The company, which offers free and paid courses across various areas like artificial intelligence, machine learning and virtual reality, saw its global revenues growing over 100 per cent year-over-year in 2017 to about USD 70 million.
In India, Udacity has recently announced a nanodegree programme in Flying car and drones, and has partnered software services major Infosys to train 500 engineers in Self Driving Car Engineering.
"We have seen over 200 per cent growth in our India operations. Users have opted for varied courses like Python, Big Data, machine learning... The trends are similar to what we see globally," Udacity India MD Ishan Gupta told PTI.
Similar to its partnership with Infosys, Udacity also works with companies like Tech Mahindra, Wipro and Just Dial, among others.
"We are very fortunate to have users coming from across India from almost all districts. Like any other Internet-based business, our top city in India is Bangalore, then Delhi, Bombay and other big cities... we have a lot of smaller cities from where we get users," he said.
Udacity has over 8 million learners on its platform globally. The company did not disclose details about its userbase in India but said Udacity has seen growth across its base of individual learners and those coming through enterprises.
"In 2018, we want to launch more courses for Indian audience, have more enterprise partners, work with government agencies, and have more hiring partners. Our intention is to become a full training partner to someone who wants to up skill or reskill," he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
