Telerik Academy has received EU funding to develop an AI-powered coding tutor as part of a project aimed at boosting innovation and competitiveness. The initiative, supported by the European Regional Development Fund, will focus on creating a functional prototype, validating the concept, and testing it in real educational environments.
Read the storyIntroducing Katalysta – our new brand for international operations, created to bring our mission of fostering tech talent to communities around the globe. And the first country to welcome Katalysta - Georgia!
Read the storyWe met with Borislava Georgieva, HR Manager to learn more about our graduates' performance, career growth and contribution to the company.
Read the storyAfter 12 years in Marketing and Sales, Stanimir decided it was time for a change. He graduated from Telerik Academy Alpha Java in May. Less than 2 months later he started working as a Java Developer. This is his story.
Learn how our updated Career Guidance program helps our students find jobs during and post COVID-19
React is the most popular JavaScript library in the world and it’s considered the future of web development. Today, companies like Facebook, Instagram, Netflix, and BBC build their web apps on React. But should you learn React? We talked to industry experts.
We are happy to share that Coca-Cola, Americaneagle.com, HedgeServ, and Tick42 expand their partnership with Telerik Academy
COVID-19 revealed and validated 6 important lessons that would be helpful in everything that we do - work, study, our daily interactions. Check them out!
Meet Petya, Edo, Boyan, and Vladi, four of our trainers. They love sharing their knowledge and are ready to tell you all their secret ways of dealing with difficult situations, including this one.
Since Telerik Academy’s launch eight years ago to-date around 12,000 people have been trained onsite. More than 45,000 have used the Academy’s online resources (including 3,800 video lessons with close to 6 million views). Telerik Academy’s results are impressive.
After leaving Progress in the end of 2016, Telerik’s four founders – Boyko Iaramov, Vassil Terziev, Svetozar Georgiev and Hristo Kosev, spun off the tech-ed organization they created in 2009 – Telerik Academy – into an independent company. Their idea is to transform the project into a self-sustaining business, grooming talent for all companies in the IT ecosystem, as well as to continue to train children and high school students for free. These plans include the current building.
Three years after Telerik co-founders Svetozar Georgiev and Vassil Terziev graced the cover of Forbes Magazine Bulgaria for the first time, Vassil Terziev is back on the cover of the prestigious business monthly.
There is more behind the avalanche-kind of success than just a good business model and a few smart ideas. You feel this the moment you enter the company's headquarters in Sofia's "Mladost" suburb. "In spite of being in the lime light, for us everyone working for the organization is a hero,” says Terziev.
In Bulgaria, where demand for qualified IT specialists is now outstripping the available supply, Telerik promotes itself as the only company in the country that offers free training courses. In 2009, it set up an academy for software engineers. So far 510 have enrolled — though not all stay the course — and the annual intake is rising. This year about 1,000 started the program, of whom Telerik plans to hire about 150.