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Byju’s Buys Blackstone-Backed Offline Test Prep Firm Aakash

The deal is valued at about $1 billion, people familiar with the details told Bloomberg.

Byju’s Buys Blackstone-Backed Offline Test Prep Firm Aakash
Byju Raveendran Founder & CEO BYJU’s. (Source: Byju’s)

Byju’s, India’s dominant edtech startup, is acquiring offline test prep leader Aakash Educational Services to accelerate offline growth, it said in a statement on Monday.

The deal is valued at about $1 billion, said people familiar with the details, asking not to be identified. India’s online edtech leader will combine forces with the three-decade-old, Blackstone Group Inc.-backed Aakash in a deal that involves about $600 million in cash and the remainder in stock, according to the people.

Read more: Byju’s to Pay $1 Billion for Blackstone-Backed Indian Tutor

“As 12 months of the pandemic have shown, there’s a clear need to disrupt education by combining offline with online, which has low single-digit penetration,” said founder and chief executive officer Byju Raveendran. “The future of learning is hybrid, and bringing students to a nearby offline center provides rigor, intensity and human touch,” he said via a Zoom call to announce the acquisition.

Blackstone, which invested 13.5 billion rupees ($184 million) for a 37.5% stake in Aakash in 2019, is cashing out partly but remains invested in the merged entity, Aakash Managing Director Aakash Chaudhry said in the video conference. The private equity firm and Aakash’s founders will now become shareholders of Byju’s, the startup said in its release.

“The next 30 years is going to be very different, we will aggressively invest with a focus on the student,” said Chaudhry, whose father JC Chaudhry set up the firm 33 years ago. “It’ll serve as a great example of what can happen by merging offline with online.”

Aakash has more than 215 test prep centers, which coach 250,000 high-schoolers and prepare them for the ultra-competitive exams to enter India’s top engineering and medical schools. Chaudhry said the centers were in the bigger cities but the combined force would start targeting the country’s smaller cities and towns.

Bangalore-based Byju’s, started by former teacher Byju Raveendran and the son of educators, has over 80 million students on its app, of which 5.5 million pay annual subscriptions. In the six months of the lockdown, the startup backed by global investors like Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative, Naspers and Lightspeed Venture Partners, added 45 million new students and has a renewal rate of 86%.

The app caters to students in grades K-12 using visuals and videos to teach concepts in Math, Science and the Humanities. It has been on an acquisition spree recently, snapping up smaller startups such as WhiteHat Jr, the coding platform for school goers.

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