Source page: McKinsey & Company

Commentary

Visual form

Funding-growth chart with regional breakout.

Layout / body structure

The page presents the edtech funding story as a growth comparison over time and across geographies. Reader first sees the escalation in total venture funding and then reads the regional spread that turns the sector into a global race rather than a US-only story.

What is being compared

It compares venture-capital funding in the adult-learning edtech sector over time and across regions, showing how the geography of funding has broadened as the market has scaled.

Measurement system

The main unit is venture-capital funding in dollars, with the chart using year or period markers and regional categories to show how the market has expanded.

Visible structure inside the graphic

The internal structure combines a time progression in total funding with a regional distribution layer that shows where the capital is going. The result is a chart that reads both as a rising funding curve and as a widening competitive map.

Main takeaway from the visual

The chart shows that adult-learning edtech is no longer a niche or narrowly American funding story. Capital has scaled sharply and spread geographically, which is why the chart reads as a global competition for category leadership.

Key standout values or extremes

The page frames the market as rising from about 500 million dollars in global venture funding in 2010 to nearly 21 billion dollars more recently. That jump is the clearest quantitative anchor in the graphic.

Controls / sequence, when applicable

This is a static chart image with no in-chart controls to operate.

Companion media, when applicable

There is no separate companion audio or video; the chart image is the full visual on this page.


Higher learning

Education | Investing

January 11, 2023 – The education-to-employment sector that serves adult learners has the attention of venture capitalists—dozens of “unicorn” edtech start-ups have valuations of more than $1 billion, note McKinsey partner Saurabh Sanghvi and coauthor. In 2010, most of the $500 million in global venture capital funding in the sector went to US-based firms. Now, funding for edtech has climbed to nearly $21 billion, with China, India, and other parts of the world grabbing larger shares.

The global race for edtech funding is accelerating, and competition spans across all previous boundaries.

To read the article, see “Five trends to watch in the edtech industry,” November 14, 2022.


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