UpGrad Subsidiary Campus Lays Off 30% Of Workforce Amid Funding Crunch

A funding slowdown has forced unicorn upGrad to lay off 30 per cent of the workforce--nearly 120 employees--at its subsidiary ‘Campus’, which has a strength of about 300 people.

This is the second upGrad subsidiary to have laid off employees recently. Last December, Harappa Education, which upGrad had acquired for Rs 300 crore in July 2022, had let go of 70 people, or about 30 per cent of its staff.

Queries sent by Business Standard to upGrad did not elicit an immediate response.

After acquiring Impartus, a video-learning solutions provider, for Rs 150 crore in a cash-and-stock deal back in May 2021, the Ronnie Screwvala-backed firm rebranded it to ‘upGrad Campus’. Following the acquisition, Impartus co-founder Amit Mahensaria took over as chief executive of Campus.

Arjun Mohan, upGrad’s former CEO, had also stepped down last month after a three-year stint at the firm.

The firm’s biggest expense in FY22 was on advertising and promotions, at Rs 393 crore. The amount is almost twice the Rs 205 crore spent in FY21, shows data accessed by business intelligence platform Tofler.

Further, upGrad’s consolidated net loss widened almost three-fold to Rs 627 crore in FY22 from Rs 211.1 crore in FY21. This came even as the unicorn’s revenue grew 111 per cent, from Rs 328 crore in FY21 to Rs 692 crore in FY22.

The of the layoffs comes at a time when the company announced it would hire more than 1,400 people between November 2022 and March 2023 in India and for offices outside. In the past months, upGrad had also signed new leases for 335,000 sq ft of space across four cities – Mumbai, Bengaluru, Pune and Noida.

upGrad competes with the likes of Simplilearn, Coursera, 2U, edX, Chegg, Skillsoft, and Byju’s. The firm raised $210 million in funding in August 2022, raising its valuation to $2.25 billion.

Singapore's Temasek Group, IFC Asset Management and James Murdoch's Lupa Systems, among others are some notable backers of the firm.

upGrad has joined the likes of many other firms letting go of employees amid a funding slowdown. According to reports, Byju's laid off 15 per cent of its employees from its engineering team last month, as the company continues phased redundancies to remain growth-oriented amid a global economic meltdown. The firm had, in October last year, also laid off nearly 2,500 people, or 5 per cent of its workforce of 50,000, as part of an “optimization” plans amid steep losses.

Edtech firm LEAD School also laid off around 100 employees earlier in January. Edtech major Vedantu cut a similar number of employees at the time. Unacademy-owned Relevel dropped 40 employees.

SoftBank-backed edtech major Unacademy said in November of 2022 it was also laying off 350 people or 10 per cent of its 3,500 workforce.

RECENT NEWS

JPMorgan Deploys AI Chatbot To Revolutionize Research And Productivity

JPMorgan has deployed an AI-based research analyst chatbot to enhance productivity among its workforce, with approximate... Read more

Private Equity And Banks: The Complex Web Of Leverage

Private equity has emerged as a significant force in the global financial landscape, driving substantial growth and inve... Read more

Financial Watchdog Highlights Unresolved Vulnerabilities In Shadow Banking Sector

The world’s leading financial stability watchdog has issued a warning about the unresolved vulnerabilities within the ... Read more

JPMorgan And Small Caps Lead Market Rally: A Sign Of Economic Optimism

In a week marked by strong financial performance, JPMorgan Chase & Co. reported a 25% rise in profits, and US small-... Read more

Big Banks Vs. Regional Banks: The Battle For Market Share

The financial industry is a competitive landscape where big banks and regional banks vie for market share. Each type of ... Read more

The Evolution Of Philanthropic Advisory Services In Private Banks

The landscape of philanthropic advisory services provided by private banks has undergone a significant transformation. T... Read more