facebook-page-view
Advertisement

GHV, existing investors infuse additional $148K in ed-tech startup Notesgen

By Dearton Thomas Hector

  • 01 Feb 2017
GHV, existing investors infuse additional $148K in ed-tech startup Notesgen
Credit: ThinkStock

Delhi-based Notesgen Technologies Pvt Ltd, which runs peer-to-peer ed-tech startup Notesgen, has raised an additional Rs 1 crore ($148,000) in angel funding from GHV accelerator and existing angel investors, the company said in a statement.

Notesgen had previously raised Rs 1 crore from angel investors in 2015.

The startup will use the funds to enhance its technology and grow its user base, Manak Gulati, founder and chief executive of Notesgen said in the statement.

Advertisement

Founded in 2014 by Gulati, Notesgen offers a mobile and web platform for students to share study notes and self-prepared content such as project reports, presentations, case studies, etc. It also allows educators and coaching centres to upload notes on its platform. Users can then download the material for a fee. The startup earns commission from all paid downloads.

Notesgen has integrated with Paytm and has formed a strategic partnership with ed-tech company Career Launcher, to host its professional notes on its platform. It claims to generate weekly payouts of Rs 200 to Rs 500 via Paytm and hopes to bring onboard 10 more partners by the second quarter of 2017.

The startup currently has 550,000 users from 125 countries on its platform and claims to get 8,000 to 10,000 new users monthly.

Advertisement

Gulati said that Notesgen is looking to raise a Series A round by Q3 2017.

Other investments in the ed-tech space include Bengaluru-based Curiositi, which raised Rs 5.4 crore ($800,000) in Series A funding from Menterra Venture Advisors and existing investor Unitus Seed Fund last month.

Last month also saw ed-tech startup Byju’s acquire Bangalore-based learning guidance tool and student profile-builder Vidyartha for an undisclosed amount. In December 2016, the firm raised $15 million from International Finance Corporation (IFC), the World Bank’s private-sector investment arm. In September last year, it raised $50 million in a round co-led by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the philanthropic foundation of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan, and Sequoia Capital.

Advertisement

A 2016 report by management consulting firm Technopak said that the Indian education market is expected to almost double to $180 billion by 2020, buoyed by the rapid expansion of the digital learning market and the country’s population.

Like this report? Sign up for our daily newsletter to get our top reports.

Advertisement

Share article on

Advertisement
Advertisement