Go1 licenses a catalog of third-party corporate learning content to companies and learning platforms, recently acquiring Blinkist to expand its library – backed by Salesforce, Microsoft, and SoftBank.
ENTRY ANGLES
Build curated marketplace aggregating courses across topics for learner discovery · Build platform that translates organizational skill gaps into assembled learning journeys from licensed components · Build vertical-specific or geography-specific education marketplace before consolidation occurs
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Program design and learning journey curation, Content licensing and aggregation infrastructure, Skills gap assessment and matching algorithms
Some startups are large enough that their absence from your radar is itself revealing. Go1 is an Australian company that has raised $413.7M – including rounds from Salesforce, Microsoft, SoftBank, and Y Combinator – and carries a reported valuation of $3.5B. It's not a niche experiment; it's a category leader in corporate learning that most people in the startup ecosystem haven't heard of.
The most recent raise – $30M from an existing investor – was specifically to fund the acquisition of Blinkist, the book-summary platform, rounding out Go1's content library.
Go1's core product is what the company calls an "ecosystem" rather than a platform or a catalog. A corporate subscription gives employees access to content licensed from more than 200 publishers – videos, courses, assessments, interactive workbooks, long-form documents. Rather than forcing companies to assemble their own content libraries or manage separate vendor relationships, Go1 aggregates everything into a single invoice and a single interface.
The pricing reflects usage breadth – companies pay more as they draw on content from more publishers – but the consolidated billing alone removes significant operational overhead. Go1 specialists help organizations assemble individual content units into learning tracks on specific topics, and a pre-built catalog of tracks is available for direct use or adaptation.
Go1 doesn't require companies to use its own LMS. A set of integration modules lets organizations import Go1 content tracks directly into their existing learning management systems, so neither employees nor administrators need to adopt a new tool. Eight million learners across companies worldwide are on the platform.
A [recent review](/review/im-hren-a-vam-dengi) covered Innential, which operates on essentially the same content-licensing model at a much smaller scale (roughly €1M raised). And a [related review](/review/novaja-arhitektura-obrazovanija) covered Odilo, which licenses content to companies, universities, and libraries – $84.5M raised, including a €60M round. Go1 is the most developed version of a thesis those earlier companies also represent.
The core argument across all three: stop generating new educational content and start curating what already exists. A small L&D team using a platform like Go1 can assemble substantive learning programs on virtually any topic in hours, rather than commissioning bespoke content over weeks. They can mix formats – video, audio, text – to match how different employees learn, and they can draw on content originally produced for local markets and cultural contexts when serving global workforces.
What Go1 does more explicitly than its peers is recruit individual content creators, not just established publishers. The platform gives creators immediate access to a large corporate audience they couldn't easily reach alone, full analytics and reporting on usage, and – crucially – integration with the enterprise LMS infrastructure that would otherwise require each creator to solve independently. This supply-side strategy, combined with the publisher network, pushes Go1's model closer to a true two-sided marketplace than a distributor.
The e-commerce analogy holds precisely here. E-commerce started with independent online stores; as their number grew, buyers found it faster and cheaper to shop on marketplaces that aggregated supply. Marketplaces now represent roughly 60% of global e-commerce volume. Online education is following the same arc – there are now enough courses on enough topics that most learners would be better served by a curated marketplace than by navigating individual vendor sites.
The structural argument runs deeper: buyers in online education don't actually want content – they want capability development. That's a program design problem, not a content-discovery problem. The platforms positioned to win are those that help organizations translate skill gaps into assembled learning journeys from licensed components, rather than ones that simply sell individual courses. Go1, Odilo, and Innential all point in that direction at different levels of maturity.
The window for building marketplace leadership in this space is open – no single player has yet claimed the position that Amazon holds in goods or Spotify in audio. But it won't stay open. In concentrated markets, two or three platforms tend to dominate each geographic or vertical segment. Investors have already signaled conviction: the combined capital raised by Go1, Odilo, and their peers is in the hundreds of millions. The market is real; the infrastructure is being built. The remaining question is who builds the dominant aggregation layer before the category consolidates.