Glorang, a Seoul-based EdTech startup that offers online after-school classes and extracurricular activities for students aged 3 to 18, has raised $10 million in a Series A funding round co-led by Korea Investment Partners and Murex Partners, along with Japan’s PKSHA Capital.
The new funding, which brings its total raised to $18 million, values Glorang at around $40 million, Glorang Founder and CEO Taeil Hwang told TechCrunch.
Glorang aspires to become the Outschool of Asia, the San Francisco-based after-school marketplace for children. Hwang said the company will use the Series A funding to expand its service to Japan and Malaysia by the fourth quarter of this year, and Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam in the following years. The company also plans to increase its workforce.
"The education market in the English-speaking and North American regions is undoubtedly large, but we understand that each country’s local D2C education market in Asia can be just as substantial," Hwang said.
Glorang was founded in 2017 by Hwang, who started this company with an AI-powered platform helping students match with study abroad programs. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Glorang pivoted its main business, the online class platform, and launched Gguge in 2020, Hwang said. The company claims Gguge has more than 100,000 users in South Korea.
What sets Gguge apart from its peers is providing education services in local languages, Hwang said, adding that it currently offers Korean but will add the Japanese language soon.
Gguge offers a selection of more than 5,000 online classes via Zoom. Instructors help students engage with active learning methods, ranging from reading newspapers through solving puzzles to incorporating Minecraft and Pokemon games into the classes.
"As a team that understands both the local culture and strategies in Asia, we are confident that our platform will have a strong standing in Asia’s ever-growing D2C education market," Hwang said.
Students can take a one-day class or subscription-based semester classes via Gguge.