Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | E-Learning |
Founded | November 2010 |
Headquarters | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Matt Cooper, CEO |
Website | skillshare |
Skillshare is an online learning community based in the United States for people who want to learn from educational videos.[1][2][3] The courses are non accredited, and are only available through a paid subscription.[4][5]
The majority of courses focus on interaction rather than lecturing, with the primary goal of learning by completing a project. The main course categories include creative arts, design, entrepreneurship, lifestyle and technology.[6]
Michael Karnjanaprakorn and Malcolm Ong started Skillshare in New York City, New York in November 2010; the site was live in April 2011.[7][8] Previously, Karnjanaprakorn led the product team at Hot Potato, a social media product bought by Facebook. Ong was the product manager at OMGPop.[9][10] In August 2011, Skillshare raised $3.1 million in Series A funding led by Union Square Ventures and Spark Capital.[9][11] In late 2013, Skillshare had raised $4.65 million in funding,[12] and $6 million by February 2014, with financing co-led by Union Square Ventures and Spark Capital. Total funding reached $10 million.[13]
Skillshare held the Penny Conference in April 2012, a one-day discussion on the current educational system and how to reform it,[8][14] with Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Codecademy’s co-founder Zach Sims, and Pencils of Promise founder Adam Braun as speakers.[8]
Skillshare launched 15 self-paced, online courses in August 2012,[1][4][15][16][17] with students collaborating to complete a project.[5] By November 2013, it hosted over 250 courses,[12][15] and launched its School of Design.[18]
Skillshare collaborated with Levi's to launch the School of MakeOurMark in October 2013,[19] focusing on individual creativity with courses in photography, tattooing, and various forms of illustration.[19][20]
In March 2014, Skillshare moved to a membership model for $9.95 a month.[21] Later that year, the company announced a new open platform, where anyone could be a course instructor, and a free membership option to watch a limited amount of class content each month.[22]
In May 2016, Skillshare raised $12 million in Series B funding.[23] The company raised a further $28 million in Series C funding in July 2018 ($20 million in equity and $8 million in venture debt).[24]
As of March 2019, Skillshare had over 27,000 premium classes and more than 2,000 free classes available. The platform has introduced the "Groups" feature that allows members to connect with other creators, share work, and take skills to the next level through engaging discussions and prompts.[25]
In September 2021, Skillshare discontinued the option of offering classes for free and required users to have either a paid membership or a free trial to access all courses, including those that were previously available for free.[26]
Skillshare organizes courses in advertising, business, design, fashion and style, film and video, food and drink, music, photography, gaming, technology, and writing and publishing,[27][28] often taught by industry leaders.[28][29] All online courses are self-paced.[1][30]
In June 2018, the company launched Skillshare Originals, a collection of courses produced by Skillshare's in-house team.[31]