Fiji Sun

India crowns its newest billionair­e, a 37-year-old former teacher

- KAREN GILCHRIST Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

India has crowned its latest billionair­e, a 37-year-old former teacher from a small village in Kerala.

Byju Raveendran received the coveted title in July after his seven-year-old education app Byju’s raked in US$150 million in its latest funding round.

The deal gives Mr Raveendran’s eponymous business a valuation of $5.7 billion, sending his own personal wealth over the billion-dollar threshold.

Mr Raveendran holds a 21 per cent stake in the education technology company, which is backed by investors including the Qatar Investment Authority, Tencent and Mark Zuckerberg.

The entreprene­ur’s feat sees him become one of India’s youngest billionair­es, joining the country’s recent wave of newly-minted millennial unicorn founders such as Flipkart’s Binny Bansal and Sachin Bansal.

A young success

It’s some achievemen­t, especially given Raveendran’s humble beginnings.

The son of math and physics teachers, Raveendran grew up in the village of Azhikode in South India before going on to university. But, once working as an engineer, he discovered his own knack for teaching and helping friends with their entrance exams to engineerin­g and management schools in his spare time.

Word quickly spread of Raveendran’s top-rated teaching abilities, and he began filling out stadiums and receiving nationwide requests from students eager to learn his techniques.

So, in 2011, alongside fellow twenty-something co-founder Divya Gokulnath, he founded Byju’s — The Learning App, an online education platform for children aged five to 16. Built around interactiv­e videos, games and quizzes, the platform helps students with everyday classes as well as exam preparatio­n.

Going global

The Bengaluru-based company became profitable in March.

The new billionair­e now has his sights set on global expansion, targeting the U.S. and the U.K. following a recent partnershi­p with Walt Disney Co.

Education

Mr Raveendran, who has said he wants to do for education what Disney did for entertainm­ent.

He said the collaborat­ion will help children learn with the help of their favorite characters by featuring them in their interactiv­e content. “Kids everywhere relate to Disney’s Simba or Moana, who grip kids’ attention before we take them through the loop of learning,” CEO Raveendran told Bloomberg recently. “We are customisin­g Disney Byju’s to the American and British school curriculum,” Mr Raveendran said. “The characters have universal appeal.”

The Bengaluru-based company became profitable in March.

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 ??  ?? Byju Raveendran, founder and chief executive officer of Byju’s.
Byju Raveendran, founder and chief executive officer of Byju’s.
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