mumbai, April 28 -- The rise of artificial intelligence-powered self-learning tools is forcing India's upskilling companies to redesign their programmes to attract a broader, non-technical learner base. Upskilling firms such as Great Learning, Temasek-backed upGrad and Prosus-backed Eruditus, among others, have introduced no-code tracks within existing skilling programmes and launched targeted courses for non-technical learners in areas that previously required coding knowledge, the firms told Mint. This comes amid rapid improvements in generative AI models, which are increasingly capable of performing tasks that once required months of technical training. Learners are now wary of sitting through three to six-month-long courses for something that can be done in minutes using AI, said Arjun Nair, co-founder of Great Learning, which was formerly a Byju's group company. "The models have become dramatically better. Whether it is Claude, Gemini, or OpenAI models, their capabilities have improved sharply in the last three to six months," Nair said. "Things we used to teach two years ago-building dashboards, basic analytics workflows, writing certain scripts-many of those things can now be done through prompts in three minutes using AI." The shift comes at a time when India's online higher education and upskilling market, valued at Rs.30,000 crore in FY23, is projected to grow at a 23.1% compound annual growth rate to Rs.85,000 crore by FY28, according to a report by Technopak Advisors in June last year. Companies said they are redesigning flagship programmes by reducing the weight of coding basics and embedding AI tools directly into the learning journey. "Earlier, someone had to first learn Python syntax, packages, environments, and setup-before they could do anything useful. Now, in many use-cases, that barrier has reduced significantly," Nair said. "A learner can begin creating outputs first, then learn the deeper layers later if needed. So we have changed the order in which courses are taught." Learners can now choose between coding and no-code tracks in almost all of Great Learning's programmes, he added. upGrad too has begun redesigning older AI and data science programmes to broaden access. "Over the past year, we have actively restructured parts of our curriculum to include no-code and low-code entry points, especially in areas like Generative AI, prompt engineering, and AI-led business workflows," Anuj Vishwakarma, CEO, higher education programs, upGrad said. Eruditus believes the non-tech user base needs fresh no-code offerings. "For learners who want to build AI-powered solutions without becoming software developers, we believe a dedicated no-code pathway is often more appropriate. That is why we are also exploring new no-code AI program opportunities this year," said Ashwin Damera, co-founder and CEO, Eruditus. The company is still updating existing programmes to reflect AI-assisted workflows to widen their appeal. "For professionals pursuing software development or deeply technical AI roles, coding remains an important part of the learning journey," Damera said. "In one of our programmes, the Full Stack Development with MERN (MongoDB, Express.js, React and Node.js) program now includes additional sessions on the do's and don'ts of AI-assisted coding, introduced in November 2025." About 37% of Eruditus's total learners in consumer business (B2C) in the last three quarters have signed up for tech programs, the company said. The company's financial year ends in June. The shift comes as a new learner base gains prominence, with demand increasingly coming from professionals outside the traditional tech upskilling ecosystem. Companies report rising interest from mid-career professionals looking to integrate AI into their existing roles rather than transition fully into software development....