Centa, a teacher accreditation-linked edtech startup, said it has raised $1 million from a clutch of 30 angel investors including JP Morgan India chairman Leo Puri, Medanta Group of Hospitals chief Pankaj Sahni, AZB & Partners founding partner Bahram Vakil and ICICI private equity director Nikhil Mohta, according to ETtech report.
In the past, the company had raised funding from venture capital investors such as Omidyar Network, Discovery Assets, Pi Ventures and 3i Partners.
The profitable venture, founded in 2014, offers certification and upskilling services across a community of 1.5 million teachers globally.
From 2014 to 2019, the company hosted a teacher examination platform in the format of an Olympiad. From 2019 onwards, it began as a full-fledged business of teacher accreditation courses.
The startup plans to use fresh capital to build out a ‘teaching-as-a-service’ (TaaS) marketplace model that will provide on-demand teaching services to national and international educational institutions as well as support state and national governments, it said in a statement.
The TaaS platform will connect teachers worldwide who seek both professional growth and supplementary income streams to employers, including edtech companies, schools and governments recruiting, the statement said.
“Right now, testing and training contributes for almost 45% each, while recruiting currently makes up the rest 10%. But in terms of growth, recruiting will become about 40% eventually,” Ramya Venkataraman, founder and chief executive, told ET.
Prior to founding Centa, IIT Delhi and IIM Calcutta alumnus Venkataraman led McKinsey & Company’s education practice. She was with the consulting firm for 15 years.
HrNxt.com Newsdesk has researchers and writers with an excellent domain knowledge about the talent ecosystem, and the business environment. The team keeps a tab on the latest happenings in the ecosystem to bring most relevant news and insights for our readers. You can connect with our newsdesk at newsdesk@hrnxt.com.