Our investors ignored, disrespected us: Udemy cofounder opens up about sale to Coursera

Our investors ignored, disrespected us: Udemy cofounder opens up about sale to Coursera



Udemy cofounder Gagan Biyani broke his silence on the startup’s $2.5 billion sale to rival Coursera and expressed his frustration with the edtech‘s investors about how he was treated and how they hollowed out a company he helped build.

In a lengthy post on social media, Biyani said a decade and a half of investor-led decisions led to the sale of the company for under $3 billion, a valuation it had gone public with in 2021.

“I think they wanted a CEO they could control, a buttoned-up suit instead of a brash founder/CEO that is risk-taking, visionary, but a bit of a pain,” he wrote.

After Udemy’s Series B, founders owned less than 30% of the company, and investors moved in, he said. He said the investors pushed out the founders and brought in one “dud CEO” after another, which impacted the company’s strategic edge. Over the company’s lifetime, it burned through seven CEOs.

But for a while, it was going well. The business kept growing and a B2B pivot scaled to $500 million annual recurring revenue (ARR).