Learning and sharing:
from Norway to new markets
We did not come to BETT only to present a product; we came as a knowledge partner. Our team brings decades of experience as educators, school leaders, distributors and technologists, and we know how demanding it is to introduce learning materials and tools into real classrooms.
During the session and across the week, we highlighted three key themes as important: finding the right balance between national guidelines and local freedom, bringing print and digital learning material together into one clear experience, and making procurement easier without losing control or quality.

The demand is clear:
95% of teachers want a mix of edtech and books, but keeping track of what’s available is overwhelming. Across geographies and roles, there is a strong need for smarter ways to distribute and manage learning materials – not one more app, but a backbone that connects them. Neddi is positioned as that neutral infrastructure layer, serving distributors, publishers, suppliers and schools without competing with them.
Our white-label platform builds on the success story of Lære in Norway and on public–private collaborations that prove we can operate in regulated, high-trust education environments. By letting distributors and suppliers plug into a ready-made solution instead of building their own technology from scratch, we help them save time and cost while opening new revenue streams.
For us, BETT 2026 confirmed what we believe: the future of learning is not only about creating new digital experiences, but about making sure the right resources reach every learner, in every classroom. That is the work we do at Neddi, and BETT is one of the places where that work becomes visible.



