Post by account_disabled on Feb 11, 2024 6:09:53 GMT -5
even more important when progressing to management-level roles. The annual EF English Proficiency Index has shown that workers with better English skills are more often promoted. An element of understanding the culture is required when mastering a new language, so managers that speak more than one language are often more able to relate to coworkers and communicate more effectively – an essential skill when managing employees from different cultures and backgrounds. Get the latest on travel,
languages and culture in the GO newsletter Sign me up As we move Belgium Telemarketing Datathe executive ladder, the importance of communication skills become even more pronounced. Interestingly, executives tend to speak worse English than management-level employees; improving English skills would thus be particularly important for someone managing a team of people who may well speak better English than they do. It makes you future-proof As the EF EPI report shows, a high level of English proficiency correlates with
higher GDP, higher average income and innovation on the national level. Indeed, countries with stronger language skills – particularly in English – are stronger and more globally connected. But this holds just as true on the individual level: not only is the future of work international, but strong language skills coupled with strong communication skills, as well as an understanding for how to bridge cultural divides, will become even more important in a world where robots and artificial intelligence take over rote tasks and anything that does not require human connection, creativity and understanding.Who said that studying can’t be fun? Trick or treat yo’ self with a little “Netflix & learn” this Halloween! in the language you’re
languages and culture in the GO newsletter Sign me up As we move Belgium Telemarketing Datathe executive ladder, the importance of communication skills become even more pronounced. Interestingly, executives tend to speak worse English than management-level employees; improving English skills would thus be particularly important for someone managing a team of people who may well speak better English than they do. It makes you future-proof As the EF EPI report shows, a high level of English proficiency correlates with
higher GDP, higher average income and innovation on the national level. Indeed, countries with stronger language skills – particularly in English – are stronger and more globally connected. But this holds just as true on the individual level: not only is the future of work international, but strong language skills coupled with strong communication skills, as well as an understanding for how to bridge cultural divides, will become even more important in a world where robots and artificial intelligence take over rote tasks and anything that does not require human connection, creativity and understanding.Who said that studying can’t be fun? Trick or treat yo’ self with a little “Netflix & learn” this Halloween! in the language you’re