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Unacademy Co-founders Set to Exit, Shift Focus to New Venture AirLearn
Unacademy Co-founders Set to Exit, Shift Focus to New Venture AirLearn

Entrepreneur

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Entrepreneur

Unacademy Co-founders Set to Exit, Shift Focus to New Venture AirLearn

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. In a significant leadership shift at Indian edtech unicorn Unacademy, co-founders Gaurav Munjal and Roman Saini are reportedly stepping down to dedicate their efforts to a new venture, AirLearn, a language learning app. This move marks a rare instance of original co-founders exiting a major Indian edtech company. Their departure follows that of the third co-founder, Hemesh Singh, who left in June 2023. Sumit Jain, co-founder of Unacademy's subsidiary Graphy, is expected to assume the leadership role. Jain joined Unacademy in 2020 after the acquisition of his startup Opentalk. According to The Economic Times, Munjal and Saini are now focused on scaling AirLearn, which has already achieved an annual recurring revenue (ARR) of USD 400,000 in the US, just months after its launch. Unacademy's board comprises representatives from SoftBank, General Atlantic, Bhavin Turakhia (Zeta), Sujeet Kumar (Udaan), along with Munjal and Saini. Data from TheKredible indicates the three original co-founders together held a 15% stake in the company. The leadership transition signals a new era for Unacademy, which is aiming to sustain and grow amid evolving market conditions. Munjal recently noted that the company has significantly reduced its core business cash burn—from over INR 1,000 crore annually to under INR 200 crore. With INR 1,200 crore in reserves and profitable units like Graphy and PrepLadder, Unacademy remains financially stable. The exit of its founding trio could usher in a fresh strategic direction for the edtech firm.

Unacademy co-founders may step back, refocus on new edtech venture Airlearn
Unacademy co-founders may step back, refocus on new edtech venture Airlearn

Business Standard

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Standard

Unacademy co-founders may step back, refocus on new edtech venture Airlearn

Unacademy's top brass is preparing for a leadership reshuffle, with co-founders Gaurav Munjal and Roman Saini expected to step back from day-to-day operations in the coming two to three months, according to people familiar with the matter. The pair is reportedly engaged in high-level talks with the company's board and key investors to carve out Airlearn—the edtech firm's language learning platform—into an independent entity. The third co-founder, Hemesh Singh, stepped down in June 2024. The trio had originally launched Unacademy nearly a decade ago, starting out as a YouTube channel before evolving into one of India's leading edtech platforms. Sumit Jain, founder of Graphy and elevated to partner at Unacademy following Hemesh Singh's departure last year, is poised to take charge of the company's offline operations, according to people familiar with the transition. At the same time, Unacademy is in the final stages of appointing new leadership to oversee its core online education business, according to the sources. An email query to Unacademy remained unanswered till press time. Jain joined Unacademy in 2020 following the acquisition of his startup Opentalk. In 2023, Unacademy promoted Jain, head of its Graphy division, to the role of partner—a designation internally likened to a late-stage co-founder. Jain co-founded Graphy, a platform that enables educators and content creators to build and sell their own online courses. Before his tenure at Unacademy, Jain co-founded real estate portal CommonFloor in 2007 and served as its chief executive officer. It was later acquired by classifieds platform Quikr in 2016. Notably, CommonFloor had earlier acquired an accommodation platform founded by Unacademy's Gaurav Munjal, in 2015. specialised in helping students and young professionals find housing in new cities. Munjal and Saini plan to devote their efforts to scaling Airlearn, Unacademy's language learning venture, which positions itself as a competitor to Duolingo, according to the sources. As of April, the app had attracted 70,000 daily active users and nearly 300,000 monthly users, according to a company update shared by Munjal on social media. Of those, 17,500 are paying subscribers, contributing to an annual recurring revenue of $2 million. The majority of Airlearn's user base hails from the US, UK, and Germany. Over the past year, users have completed more than 20 million lessons on the platform. The app currently offers 13 language courses, with English-to-Spanish, English-to-French, and English-to-Korean emerging as the most in demand. Unacademy's board includes representatives from global investors SoftBank and General Atlantic, as well as prominent entrepreneurs Bhavin Turakhia of Zeta and Sujeet Kumar of Udaan, alongside co-founders Gaurav Munjal and Roman Saini. The edtech company has secured approximately $880 million in total funding, according to data provider Tracxn. In 2021, it raised $440 million in a funding round led by Temasek, with super pro-rata participation from General Atlantic, Tiger Global, and SoftBank Vision Fund, taking the company's valuation to $3.44 billion. The three original co-founders collectively retain a roughly 15 per cent stake in the company. Unacademy recorded Rs 988.4 crore in total revenue during FY24, a 5.33 per cent decline compared to Rs 1,044 crore in FY23, according to Entrackr. However, the SoftBank-backed firm cut its losses by 62 per cent, reducing them to Rs 631 crore in the fiscal year ending March 2024 from Rs 1,678 crore in FY23. Munjal recently claimed that Unacademy has reduced its cash burn in the core business from over Rs 1,000 crore annually three years ago to under Rs 200 crore this calendar year. He added that Unacademy has Rs 1,200 crore in the bank and is financially stable. Some of its businesses, like Graphy and PrepLadder, are making money every month.

Cleared AIIMS entrance at 16, cracked UPSC exam, became youngest IAS Officer at 22, yet quit IAS job due to.., now is working as…, name is..
Cleared AIIMS entrance at 16, cracked UPSC exam, became youngest IAS Officer at 22, yet quit IAS job due to.., now is working as…, name is..

India.com

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • India.com

Cleared AIIMS entrance at 16, cracked UPSC exam, became youngest IAS Officer at 22, yet quit IAS job due to.., now is working as…, name is..

The biggest adventure you can take is to live the life of your dreams. And nothing explains it better than the success story of Unacademy co-founder Roman Saini. He not only cracked the AIIMS entrance examination at 16 but also qualified for the UPSC Civil Services examination at 22. Despite this success, Roman Saini quit his IAS job to build a Rs 26000 crore worth company. Hailing from Rajasthan, Roman Saini cracked the highly competitive AIIMS medical entrance exam at 16 years old. Surprisingly, he earned an MBBS degree by 21. After a year of becoming a doctor, he set his passion on conquering the toughest examination – the Union Public Service Commission- Civil Services Examination CSE and becoming an IAS officer. Speaking of his family background, Roman Saini's father is an engineer by profession, while his mother is a homemaker. After becoming IAS Officer, Roman Saini served as a district collector in Madhya Pradesh. However, his quit his IAS job for something bigger. In 2015, he co-founded Unacademy with Gaurav Munjal and Hemesh Singh. Together, they established Sorting Hat Technologies, the parent company of Unacademy. 'From a YouTube channel that started in 2010, we became a feature-rich educational technology platform in 2015,' reads the statement on the official website of the Unacademy. Unacademy, one of India's top ed-tech companies, has grown tremendously over the past 5-6 years. A large part of this success goes to Roman Saini, a doctor and former IAS officer, who played a significant role in transforming Unacademy into a Rs 26,000 crore enterprise. According to several media reports, in 2022, Unacademy's leadership earned significant salaries—CEO Gaurav Munjal earned Rs. 1.58 crore, Hemesh Singh received Rs. 1.19 crore, and Roman Saini got Rs. 88 lakh.

Unacademy now ‘default alive', to cut cash burn to Rs 200 crore in 2025: CEO Gaurav Munjal
Unacademy now ‘default alive', to cut cash burn to Rs 200 crore in 2025: CEO Gaurav Munjal

Time of India

time21-04-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Unacademy now ‘default alive', to cut cash burn to Rs 200 crore in 2025: CEO Gaurav Munjal

SoftBank-backed edtech startup Unacademy is targeting a significant reduction in cash burn , aiming to bring it down to under Rs 200 crore in calendar year 2025, from more than Rs 1,000 crore three years ago, cofounder and chief executive Gaurav Munjal said in a post on social platform X. 'Significant improvement in cash burn in the core business. Three years ago, we used to burn more than Rs 1,000 crore; this CY (calendar year), it will be under Rs 200 crore. This is half of what we did last year,' Munjal wrote. He also added that the company is now in a 'default alive' state, with Rs 1,200 crore in the bank—a term that refers to startups being financially stable enough to survive without additional external funding. Munjal said that two of Unacademy's businesses—Graphy and PrepLadder—have started generating cash on a monthly basis. PrepLadder , acquired in 2020, is a post-graduate medical entrance exam prep platform. Graphy allows educators to create and monetise online courses. Founded in 2015 by Munjal, Hemesh Singh, and Roman Saini, Unacademy began as a YouTube channel before evolving into a full-fledged edtech platform. It has raised $880 million from investors including SoftBank , Peak XV Partners, General Atlantic, and Tiger Global. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories In the offline segment, Munjal said nearly 70% of Unacademy's centres are expected to become profitable at the centre level in 2025. Unacademy operates in India's competitive test prep market alongside Aakash Institute (owned by Byju's), Allen Career Institute (backed by Bodhi Tree Systems), and PhysicsWallah (backed by WestBridge Capital). In FY24, Unacademy's operating revenue fell 7% to Rs 840 crore from Rs 907 crore in the previous fiscal, while net loss narrowed to Rs 631 crore from Rs 1,678 crore. Earlier this month, Munjal said the company's new language-learning app, Airlearn , now has over 70,000 daily users and close to 300,000 monthly active users. The app competes with global player Duolingo. Reflecting on past strategic decisions, Munjal said, 'Any edtech (and we have done this mistake in the past) that goes after multiple acquisitions to grow is bound to fail. It just doesn't work in this market. So keeping the 'blinders on' and not worrying about who is acquiring whom—and focusing on profit—is the only way to go.' As reported by ET on December 4 , Unacademy had been in discussions with Allen Career Institute for a potential sale, which could value the company at $800 million—a steep drop from its $3.4 billion peak valuation in 2021.

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