A Louisiana-based education technology company announced last week plans to expand its East Baton Rouge Parish headquarters, backing development and national distribution of the company’s K-12 tutoring and literacy software platforms.
Studyville Enterprises delivers data-driven digital platforms for K-12 tutoring and literacy programs.
According to the announcement, the expansion will grow technology operations at Studyville’s Baton Rouge office, strengthening software development capabilities and supporting continued advancement of StudyTrack and ReadingImpact – the company’s digital platforms designed to support accountability in K-12 tutoring and literacy programs.
“Studyville’s journey from a single, in-person tutoring center to a growing education technology company reflects the entrepreneurial spirit and innovation driving our digital economy,” Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan B. Bourgeois said. “By building on a strong foundation of direct student impact and bolting on data-driven technology to scale their solutions, Studyville demonstrates that homegrown companies can evolve, compete nationally and create high-quality jobs right here in Louisiana.”
The company plans to invest $1.26 million in the expansion, which is expected to create 32 new direct jobs over the next five years. The Louisiana Economic Development also estimates the project will result in an additional 13 indirect new jobs, for a total of 45 potential new job opportunities in the Capital Region.
Studyville Founder and CEO Amanda Martin said the company plans to keep building in Louisiana as it expands its product footprint.
“Studyville was born in Louisiana, and we’re committed to growing right here. With StudyTrack and ReadingImpact, we’re building the technology infrastructure that schools and states need to prove what’s actually working for students – and we’re doing it from Baton Rouge,” Martin said.
The headquarters currently employs 12 corporate team members and supports more than 200 tutors statewide. New hiring is expected to begin in the first quarter of 2026, with full ramp-up of the new positions projected through 2030.
“This investment means new high-paying technology jobs for Louisiana. We’re proving that world-class education technology doesn’t have to come from Silicon Valley – it can be built right here in the Pelican State, and we’re excited to lead that charge,” Martin said.
Local officials cast the project as both an economic development win and an education technology play with broader reach.
“We are thankful for Studyville’s investment in Baton Rouge, helping to grow our economy by creating and retaining jobs,” East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor-President Sid Edwards said. “Our city also benefits by being the home of a company that helps educate youth throughout the nation and that showcases the technological creativity of our workforce.”