Information Management

Giunti Labs Launches learn eXact for Asian Markets

Sestri Levante (IT), March 2009 - Giunti Labs has increased its presence at the annual Global Learning Summit, held in Singapore from 24 - 27 of February. In addition, at the event, Giunti Labs launched the new Enterprise 2009 Edition of its learn eXact Online and Mobile Learning Content Management Suite (LCMS).




As well as giving the opening address to the Summit on 26 February, Giunti Labs' CEO, Fabrizio Cardinali made two presentations: one examining the latest developments in tools and technologies for mobile learning and the other looking at how using new-generation enterprise LCM systems can help organisations survive the current global economic crisis.

"In a world of increasing financial pressure and global competition, large organisations have a heightened need for innovation and creativity in the way they manage their knowledge assets, secure their content archives, and create effective learning experiences for their rapidly evolving workforces and labour needs", observed Cardinali.

"Media-dependent, skills-adapted, enterprise-wide, learning content production, management, and sharing projects and tasks, including corporate-wide information dissemination, performance support, and competence management, are becoming paramount to support business changes and evolution."

"Information duplication, loss of consistency, and ineffective searching and harvesting of content are unaffordable inefficiencies in today's corporate environments", he continued. "So to help its worldwide corporate client base overcome such challenges, Giunti Labs has launched the new Enterprise 2009 Edition of its learn eXact Online and Mobile Learning Content Management Suite (LCMS)."

While attracting most of its delegates from Singapore (twenty per cent) and nearby Malaysia (eleven per cent), the Summit also drew visitors from Europe and the Americas (three per cent each) as well as Africa and the Middle East (ten per cent), India (five per cent), and mainland China (five per cent).