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CORPORATE CULTURE AND NATIONAL CHARACTERISTICSSteve Redwood, a London-based management consultant with Price Waterhouse, tells of a client who had brought together a team from eight different countries to work on a project. 'The national stereotypes applied,' he says. 'The people from Switzerland and Germany were mainly interested in the way the project was organised. The people from Spain took a much more intuitive approach. The British had a high level of scepticism about whether the whole thing really mattered. Language was not the issue. It was more basic than that.' Behind this lies the most fundamental problem of all: companies are dominated by the culture of the home country. One big difference with American companies is that they think globalisation means Americanising the world. Others don't have that arrogance. If top management all come from the home country, that makes it much more difficult to attract and keep a global pool of talent. People know when they fit in and when they don't. That's true even of national companies: there's a tendency for people to have gone to the same school, or all have trained as engineers. It's even more true when it comes to where you grew up. The problem lies not in attracting people - a talented Indian or Korean manager will typically want early experience with a multinational - but in keeping them. Task VII. Find information about the countries listed below. Complete the table. Discuss the results with your group.
Task VIII. Read the following dialogues. Try to guess the meaning of the business idioms given in bold. Give their Russian equivalents. 1. A: How do you like working for that firm? B: They're marvellous. They've just given me a loan to buy a house: low rate of interest, no strings attached! 2. A: His work's gone off lately. I think he needs a holiday. B: That's what comes of burning the candle at both ends. 3. A: Done any research yet into possible manufacturers? B: Well, I've sounded out a number of firms, and the response is encouraging. 4. A: Hiroshi told me he was thinking of taking up flower arranging — I ask you! B: If he does, you can bet your bottom dollar he'll work at it till he's number one in Japan! 5. A: Hey, I like your tie: the Hole-in-One-Club, eh? B: That's right. Actually, I don't care for the tie, but it does put you one up on your opponents. 6. A: My little daughter's a natural ice-skater. She's thirteen, and already she's raining for the next Olympics. B: I'm not surprised. In ice-skating, you're over the hill at a very early age. 7. A: You look thirsty. How about a can of beer? B: Er... Not just now. I'll take a raincheck on that, if I may. 8. A: Some of the locals are getting very worked up about the pollution issue. B: That's understandable, but they don't want to throw the baby out with the bath water. If the factory goes, this place will be a ghost town.
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