Coursera says over 26 million people have enrolled on Coursera globally and over two million of these are from India, which makes India its second-largest market after the US.
Raghav Gupta, India Country Director for Coursera, says the portal is growing fast in India, having added over 50,000 users every month since January 2017.
“The awareness question (lack of awareness about Coursera) applied about 18 months ago. Now it (awareness) is quite strong both at an individual and organisation level,” says Gupta. However, the awareness about Coursera is not spread across the country evenly. “We have an English speaking and metro-centric audience. We have work to do to reach the non-English speaking audience.”
Gupta mentions transcripts and subtitles in regional languages as an option the company has been considering, but there’s no fixed timeline on rolling out to that feature.
The machine learning course from Stanford is the most popular Coursera module in India. In an emailed statement, Coursera shared the experience of a student named Shraddha Surana who’d enrolled for the course from India.
“Though I was interviewing for a role of application developer which required a background in computer engineering where as I had in electronics, I did not know much about building applications,” Surana says in the statement Coursera shared.
Surana adds, “When asked about my projects, I spoke about my thesis which used artificial neural networks (ANN) to identify intrusion detection. Apparently, I explained ANN very clearly and the interviewers who had no background in any ML (machine learning) were able to understand and were curious to know more.”
Since slow Internet speeds are always a challenge in India, Coursera allows people to download lectures and assignments, which they can complete offline and submit when they’re back online. Gupta says the course completion rate in India for people who pay for courses is 60 percent.
Almost all courses in Coursera have a paid and an unpaid version. The latter doesn’t allow access to quizzes, exams, or certificates. You can either pay per course or pay a subscription fee per specialisation (which includes three to five courses). Gupta says most people who don’t complete courses after paying for them do so due to work pressures or them abandoning the idea of a career change.
As you’d expect, Coursera’s focus is on growing its business in India at the moment, both through individuals and the enterprise. Some companies such as Infosys have enrolled employees in courses via Coursera, and that is also a big opportunity for growth for the company in India, Gupta says.
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