Udemy has not killed the university. It hasn't even wounded it. What it has done is more interesting: it has colonized the space the university abandoned—the vocational, the specific, the desperate need to learn a tool right now .

The company’s CEO, Greg Brown (who took over in 2022), has framed AI not as a threat but as the ultimate tutor. The vision: Udemy becomes a "learning co-pilot" that knows what you need to know, delivers the exact five-minute video clip from a two-hour course, and then tests you immediately. To judge Udemy by the standards of Harvard is to miss the point entirely. Udemy is not trying to produce well-rounded citizens or critical thinkers. It is trying to produce employable technicians.

This was a direct assault on the accreditation cartel. Udemy didn't care about your PhD. It cared about your ability to explain "JavaScript closures" in a way that a burned-out QA tester could understand at 11 PM on a Tuesday. To understand Udemy’s cultural weight, look at the numbers. As of 2024, the platform hosts over 210,000 courses in 75 languages, with 67 million learners. But the raw data misses the nuance. Udemy didn't just digitize the university syllabus; it unbundled it.

The platform’s core innovation was radical: Anyone with a camera, a PowerPoint deck, and an internet connection could become an instructor. Udemy would handle the hosting, the payment processing, and the global distribution. In return, it took a hefty cut (originally 50%, later shifting to a revenue-share model that could drop to 25% if the instructor brought their own students).

Udemy’s response has been aggressive. They launched including a "Personalized Learning" path that adapts based on your job title, and an "AI Assistant" that can summarize a 10-hour course into a 5-minute text digest. More radically, they are experimenting with "AI Simulation Labs," where learners can practice server configuration or code debugging in a simulated environment without the friction of setting up a real server.