It was only a few weeks ago, back in mid-February, when Google valued a new company known as Renaissance Learning at $1 billion, and subsequently invested $40 million in the company's operations. That's a valuation that proved almost eerily accurate as a second company, Hellman & Friedman, put a valuation of $1.1 billion on the company, and then promptly paid up, buying the company.
Renaissance Learning's previous owner, a private equity firm called Permira, reportedly took the 30 year old company off public markets in a purchase for $455 million back in 2011. The new deal sent the company to Hellman & Friedman for the aforementioned sum. Google (News - Alert) Capital, meanwhile, is expected to step in once more for a minority stake with the new owner in much the same way it recently did with the old. Details on that arrangement, meanwhile, have yet to be announced.
As Renaissance Learning CEO Jack Lynch explained, this was a big deal for Permira, who had what amounted to an opportunity to see huge returns without having to sacrifice a firm in which it had a long-term stake, so the company really couldn't pass it up. Hellman & Friedman, meanwhile, were likely attracted by Renaissance Learning's profitability, given that the company saw a 20 percent gain in revenue just last year in what Lynch described as “a very high margin business.”
But that wasn't all that likely drew Hellman & Friedman. There's also the issue of significant reach, as Renaissance Learning not only offers services to one in three United States schools, but also offers service in 57 different countries beyond. A reported 20 million students are involved with Renaissance Learning materials, and that's at $5 per student per year, so the revenue is just as substantial.
Google, however, was involved with the company even before Hellman & Friedman. Reports suggested that there are distribution deals afoot for Renaissance Learning matter to go on Google Play, and the company is set to put fully 50 percent more into the R&D budget than was seen last year.
Education is a hot-button topic for a lot of people, and has been for some time. Many, dismayed by what is perceived as an attack on values by public schools, are turning to homeschooling and private school options instead. Products like those offered by Renaissance Learning can be a big help in such endeavors, and that gives a wide market to tap as the newly-minted teachers go forth to find materials. Even public schools can get involved, as more and more are discovering the value inherent in buying an iPad for each student and pre-loading the textbooks onto said devices, instead of buying pallets of textbooks and then either having to re-buy the books or face the humiliation of having old textbooks in classes. Granted, in some cases, this is less a problem than others, but explaining the use of books two or three decades old can be difficult even in the best of times. Issues of backpack weight come into play as well, long thought a problem for still growing bodies, and the ability to shrink a load of schoolwork onto a tablet has to be tempting.
Education is a growth industry—as long as there are kids, there will be schools—and Renaissance Learning may have tapped a pocket of real value. At least, that's likely what Google thought...and what Hellman & Friedman thought as well.