Edument and ELVA11 enter new partnership to strengthen talent development in software engineering
- Niclas Pahlfer
- Oct 1
- 2 min read
Edument and ELVA11 are now entering a partnership where ELVA11 will provide senior trainers and consultants, while Edument continues its long-term work in advancing skills development within the tech sector.

ELVA11 is a young company, founded as recently as February this year, but has already grown to 35 employees and established itself with a clear strategy of recruiting the most experienced consultants on the market. Together with Edument,which for nearly two decades has built and delivered talent programs, courses across the globe, and Proof of Concepts for some of the world’s largest technology companies including Ericsson, ABB, Boeing and Volvo, this creates a unique combination of expertise and experience.
The collaboration also means that Edument’s course catalog will expand with new courses, where ELVA11’s expert consultants will contribute with deep specialization.
This gives customers access to an even more complete offering in skills development.
As part of the partnership, Fredrik Mörk from ELVA11will deliver several training and consulting assignments before Christmas.
– We see this as a natural step in combining ELVA11’s strength in recruitment with Edument’s long-standing experience in education and development. Together, we can offer our customers an ecosystem of both the best senior consultants and the most effective upskilling programs,” says Acke Salem, founder and CEO of Edument.
– For us at ELVA11, the collaboration with Edument is a way to, from day one, contribute to something larger than individual assignments or projects. We want to be part of securing future talent supply while raising the bar for how education and consulting can be combined. This partnership makes that possible,” says Jim Roslund, CEO and founder of ELVA11.
The partnership strengthens both companies’ positions in the market and addresses the growing need for skills development in an industry where more than 70,000 developers are currently lacking in Sweden.



