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Phil|Accent Trainer
职业教师
What’s YOUR business learning English? :)
English is the current international language of choice around the world, so it’s no surprise that most of my ESL students are learning it for business purposes (among others). But the thing is, everyone’s business is different. Long ago, before starting to teach English, if you had said “business”, I’d have thought of managing a big company. But what level of management? What kind of company? How large a company? Even in the same company, there’s a huge difference between production, marketing, finance, human resources, etc. 

And when you think about it, isn’t everyone involved in business of some type? I mean, unless you’re independently wealthy — but even then, it must get boring sitting around all day eating caviar and sipping champagne. In reality, isn’t business just life? There’s the farmer looking for ways to supply food to foreign markets, the internet marketer, the large company that everyone’s heard about, the small startup that no one's heard about, the consulting firm (what kind of consulting?) high tech, low tech, banking and finance, mom ’n’ pop stores, the list could go on forever. And if every size, shape, and kind of business has its own peculiarities, why do English teachers love to talk about “business” English so much? Is there really one “business” English, and is business really separate from non-business activities — in terms of language?

So here are some more questions for you to share your experience: Do you consider yourself to be in the “business world”? What’s your business? What does the word “business” mean to you? What specifically do you expect to get out of it?

2020年7月15日 01:37
评论 · 12
2
There is that pithy saying "the business of business is business", ostensibly coined to counter the new age corporate brouhaha of people and community being the most important and corporate social responsibility being a part of someone's DNA. While it's true that without a community there can be no business, that's generally the end of it except for very rare cases. In general, the first business of business is to earn revenues and profits, everything else comes way later.

I'm not kidding, I work in the classical Taylorian industry. Our business is automotive assembly lines, nothing new age about that such as IT or consultancy. We work with steel and machines, not with Google. As for business English, it's not really different from regular English except that it's much more formal, unemotional and loaded with jargon and numbers. Anyone with a bit of common sense can manage that.
2020年7月25日
1
I'll respond when I have time.
2020年7月15日
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Phil|Accent Trainer
语言技能
加泰罗尼亚语, 中文, 中文(粤语), 英语, 法语, 德语, 希伯来语, 意大利语, 葡萄牙语, 西班牙语
学习语言
中文(粤语), 希伯来语