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Bite-sized learning for business success

In 1999, young entre­pre­neurs Patrick Brig­ger and Thomas Bergen were look­ing for an inno­v­a­tive idea to launch a new start­up. They soon stum­bled across a gap in the mar­ket that paved the way to do just that.

“As entre­pre­neurs, we need­ed smarter, quick­er, bet­ter infor­ma­tion,” Mr Brig­ger explains. “We want­ed to have instant access to all the knowl­edge con­tained in the busi­ness books on our book­shelves. And we knew we could make that knowl­edge acces­si­ble and use­ful to oth­ers as well.”

This real­i­sa­tion led Mr Brig­ger, with Mr Bergen and their third co-founder, best-sell­ing author Rolf Dobel­li, to launch getAb­stract, an online library of con­cise busi­ness book sum­maries.

“When we start­ed, only one oth­er firm was offer­ing book sum­maries, and only in print, in lim­it­ed quan­ti­ty and from a hand­ful of pub­lish­ers,” says Mr Brig­ger, who recog­nised an unmet demand. “We took a chance and nev­er looked back.”

Now getAb­stract is the world’s largest library of com­pressed knowl­edge, fea­tur­ing more than 20,000 sum­maries of busi­ness books, arti­cles, pod­casts and videos. It has become a pre­ferred learn­ing solu­tion for cor­po­rate and indi­vid­ual cus­tomers world­wide.

The chal­lenge for many L&D depart­ments is that changes hap­pen extreme­ly quick­ly; what you learnt yes­ter­day is not nec­es­sar­i­ly what you need to know today

World’s best business content

Almost 21 years lat­er, Mr Brig­ger is proud of what getAb­stract has achieved. The com­pa­ny finds, rates and sum­maris­es the world’s best busi­ness con­tent to enable users to learn quick­ly, effi­cient­ly and flex­i­bly, wher­ev­er they are and from any device.

“We select and sum­marise our con­tent in a com­plete­ly unbi­ased and neu­tral fash­ion,” he explains, adding jok­ing­ly: “We are Swiss, after all.”

The company’s edi­tors curate their selec­tions based on qual­i­ty, inno­va­tion and applic­a­bil­i­ty, draw­ing from the work of more than 600 pub­lish­ing part­ners. The edi­tors con­stant­ly scour web­sites, cat­a­logues, mag­a­zines, news­pa­pers, book fairs and book­stores to find the best con­tent.

The world of learn­ing and devel­op­ment (L&D) has under­gone major trans­for­ma­tions since 1999, yet getAb­stract has been able to keep pace by con­tin­u­ing to pro­vide clients with out­stand­ing, up-to-date con­tent. getAb­stract clients, often com­pa­nies with thou­sands of employ­ees, reap the ben­e­fit of con­tin­u­ous learn­ing, which enables them to be more inno­v­a­tive in a fast-mov­ing and unpre­dictable busi­ness envi­ron­ment.

“The chal­lenge for many L&D depart­ments is that changes hap­pen extreme­ly quick­ly; what you learnt
yes­ter­day is not nec­es­sar­i­ly what you need to know today,” says Mr Brig­ger. And this is where he sees the most promis­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties.

Learning workers and leaders

Busi­ness guru Peter Druck­er coined the term “knowl­edge work­ers” to describe high­ly skilled employ­ees who apply their knowl­edge to devel­op sophis­ti­cat­ed prod­ucts and ser­vices. The phrase is now com­mon­place in man­age­ment jar­gon, but Mr Brig­ger says he prefers to use the terms “learn­ing work­ers” and “learn­ing lead­ers”.

“L&D solu­tions often focus on devel­op­ing work­place skills, but employ­ees need, and often want, a broad­er per­spec­tive, which includes solu­tions that allow them to devel­op them­selves holis­ti­cal­ly,” he says. “More­over, it’s impor­tant to extend per­son­al knowl­edge beyond exist­ing bound­aries. L&D needs to fos­ter an urge for curios­i­ty and then be able to sat­is­fy that curios­i­ty in var­i­ous areas.”

Pushing boundaries

To suc­ceed in a world shaped by unprece­dent­ed­ly rapid change, Mr Brig­ger main­tains you have to think cre­ative­ly and curi­ous­ly, both on a cor­po­rate and per­son­al lev­el, while con­stant­ly envi­sion­ing what the next inno­va­tion might look like.

“We’re always think­ing about our cus­tomers, how their habits and needs are chang­ing in tan­dem with the world around them,” he says. “We strive to make knowl­edge acces­si­ble to every­one every­where, regard­less of how much time they have. We know peo­ple are busy, but that shouldn’t pre­vent them from learn­ing, even if that means read­ing or lis­ten­ing to con­tent for five quick min­utes on a mobile device in an air­port lounge.”

In its quest to serve glob­al needs, getAb­stract pro­vides sum­maries in Eng­lish, Ger­man, Span­ish, French, Por­tuguese, Russ­ian and Man­darin Chi­nese. Its mul­ti-lan­guage libraries are unique in the world of busi­ness and glob­al com­pa­nies among their cus­tomers, such as Microsoft, wel­come hav­ing an exten­sive bank of infor­ma­tion that every­one in their inter­na­tion­al work­force can share.

getAb­stract is com­mit­ted to help­ing the next gen­er­a­tion of lead­ers seize their oppor­tu­ni­ties and under­stand their chal­lenges. As part of a new ini­tia­tive, getAb­stract now offers stu­dents free access to its online library, a pub­lic ser­vice embraced at once by stu­dents world­wide.

Beyond business

While getAbstract’s pri­ma­ry aim is to edu­cate on busi­ness mat­ters, Mr Brig­ger is acute­ly aware of how inter­con­nect­ed the world has become. He’s adamant that to fos­ter a deep under­stand­ing of a sub­ject like busi­ness, you must have a sol­id grasp of the sci­en­tif­ic, polit­i­cal and eco­nom­ic forces which shape glob­al affairs. “We offer the hands-on, skill-based infor­ma­tion that learn­ing work­ers need, like how to be per­son­al­ly pro­duc­tive, how to sell and pro­mote a prod­uct, and how to dri­ve a career and run a suc­cess­ful organ­i­sa­tion. How­ev­er, we also want to pro­vide the larg­er con­text,” he says.

“We’ve extend­ed our tra­di­tion­al busi­ness library to encom­pass a sci­ence library, a pol­i­tics library, an eco­nom­ics library and an ‘Inside Chi­na’ library, where we find and rate con­tent in Man­darin and sum­marise it in Eng­lish. No one else offers access to that kind of knowl­edge from the Chi­nese busi­ness press.”

Look­ing ahead, Mr Brig­ger sees the com­pa­ny con­tin­u­ing to devel­op in this vein. “We intend to pro­duce more applic­a­ble, high-qual­i­ty con­tent from a wider vari­ety of sources and to con­tin­ue to be the dom­i­nant, most use­ful pre­sen­ter of essen­tial busi­ness con­tent sum­maries world­wide,” he says.

“We know that it can be tough to stay on top of the lat­est devel­op­ments in a world that’s chang­ing at such a break­neck pace, but we’re here to cut through the noise and make learn­ing imme­di­ate, smart, man­age­able and mean­ing­ful. This is the age when com­pa­nies need pur­pose, as well as prof­it, and we’re very clear that this is our mis­sion.”

For more infor­ma­tion please vis­it www.getabstract.com