《综合商务英语》课程建设项目高级课程阅读补充材料汇编参考模板范本.doc
- 【下载声明】
1. 本站全部试题类文档,若标题没写含答案,则无答案;标题注明含答案的文档,主观题也可能无答案。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
2. 本站全部PPT文档均不含视频和音频,PPT中出现的音频或视频标识(或文字)仅表示流程,实际无音频或视频文件。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
3. 本页资料《《综合商务英语》课程建设项目高级课程阅读补充材料汇编参考模板范本.doc》由用户(林田)主动上传,其收益全归该用户。163文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对该用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上传内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知163文库(点击联系客服),我们立即给予删除!
4. 请根据预览情况,自愿下载本文。本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
5. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007及以上版本和PDF阅读器,压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 综合商务英语 综合 商务英语 课程 建设项目 高级 阅读 补充 材料 汇编 参考 模板 范本
- 资源描述:
-
1、综合商务英语课程建设项目高级课程阅读补充材料汇编Text 1BUILDING RELATIONSHIPSBoth employers and employees have expectations about what is reasonable behavior in a work context. There is a certain level of trust between people, and even if the newspapers are full of stories of breakdowns in this trust, we think of them as ex
2、ceptions to established norms in social relationships.Business-to-business relationshipsSome say that first impressions count. Others think that someones character can only be judged after a lot of contact in business contexts and socially. This is why deciding on a supplier or distributor takes var
3、ying lengths of time in different cultures. To emphasize the importance of relationships like these, companies may refer to each other as partners.A new trend is for companies to set up e-marketplace on the Internet where they work together on procurement (purchasing) of materials and parts. Supplie
4、rs can make bids in competition with each other.When firms work together on a particular project, they may enter into a strategic alliance. This may take the form of a joint venture between two or three companies, or a consortium between several organizations. An alliance may be the prelude to a mer
5、ger between companies. Journalists often use the language of betrothal and marriage in situations like this.Companies may overcome legal and other barriers in order to merge, but, as in marriage, there is no guarantee that the relationship will work. The cultures of the two companies may be so incom
6、patible that the promised increase in profitability and shareholder value does not materialize.Relationship networksStakeholder theory holds that society is made up of a web of relationships, and that each member of this arrangement has its stake of interest and of responsibilities. In a company, th
7、e interested parties are its owners (shareholders), managers, employees, supplier, distributors and customers who may or may not be end-users of its products or services. A large companys activities have an effect the places where it operates (think especially of company towns dominated by one compa
8、ny) and on society as a whole.Some companies publish an independent social audit that goes beyond the traditional annual report and attempts to give a bigger picture of the companys place in society, the benefits it brings, the effects of its activities on people and the environment. Some say that s
9、ocial audits give a false sense of social responsibility. Optimists reply that pressure from stakeholders such as shareholders and customers can bring positive changes in the way companies work, and benefits to society as a whole. Companies are increasingly sensitive to accusations of causing pollut
10、ion, tolerating racism or using sweatshop labor.Text 2RiskAll business is built on risk. Operating in politically unstable countries is one of the most extreme examples of this. The dangers may range from kidnapping of managers through to confiscation of assets by government. Company managers may ha
11、ve to face fraud and corruption. But the fact that companies want to work there at all shows that they think the returns could be very high. As always, there is a trade-off between risk and return: investing in very challenging conditions is graphic, if extreme, illustration of this trade-off.Compan
12、ies do not have to go to unstable countries to be harmed by criminal activity. Industrial espionage has existed for as long as there have been industries to spy on, but this can now be carried out at a distance by gaining access to company computer networks. IT security specialists may try to protec
13、t their companys systems with firewalls (technical safeguards against such snooping by hackers) and against computer viruses.So far, we have looked at some of the more extreme examples of risk, but even business-as-usual is inherently risk. For example, by putting money into a new venture, investors
14、 are taking serious financial risks. More businesses fail (some put the figure as high as nine out of ten), and as the first shakeout of Internet start-ups showed, this can happen increasingly quickly after they are founded. Venture capitalists who put money into such businesses spread their risk so
15、 that the payback from one or two successful ventures will hopefully more than compensate for the money lost in the failures. There is also the risk that even apparently well-established companies that are seemingly in touch with their customers can easily start to go wrong: we can all think of exam
16、ples in soft drinks, clothing, cars and retailing, to name a few. Here, the risk of losing sight of the magic ingredients that make for success. Some companies are able to reinvent themselves, in some cases several times over. Others dont understand what they need to do to survive and thrive again,
17、or if they do understand, are unable to transform themselves in the necessary ways. The things about the company that were formerly strengths can now become sources of weakness and obstacles to change. The financial markets see this, and the company shares fall in value. Investors are increasingly q
18、uick to demand changes in top management if there are not immediate improvements. In some cases, companies that were the leaders in their industry can even go bankrupt: in airlines, think of PanAm.And then there is the risk of management complacency. Take a tyre company. A few weeks of shoddy operat
19、ions and enough faulty tyres are produced to put the whole future of the company at risk through product liability claims following accidents caused by blow-outs. Product recalls are the worst possible publicity imaginable for companies, and in the worst cases, their image is so damaged that they ne
20、ver recover. This is a case study in reputational risk: the trust that customers put in a company can be thrown away overnight. Another example of a company that destroyed the trust of its clients is the well-known Internet service provider that announced free access at all times, and then immediate
21、ly withdraw the offer. One commentator described this as brand suicide.Text 3The risk of loss of brand value and reputationBefore you readWhat effect can strikes and industrial action have on the reputation of a company? If a company has a well-know brand, what are the risks to its brand value?Readi
22、ngRead this article by Richard Gillis from the FT.com site and do the exercises that follow.One strike and youre downCompanies forget that staff have the power to wreck the brand. This warning comes from Martin Langford, a corporate reputation specialist. But brand owners that probably dont 引们引乙矢。纽J
23、j纽”那盯!lneed reminding of this include British Airways, Royal Mail and Jaguar, because of the high profile which staff industrial action, or threats of industrial action, has assumed at all three.Management at large organizations do not embark on widespread and risky company restructurings unless the
展开阅读全文