Rosetta Stone
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Making Connections has Never Been More Important

It’s an increasingly interconnected world. Commerce and people regularly cross borders. The people charged with managing these issues must be comfortable communicating among nations—and that means removing language barriers. By making it possible for busy government personnel around the world to learn a new language, Rosetta Stone® opens doors to closer cooperation.

National Government

Government officials posted overseas or meeting with foreign officials at home find Rosetta Stone to be the ideal tool for learning a foreign language or refreshing their language skills.

Central and Local Government

Increasing populations of non-native speakers are driving the language-learning needs of emergency services (fire, police, rescue), public health workers and other government agents. Rosetta Stone is an ideal language training tool to help them communicate more effectively with members of the community and deliver services more effectively.

Defence Mission Critical Language Skills

Rosetta Stone is up to the challenge of helping armed forces all over the world strengthen their language skills. The 31 languages covered by Rosetta Stone include the “investment” languages – Chinese, Arabic, Korean, Farsi, Hindi and Pashto – that Defence organisations often deem critical to national security. With Rosetta Stone, armed forces personnel can start preparing at home and with flexible delivery solutions, they can continue their language learning after deployment.

Customer Comments

"It's important that our employees are able to communicate in a variety of different languages to remain competitive in an international market - to help us achieve this competitive advantage, lastminute.com delivers Rosetta Stone, a product that is widely used by people around the world." - Stuart Bagnell, Learning & Development Advisor, lastminute.com

News and Announcements

Are We Language-Ready For Beijing 2008?
2007-07-25
The UK and China may not be ready to break the language barriers in time for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
» View the article