Technology

Google Capital's Third Investment: Renaissance Learning

Google Capital has made its third investment. Renaissance Learning, an education technology start-up, said on Wednesday that Google Inc.’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) investment fund had acquired a minority stake in the company for $40 million.

Google Capital’s previous investments came in 2013: in online surveys provider SurveyMonkey, as part of a large debt and equity round, and in Lending Club, a peer-to-peer lending platform. Google Capital was formed in 2013 to invest in late-stage technology start-ups, and it is run by David Lawee, who used to head up mergers and acquisitions (M&A) at Google.

Privately owned Renaissance Learning provides cloud-based education software. The company says its reading and assessment tools are used by nearly 20 million students and teachers in some in 40,000 schools.

Gene Frantz of Google Capital said:

For many educators, the question is not whether to embrace new technology, but how to embrace technology in a way that makes teachers’ lives easier and meaningfully boosts student achievement. Renaissance Learning is at the forefront of this educational movement, and their ability to use data to support effective teaching and drive student growth is unparalleled.

Bloomberg recently found that over the past three years Google has executed more deals than any company in the world. It was involved with 127 deals in that time, at a total value of $17.6 billion. Its M&A group is said to have expanded by at least 50% in the past two years.

Google Capital’s cousin, Google Ventures, focuses on funding early-stage start-ups. It led a $361.2 million investment in app maker Uber Technologies last year. Google Ventures was also a backer of e-reader platform start-up Subtext, which Renaissance Learning acquired back in August.

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