Global investors'
appetite for Vietnam EdTech market grows
By
Vien Thong
September
13, 2022 (Source: VNexpress)
Two Vietnamese edtech startups raised US$16 million in
funding last Thursday, marking the latest episode of foreign investment and
expansion in the country.
Edupia staffs support students. Photo courtesy of Edupia
Online tutoring platform Vuihoc raised $2 million in its
latest funding round led by BAce Capital, a venture fund backed by Japanese
giant Ant Group, and with the participation of Vulpes Venture,
DT&Investment & Colopl Next and Nextrans. Founded in 2019, it now has
over 400,000 learning materials including online courses, video lessons and
quizzes. It hopes to reach one million subscriptions by 2024.
English self-learning platform Edupia raised $14 million
in a series A round led by Jungle Ventures with eWTP Capital (a venture fund
under Alibaba and Ant Financial) and ThinkZone Ventures participating. Edupia
has five million users, including 400,000 paying students. Tran Duc Hung, who
founded the company in 2018, said Edupia is on track to exceed its $100million
revenue target in the next three years.
Most of its users are in Vietnam, but it is also
expanding into other Southeast Asian markets like Indonesia, Thailand and
Myanmar, and adding more subjects, including math and coding.
Many foreign edtech firms also plan to expand their
operations into Vietnam.
In August, Singapore’s leading online learning platform
Geniebook announced plans to enter Vietnam, making the country its second
market in Southeast Asia outside Singapore after Indonesia.
According to Geniebook, the expansion comes on the back
of a profitable 2020 when it recorded an annual recurring revenue of $10
million. Launched in 2017, it is an edtech platform that uses artificial
intelligence and machine learning to personalize learning by recommending
assessment concepts and questions based on students’ strengths and challenges.
Vietnam has a significant market for education, with 16
million students in primary and secondary schools and 1.7 million in
universities. It is one of the fastest growing markets globally and its value
would hit $3 billion next year, industry researcher EdTech Agency said in a
report in July.
"We believe there is significant potential for
Vietnam's edtech market," BAce Capital managing partner Benny Chen said
after the fund invested in Vuihoc. "Vietnamese culture highly emphasizes
education and the online format has achieved wider adoption during the
pandemic."
Giang
Tran Minh Thanh, Vietnam country manager KVision, the investment arm of
ThaiKBank, said the education market has great potential since Vietnamese
parents are willing to spend big money on their children.
(Source:
VNexpress)