Saturday, April 12, 2014

How A Bilingual Business Can Be Good For Your

You must become adept at adjusting to the ever-changing business culture if you want to reach the top (or, if you want to stay at the top). Becoming bilingual (or even multilingual) is one of the big ways in which businesses can adjust. While a lot of companies in other countries have adjusted in this way already - with most of those in non-English-speaking countries adding English to their plate of languages in order to compete in America - a lot of American businesses have fallen behind. You can benefit from following the lead of these companies and becoming bilingual yourself if you are a business executive, a small business owner, or even a small-time employee in a big corporation.

For business executives, it is easy to understand the need for linguistic expansion. For a business executive, the expectation is for them to be the best at what they do. Just because you have reached the top does not mean that you are guaranteed to stay there; after all, if you are not continuing to improve, someone else is! By adding an extra language to your arsenal, you are able to broaden the scope of your communicative powers, and are therefore able to broaden your powers overall. Furthermore, you will be able to encourage your employees to follow your lead if you take the initiative to expand your linguistic prowess, and you will also be able to communicate more effectively with a wider range of customers.

Four years after a small business is birthed, there is only a 40% chance it will still be alive; ten years after a small business is birthed, the chances of it still existing are only 10%. Every advantage you can find when running a small business can be a big deal, and becoming bilingual is a big advantage!

If you are just a regular old employee in a big corporation, you might think you don't have any real need to add a new language. But you would be wrong! While the boost an extra language can give you as far as advancement opportunities within a company is certainly a reality, it is even more concrete a reality as businesses continue to progress toward a multilingual culture. The present might not yield you much fruit for your efforts, but you will surely see the payoff sometime down the road!

The first step for learning a new language is motivation; you should find that you now have that! As for the remaining steps of dedication and time, it will be up to you to supply both of these.

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