Industry-Specific Language Bootcamp Network
A network of intensive 8-week bootcamps (in-person and hybrid) focused on business-critical language skills for specific industries: export logistics companies learn Mandarin trade terminology and negotiation; wine/food exporters learn Italian; shipping/maritime firms learn Greek. Each cohort of 12-15 is taught by native speakers who are also industry practitioners (former traders, logistics managers, export compliance officers), not traditional language teachers. Participants emerge with 200-300 industry-specific phrases, cultural negotiation tactics, and direct connections to native-speaking business contacts.
40 weeks • 70% confidence
Value Proposition
Beats university language programs (too slow, too theoretical) and generic Duolingo/Babbel (no business context, no accountability). Beats hiring multilingual staff (cheaper, faster, builds internal capability). Participants close actual deals within 3-6 months post-bootcamp because they learn real negotiation language, not textbook phrases.
Target Audience
Export-focused SMEs (50-500 employees) in agriculture, wine, specialty foods, manufacturing, and logistics; their operations managers and sales teams who directly negotiate with international partners
Key Features
- Industry-specific vocabulary lists (200+ terms per language per sector)
- Live role-play negotiations with native speakers playing supplier/buyer roles
- Post-bootcamp peer accountability groups (monthly 2-hour calls for 6 months)
- And more, with full implementation detail...
Tech Stack
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Sign up freeOriginal Problem
Australian businesses and workers losing competitive advantage due to language skill gaps in global marketsAustralian companies struggle to compete internationally and attract global talent because their workforce lacks proficiency in high-value languages like Mandarin, Italian, and Greek. This creates missed export opportunities, limits access to emerging markets, and reduces hiring flexibility for roles requiring multilingual capabilities. Current education systems fail to prioritize practical language skills that directly impact business revenue and career advancement.
Score: 17.5%