RevisionSuccess Chief Executive Officer Phonlawat Sirajindapirom has raised concerns about Thailand's education gap in a video interview with PostToday, placing the 17-year-old founder before a broad business and policy audience.
He argued that uneven learning outcomes continue to hold back wider economic and social development, and that education should be treated as a national priority rather than a narrow policy issue.
His comments focused on Thailand's progress in expanding access to education while still struggling with the quality and consistency of learning. In his view, that weakens the country's ability to develop the skilled workforce needed across sectors.
"Education builds people, people build the nation," Sirajindapirom said.
He tied that argument to the need for stronger pipelines of skilled professionals, including doctors, engineers and innovators. The remarks reflect a wider debate in Thailand over how education standards compare with those of other ASEAN economies.
Student roots
Sirajindapirom also used the interview to explain how RevisionSuccess was founded by students trying to solve problems they had experienced in their own studies. He said those origins still shape the company's product decisions and priorities.
The business was co-founded by Sirajindapirom, Phuwadit Sutthaporn and Chotiwith Chotiheerunyasakaya after the three met through a debate competition. They went on to develop early versions of a learning platform aimed at Thai students.
In the interview, he said the founders believed existing tools were not meeting students' needs in practice. That led them to build a platform around the gaps they had encountered in high school and university.
RevisionSuccess describes itself as a student-first education technology company focused on improving outcomes for Thai learners. Its model centres on tailoring lessons, feedback and product development around student experience.
Founder profile
The interview also highlighted Sirajindapirom's profile as a young founder in Thailand's technology and education sectors. PostToday, part of Nation Thailand, has a long-established readership across business, public policy and current affairs.
That visibility comes as interest grows in younger entrepreneurs building businesses in sectors tied to national development priorities. Education technology has drawn attention as schools, families and policymakers look for ways to address uneven attainment.
Sirajindapirom also spoke openly about his ambitions for the company and for himself as a founder. He said he wants to build RevisionSuccess into Thailand's next unicorn and one day surpass the wealth of Flash Express founder and Chief Executive Officer Komsan Lee.
The comments struck an unusually direct tone for a founder of his age. They also underscored how some younger entrepreneurs frame education technology not only as a service business, but as a route to broader economic influence.
Team focus
Even while discussing those ambitions, Sirajindapirom repeatedly shifted attention back to his colleagues. He said the company's growth, partnerships and wider impact depended on the team rather than any one founder.
That emphasis on collective effort ran through the interview, contrasting with the more personal goals he set out for the business.
For RevisionSuccess, the public exposure may help raise awareness among education stakeholders and potential partners in Thailand. The company is positioning itself around a simple claim: students who have recently experienced the system may be well placed to identify where it falls short.
Thailand's education debate has often focused on attainment, regional disparities and students' readiness for a changing labour market. Sirajindapirom's intervention adds a founder's perspective to that discussion, linking the issue to a business built from direct experience of those gaps.
"Education builds people, people build the nation," Sirajindapirom said.