On 26 February, Internshala’s offices were adorned in its signature yellow-and-blue — punctuated by red balloons symbolising Upgrad, the edtech giant that acquired the internship-and-online-training platform via a 90% stock swap for Rs 100 crore.
The acquisition marks Upgrad’s return to M&A after a four-year pause. Between 2020 and 2022, the company had executed 12 emergency acquisitions to expand its footprint.
Upgrad’s Financial Recovery
In the interim, Upgrad managed to stabilise its finances:
- Revenue nearly tripled to Rs 1,500 crore in FY25
- Losses fell sharply to Rs 274 crore — roughly a third of previous levels
- EBITDA turned positive for the first time
The firm’s strategic aim is clear: accelerate growth while consolidating market share amid intense competition in India’s edtech sector.
Why Internshala?
Internshala brings:
- A robust internship platform for students
- Online training modules complementing Upgrad’s course offerings
- A loyal user base across India’s youth segment
By integrating Internshala, Upgrad gains access to a pre-existing community and expands its touchpoints in career development, bridging the gap between learning and employability.
Strategic Logic: Growth via Acquisition
Screwvala’s approach is unconventional but calculated:
- Leverage Existing User Base: Internshala’s network offers immediate scale and engagement.
- Complement Core Offerings: Aligns career-oriented training with Upgrad’s professional development ecosystem.
- Enhance Revenue Potential: Cross-selling courses and certifications can monetise student traffic more efficiently.
The Rs 100 crore stock-swap deal reflects confidence in synergies rather than immediate cash ROI.
EdTech Consolidation in India
Upgrad’s move is part of a broader trend in the Indian edtech market:
- Startups are consolidating to achieve scale
- Profitability pressures are driving strategic mergers
- Investors prefer robust platforms with diversified revenue streams
By acquiring Internshala, Upgrad positions itself as a one-stop solution for career upskilling, internships, and online learning — enhancing stickiness among students and professionals alike.
Risk and Reward
Acquiring a loss-making platform might seem counterintuitive. However, in this context, it is strategic:
- Losses are offset by long-term network effects
- Stock swap preserves cash flow
- The integration creates cross-platform monetisation opportunities
Upgrad bets that the acquisition will accelerate growth faster than organic expansion could, while maintaining improving margins.
What’s Next
The success of this acquisition depends on:
- Seamless integration of Internshala into Upgrad’s ecosystem
- Effective monetisation of student engagement
- Maintaining course quality and brand trust
If executed well, this could signal a new phase in Indian edtech: growth through consolidation, not just organic expansion.
The CapTop Premium Insight:
Sometimes the fastest path to profitability is buying scale rather than building it. Ronnie Screwvala’s bet on Internshala illustrates a new playbook for Indian edtech — acquisition-led growth combined with careful margin management.