The English school chain Green Forest bought the startup Voopty. Why do they need it?
The Green Forest Family educational network has acquired the startup Voopty, whose product is an automated platform for managing educational centers.
The Green Forest Family educational network has acquired the startup Voopty, whose product is an automated platform for managing educational centers.
The Green Forest Family educational network has acquired the startup Voopty, whose product is an automated platform for managing educational centers.
As reported by Vector, negotiations between the Green Forest Family and the Voopty team lasted from March to April 2025, and the contract was signed in June.
The amount of the deal was not disclosed, but according to the publication’s own estimates, it could be $150,000-$250,000.
Voopty’s founders — Anastasia Sinkevich (CEO), Yevhen Rachkovan (fractional CTO), and Taisiya Kholodova (developer) — completely exited the business, remaining as advisors for the transition period, but the team remained composed of development and technical support specialists.
«We made the decision to sell as a strategic step to ensure further growth of the product. Opportunities appeared on the market that required faster scaling and significant investments,» said Anastasia Sinkevich, co-founder of the startup.
Recall that Voopty is an ERP system for managing educational centers that helps automate operational processes: from student enrollment and class scheduling to analytics, payments, and reporting. The product works in website format in desktop and mobile versions.
The startup was founded in 2018 by Kharkiv developer Taisiya Kholodova, and in 2022 Anastasia Sinkevich and Yevhen Rachkovan joined the project. In 2024, the team went through the YEP Accelerator. At the time of the sale, Voopty had over 100 clients — language schools, tutoring centers, and other educational projects.
Recently, dev.ua told how the Ukrainian EdTech startup Pravozno works, which helps prepare for state exams.
We also wrote that the Swedish-Ukrainian EdTech startup memoryOS attracted funding from four investment funds.



