SchoolTry: Meet the startup building the operating system for African schools

Ismail Eleburuike


In 2008, Ismail Eleburuike, a graduate of Federal Government College Ilorin, Nigeria, moved to Sweden in search of top-quality education. On arrival, he wasn’t content making personal progress alone; his mind kept reminding him of his place of origin and how he could contribute to educational development back home.

Within three years, Eleburuike earned two Master’s degrees: one in Electrical Engineering with an emphasis in Telecommunications from Blekinge Institute of Technology, and another in Project Management and Operational Development from KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Yet, something remained missing: a desire to give back.

The perfect opportunity presented itself when his mentee, who had served as a classroom teacher in Katsina State during the mandatory National Youth Service Scheme, reached out to him for financial assistance to set up his own school. However, Eleburuike insisted that he would only support it if the school his mentee was building was a digital one, something different from the commonplace schools.

That conversation, along with his firsthand experience of the transformative power of education in his life and what is available in Sweden, prompted him to research further how schools can be digitised. He studied models in the US, UK, Sweden, and what’s available in Nigeria.

So he concluded that instead of building just one school, they could serve multiple schools. He sketched an imaginary architecture for how the school would look, and that’s how SchoolTry was born.

Understanding SchoolTry

SchoolTry is an education management solution that empowers schools to coordinate operations, enhance communication, and improve overall efficiency. The EdTech provides a platform where students can take courses, school administrators can manage their students and teachers, and teachers can give assignments, mark attendance, and grade students’ performance.

The all-in-one platform offers customised, digitised educational solutions that simplify school operations and enhance learning experiences for students, administrators, and teachers.

Eleburuike launched SchoolTry in 2020, focusing on basic education (primary and secondary schools), before pivoting to serve tertiary institutions.

Building SchoolTry and the challenges so far

Eleburuike says resilience and persistence, two core values of entrepreneurship, have kept him going on the journey so far.

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EdTechs have struggled to break through in a challenging environment like Nigeria; Edukoya shut down in 2025, citing market readiness, widespread connectivity issues, and limited access to devices as key challenges. Other EdTechs have also struggled with securing funding because investors don’t believe EdTech is a viable venture in the global south.

During the early days of SchoolTry, it encountered challenges when some parents refused to pay after the solution had been deployed.

At some point, SchoolTry was deployed to Command Schools, a network of 45 Nigerian Army-managed schools, but after a full year of operation, a change of leadership forced the startup out. However, some of the schools, after seeing the value on offer, decided to continue independently of the headquarters and pay for it out of their own pockets. To date, 15 of the 40 approved still utilise SchoolTry. Eleburuike calls this a turning point in his startup journey.

Following this validation, some higher education institutions approached SchoolTry to replicate the software for them, and this became the EdTech’s biggest revenue channel.

Within a year of deploying SchoolTry for higher education, the startup generated more revenue than it made in three years deploying SchoolTry for K-12. And it was only a logical decision as SchoolTry now focuses on serving tertiary institutions: universities, polytechnics, colleges of education, and vocational training centres (in Kenya).

Traction and funding

Eleburuike says he is more confident about the future based on the challenges and journey so far.

SchoolTry now has 400,000 active students on its tertiary platform, with over two million users (including lecturers, partners, etc.). Interestingly, Eleburuike says he’s yet to serve 1% of the market.

Today, SchoolTry serves Obafemi Awolowo University, University of Ilorin, Nasarrawa State University, and Kogi State University, and discussions are ongoing to expand to other institutions to deploy the EdTech solution.  

With five simple clicks on SchoolTry, students’ transcripts can get to anywhere in the world that you want to send them, but data migration remains a challenge for some institutions, so the transcripts collection might not be fully active. However, for the University of Ilorin, the service is fully operational.

Currently, the startup is building an AI-job matching infrastructure atop the higher education system. It can match students with job opportunities based on the data it has on its system. While still studying for a degree, students can find remote or part-time jobs through the opportunities listed on the platform.

SchoolTry is also leveraging its data to provide a pipeline of students to online universities seeking candidates, as well as providing alternative admission routes to students who couldn’t gain admission to overcrowded federal and state tertiary institutions in Nigeria.  

The Edtech has raised over a million dollars in the past three years from angel investments and is still raising money to bridge the gap to shore up some pipelines.

The startup is operational in Cameroon and has pilots ongoing in Burkina Faso. However, its major markets are in Nigeria and Kenya, with its headquarters in Sweden.

On receiving support from government to scale education in Nigeria

SchoolTry currently powers all the higher institutions in Oyo state. Eleburuike says he presented SchoolTry to Nigeria’s Vice President when the Vice President visited Sweden, and he’s also been in touch with the Minister of Education and some governors. He says working with the government takes patience because of the numerous priorities they have.

The main idea of SchoolTry, aside from access to education, is to connect Nigerians with people from other continents to exchange learning and opportunities. A researcher with the ecosystem around: researchers from Australia, the US, the UK, Europe, and all the possibilities that education can afford.

With only 0.2% of its users being paying customers, the startup still has a long way to go before it can make meaningful profits. However, since 90% of its 400,000 paying users are in the higher education bracket, the startup might have just found the perfect product to focus on.

SchoolTry was conceptualised in 2019 but launched in 2020. However, its biggest product, SchoolTry for tertiary, was only started towards the end of 2023, an important lesson that pivoting as you build is the key to finding the right product for your market.



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