The education sector is fighting against AI. Coursera will acquire another large player


Who will become the default reskilling platform at a time when job demands are changing faster than training programs?
Coursera and Udemy announced a merger agreement valued at approximately $2.5 billion. Coursera is to acquire Udemy in an all-stock formula, and the closing of the transaction is scheduled for the second half of 2026, provided that regulators and shareholders agree.
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According to information provided at the time of the announcement, Udemy shareholders are to receive 0.8 shares of Coursera for each share of Udemy, which values Udemy itself at approximately USD 930 million. and represents a premium compared to the pre-announcement price.
This agreement comes at an inconvenient time for the entire edtech segment. Despite the growth in revenues, the market viewed both companies with growing distrust, and the quotations did not give investors the feeling that their large reach and library of rates would be enough to win in the coming years.
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In their announcements, the companies emphasize that together they have a chance to build a stronger offer for learners, corporate clients and instructors, and at the same time show shareholders a more credible growth path.
The important word in this story is AI. Coursera has previously announced integration with the ChatGPT app ecosystem and content partnership with Anthropic, signaling that it wants to introduce science to places where users spend more and more time anyway.
In turn, Udemy, just a few days before the information about the merger, released an announcement of “AI-powered microlearning”, i.e shorter, more personalized lessons to suit busy schedules and learning in small doses.
The juxtaposition of these two movements looks like an answer to the same problem. Video + quiz alone is no longer an advantageif generative AI can translate, summarize, create exercises and personalize learning in real time.
What does this mean for the education sector? The most likely scenario is the acceleration of the so-called platformization of learning, especially in the B2B segment. Companies increasingly want one supplier that will provide content, competence diagnostic tools, development paths, reporting and elements of skill confirmation. Coursera has historically played heavily on partnerships with universities and recognized certifications, and Udemy has a huge database of practical courses created by independent instructors. Together they can try to build an offer that combines academic credibility with practice in the here and now — and sell it as an answer to a job market where AI skills are becoming a requirement, not an add-on.
Could the emergence of AI and tools such as ChatGPT have contributed to consolidation? Very possible. AI increases the cost of gaming and changes user expectations. If the user receives immediate explanations, a learning plan, examples and feedback in a conversational tool, the course platform must add a layer of value: better personalization, practical projects, tools for instructors, skills assessment, recommendations, and in B2B also implementations, integrations and compliance.
These are capital-intensive investments that are easier to bear on a larger scale, with a larger user base and more predictable revenues from the enterprise segment.




