
“Please Don’t Rise Again”: Byju Raveendran’s Comeback Post Backfires as Netizens Vent Anger
March 31, 2025: Byju Raveendran, the embattled founder and CEO of once-mighty edtech unicorn Byju’s, returned to social media with a bold promise: “We will rise again.” But his statement drew more rage than reassurance.
On March 30, Raveendran posted a photo of his younger self on X (formerly Twitter), captioned:
“Broke, not Broken. We will rise again.”
The post, viewed over 1.3 million times, was clearly intended to signal hope and a comeback — but the internet wasn’t buying it.
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From sarcasm to fury, replies poured in, targeting Byju’s alleged exploitation of vulnerable families, deceptive sales tactics, and unpaid dues to employees.
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One user wrote:
“You broke, not broken. But you broke the dreams of students and families. What’s the point of rising again if it’s built on exploiting the poor?”
Another added:
“Greed overtook Byju’s. Education became a racket. People never forget how you treated them.”
Some were more direct:
“Please bhai, baksh de. Please don’t rise again,”
while another simply wrote,
“Go to jail.”
This is Raveendran’s second social media post since wiping his online presence during the height of Byju’s legal and financial chaos. In a thread posted on March 29, he hinted at relaunching the company soon, saying:
“Once we relaunch our company… we will rehire exclusively from our incredible pool of former BYJUites.”
He called his mindset “hyper-optimistic”, adding:
“You have to be odd to be number one.”
At its peak, Byju’s was valued at $22 billion, hailed as the face of India’s edtech boom. But things quickly spiraled. The company defaulted on a $1.2 billion loan, leading to insolvency proceedings, lawsuits, and BCCI dragging them to court over unpaid dues.
Employees faced unpaid salaries, layoffs mounted, and investors wrote off their stakes. The once-dominant startup is now a cautionary tale.
While Raveendran remains hopeful, online sentiment is overwhelmingly against him. Many believe a comeback would only reopen wounds caused by aggressive loan-based sales, false promises, and corporate mismanagement.
One user summed it up bluntly:
“Another fraud loading.”
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