most directly tied to enrollment efficiency.
Data Notes & Methodology
OBUSA data: 2025 Inventory Reference sheet (241 rows/sections) and 2026 Draft 2 Working sheet (269 rows/sections). "Typical year" figures are simple averages across both years. Each section = one SKU. Course titles, not section counts, are used for unique-title comparisons. Veterans and Outdoor Educator program lines are included in "all programs" totals but excluded from Classic-only and youth-only comparisons.
Competitor data: Competitor_Set_Only.csv (1,031 rows) covering 17 providers from 2025 public catalog data. Active Adventures and Backroads are adult travel providers included only in the full comparison table; excluded from youth segment comparisons. NatureBridge (n=3) has insufficient data for structural analysis and is noted but not charted. Length Bucket values were normalized to a single case-insensitive scheme. Age Band classifications were preserved as supplied.
Complexity rating: Qualitative assessment based on Age × Length combos relative to catalog size, number of distinct institutions, and structural decision layers. Not a formula-derived score.