Torontoâs Cognota has acquired New York City-based Learnexus, another startup developing learning and development (L&D) technology for large enterprises. Neither company shared the financial terms of the transaction, which closed earlier this month.
Cognota founder and CEO Ryan Austin said the deal expedites the startupâs plans to help large enterprises not only manage their internal learning efforts, ranging from skills to leadership training, but also facilitate them.
The deal aids Cognotaâs âmove beyond just planning software into execution software.â
Cognota aims to help achieve that with Learnexusâ on-demand L&D talent marketplace, which features 3,000 vetted freelancersâfrom subject matter experts to technical writers, designers, developers, and facilitatorsâand accompanying investments in agentic AI.
In an exclusive interview with BetaKit, Austin said Cognota sees room to help connect its clients with the external professionalsâor agentsâto deliver their L&D programs. Learnexus marks Cognotaâs first acquisition to date.
Cognota describes itself as an âall-in-oneâ corporate L&D operations platform. The startupâs âLearnOpsâ software helps about 200 large enterprises, including Ace Hardware, Goodyear, RBC, and State Farm, monitor their learning and development needs, replacing disparate tools.
As corporate L&D team sizes and internal budgets shrink, and the folks responsible for these efforts are increasingly being asked âto do more with less,â Austin said big companies looking to upskill their workers are more frequently turning to temporary, outside help.
At the moment, Austin said Cognotaâs platform can tell users when a capacity issue is looming, but has no way to help them solve it. Joining forces with Learnexus allows the startup to begin helping its clients address those challenges by matching them with the right expertise.
Cognota is rolling out a next-generation, AI-native version of its platform this September as part of a âmove beyond just planning software into execution software,â a shift Austin said Learnexus helps facilitate.
RELATED: Cognota closes $5.5-million USD Series A to make corporate LearnOps a thing
In an interview with BetaKit, Learnexus co-founder and former CEO Peter Enestrom described Cognotaâs work as a ânatural extensionâ of the work his company was already doing, noting that the two firms already shared customers.
Cognota has acquired Learnexusâ tech and âa handfulâ of its employees, bringing the size of its team to approximately 40.
The deal comes months after Cognota secured a $5.75-million USD ($8.12-million CAD) Series B round. That January 2026 round consisted of just over $4 million in equity funding led by new backer Blossom Street Ventures, and approximately $1.7 million in venture debt from fellow Dallas-based firm Comerica Bank (soon to be Fifth Third Bank). Austin claimed it came at a higher valuation than Cognotaâs $5.5-million Series A round, but did not share the exact amount.
Austin did not share the startupâs current revenue, but emphasized that it was âlarge enoughâ to close a Series B, albeit a smaller one, âin a tough market.â The CEO said Cognota plans to use this money to reach breakeven.
As for why Cognota raised only slightly more this time around than for its Series A, Austin said that AI has reduced the amount of capital the startup requires to build products. He said the Learnexus deal also adds cash to Cognotaâs balance sheet and a couple million dollars worth of revenue to its overall sales. Cognota expects its recent distribution partnership with Cornerstone to provide an added boost.
CORRECTION (06/25/26): A previous version of this story incorrectly indicated that Learnexus was Cognotaâs second acquisition to date, after LearningOperations.com, when the latter was simply a domain purchase. The story has been updated with the correct information.
Feature image courtesy Cognota.
