Less Than Two Years After Its Seed Funding, Nigerian Edtech Startup, uLesson, Secures $7.5m In Series A Round

A year and a few months after its $3.1m seed round, Nigerian startup uLesson, founded by serial entrepreneur and founder of Konga Sim Shagaya has raised a $7.5 million Series A round led by the US-based Owl Ventures. uLesson is integrating mobile platforms, SD cards, culture-specific curriculum and a network of tutors to bridge educational gaps for secondary school students in Nigeria and broader Africa.

“We are now witnessing an increased availability of data networks in Africa. With more affordable smartphones and the change in attitudes towards online learning accelerated by COVID-19, the foundations are now in place for an education revolution.

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At uLesson, we know we have a critical role to play in this ‘new normal’ and this funding will be crucial in our drive to fill the major gaps in Africa’s education system through tech,” said uLesson founder and ex-Konga chief executive, Sim Shagaya.

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Why The Investors Invested

Investment in uLesson by Owl Ventures is not coming as a surprise. The San Francisco-based VC has no other business apart from investing in education startups and businesses supported by technology. Its portfolio includes investments in leading edtech platforms, including India’s leading edtech Byju, as well as in Labster, MasterClass and Quizlet.

Last year September, Owl Ventures announced that it had closed a pair of investment vehicles totaling $585 million. While $415 million investment vehicle would be used to invest in edtech startups’ Series A and beyond, its first-ever opportunity fund — at $170 million — would be deployed to work as a growth-stage bank for existing portfolio companies. The new funds allow Owl Ventures to cut larger checks. Traditionally, the firm cut checks that were between $5 million to $35 million. Now, it can write investments up to $50 million in companies. The opportunity fund will exist to back existing investments throughout their lifetime.

“Owl Ventures is honoured to be partnering with uLesson for their Series A. The company has quickly grown into the premier platform, supporting students in Africa. And we are excited to support their global expansion, as they seek to empower students around the world,” Patterson said of the Series A round.

Investment in uLesson by Owl Ventures has also been made easier by the mass adoption of online education brought about by the coronavirus pandemic. 

“Edtech as a sector is really exploding and emerging,” said Ian Chiu, a managing director at Owl Ventures. “It’s not that COVID is the reason for that. It’s more that COVID has accelerated that.”

On its part, investor TLcom Capital has been taking a huge bet on African startups. The VC has previously participated in Twiga Foods’ $23.7 million a Series B round led by US investment bank Goldman Sachs. It also participated in Kobo360’s US$30 million debt and equity Series A funding also led by the American multinational investment bank and financial services company Goldman Sachs. In 2019, the VC led a $3.1 million seed round in uLesson. 

Founder Collective, a seed-stage fund formed 11 years ago in Cambridge, Ma., also recently closed its newest fund at $85 million. The VC participated in uLesson’s seed round in 2019.

“From the beginning of Founder Collective, we’ve done two kinds of investing, $1 million to $2 million checks, where we lead and take a board seat, and around $400,000 investments, where we participate,” said Eric Paley, one of the firm’s general partners. 

LocalGlobe is a UK-based venture capital firm that focuses on seed and impact investments. The VC is one of the investors in African logistics startup Lori Systems. 

Generally, investors in uLesson were attracted by Shagaya’s weight as a previous founder at leading ecommerce startup Konga as well as the size of the Nigerian and African edtech market. 

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A Look At What uLesson Does

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