BEP 59 – Perswazja 1: Zdobywać uwagę

Do you ever need to persuade or convince someone of your point of view? Do you need to win support for a proposal, or get backing for a project? Of course you do. Perswazja – convincing someone of somethingis an essential part of almost everything we do, from informal discussions to formal negotiations. To be successful, you need to be persuasive. You need to get people to accept a different point view, to see things your way. How can you be more persuasive? In this three-part series, we’ll be giving you some answers.

Throughout the years, many talented speakers and researchers have been developing ways to persuade people effectively. One of the most widely used methods is Alan H. Monroe’s. In the mid-1930s, Monroe created a persuasive process called theMonroe sequencethat has become a standard in business, media and politics. Once you know it, you’ll recognize it everywherein speeches, statements, proposals, advertisements. It’s popular because it is logical and effective.

Więc, over the next three Business English Pod episodes, we’ll be studying language and strategies for persuasion based on the Monroe Sequence.

The Monroe Sequence has five parts.
1) Get the audience’s attention
2) Establish a need
3) Satisfy that need
4) Visualize the future
5) Call for action

This lesson will focus on the first step, getting the audience’s attention.

The listening takes place at Swift, a bicycle manufacturer whose major market is the U.S. We’ll be listening to a good example and a bad example of persuasion. First let’s examine the bad example.

Pytania do słuchania

Bad example
1. Whose needs does Franz focus on? To jest, whose needs is he taking into consideration when he makes the proposal?
2. Why is Franz’s proposal so ineffective?

Good example
1) What does Steve do at the beginning of his presentation?
2) Whose needs does Steve focus onthe workersor the management’s?

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BEP 58 – Chitchat z chłodnicą wody: Idiomy sportowe (2)

Idiomy sportowe 2, jest częścią serii poświęconej nieformalnej rozmowie lub krótkiej rozmowie – chitchat z chłodnicą wody. Kontynuujemy od miejsca, w którym ostatni raz skończyliśmy BEP 57. Jan i Jen, pracownicy największej amerykańskiej firmy telekomunikacyjnej Ambient, rozmawiają o ostatnim wydarzeniu w branży: Akcent, europejska firma telekomunikacyjna, przejął TelStar, jeden z amerykańskich konkurentów Ambient.

Ostatni raz, Jen właśnie przedyskutowała, jak była zaskoczona, że ​​TelStar zdecydował się grać w piłkę, to jest współpraca, z Accent, ponieważ byli akcjonariusze “zwlekanie na czas,” lub opóźnianie, przez miesiące. Jak Jan odpowiada?

Pytania do słuchania

1) Kim jest McConnel i co o nim myślą Jan i Jen?
2) Co mówią Jen i Jan o przyszłości Accent na rynku amerykańskim?

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BEP 57 – Chitchat z chłodnicą wody: Idiomy sportowe (1)

This Business English Podcast lesson is the first in an ongoing series where we’ll listen in on some typical chitchat around the office water cooler. You’ll find a water cooler in offices around the worldusually in the break room where employees gather to drink a cup of coffee or tea and take a rest from work.

And during these breaks, you might meet with a colleague and exchange words about life, your jobs, your company, Sporty, politics or whatever. Więc “water cooler chichathas come to refer to all types of informal communication that take place at the office.

We’ll be listening in on Jan and Jen, who work in the same office of Ambient, an American telecoms company, gossiping around the water cooler. They are discussing the latest industry news: Akcent, a major European player in the market, has just announced the takeover or buy out of Ambient’s main competitor,TelStar.

Pytania do słuchania

1) Do Jan and Jen think Accent’s takeover of TelStar was a good idea?
2) Why was there a delay in the takeover?

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BEP 56 – Podróż biznesowa 2: Cła i imigracja

Continuing our series on ESL for business travel, we rejoin Alan and Honesto on their business trip to the USA. W BEP 55 – Airport Departures and Take Off, Alana, the main character in our story, and Honesto, his colleague, have left Hong Kong for San Francisco. There they will go through immigration, collect their bags, and change planes to Michigan, which is where their company, Otaczający, is headquartered.

Immigration is the process you follow to enter a foreign country. So in today’s ESL lesson, you’ll learn helpful travel vocabulary and phrases you can use when you enter the U.S. or other countries.

Pytania do słuchania

1) What is an I-94 form?
2) How much money can you bring into the U.S.?
3) Where does Alan want to go sightseeing?
4) What does Alan mean byjust pulling your leg?”

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BEP 55 – Podróż biznesowa: Odlot i start z lotniska

This Business English Podcast lesson is the first in a series of shows that will follow an employee of a manufacturing company on a training trip to the U.S. Over the series, we’ll practice many situations that will be useful for you on your business trips overseas, including going through immigration, renting a car, checking into a hotel, using wireless internet and so on.

The main character in our story is Alan Chen. He works for a major multinational electronics manufacturer, Otaczający, which is headquartered in Michigan in the USA. Having recently received a promotion, Alan is going to America to learn 6 Sigma, which is a system for improving quality.

Today’s episode starts at the beginning of the business trip withboarding the airplane.

Pytania do słuchania

1) What row are Alan and Honesto sitting in?
2) What should passengers turn off before the plane takes off?
3) What does Alan mean bymurder a scotch.

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