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Doing business in a foreign culture
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Cross Cultural Communication Theory and Practice PDFDrive (1)
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- Question My culture Their culture
- Exercise on stereotypes
Doing business in a foreign culture
Another student exercise that the authors have used to good effect is to issue business people who are about to go to work in another culture for the first time with a short questionnaire aiming to highlight the key cultural differ- entiators between their culture and the one in which they are going to work. Many of their answers will be their perceptions, which may be incorrect, and these can be discussed further with their tutors. An example of such a questionnaire follows. Teaching Cross- Cultural Communication 289 Question My culture Their culture 1. Is English widely understood in business? 2. Do people use first names or last names in greeting and general conversation? 3. Can humour be used in meetings and presentations? 4. Do people proceed direct to business at meetings or do they first use ‘ice- breakers’? 5. Is it essential to build good personal relationships before doing business? 6. How important are socializing and hospitality? 7. How important is punctuality? Do things always keep to schedules? 8. Do decisions have to be unanimous or do they depend on consensus? 9. What importance is given to status and hierarchy? 10. Is an agreed agenda issued before a meeting? The next step is to summarize the key differences for both your culture and the foreign culture, and discuss the reasons for the differences. Exercise on stereotypes As we have seen earlier, stereotypes are quick, simplistic ways of classifying people into categories. They are useful as we try to sort people into catego- ries and therefore become handy pigeon holes. They are relatively harmless if used only as a rule of thumb, but can be dangerous if they are taken as the whole truth about other people, for example, in relation to race, gender, class and religion. Unfortunately, most stereotypes contain value judg- ments. Our own group loyalty tends to encourage us to believe our group is more important or better than other groups. Although national barriers are disappearing, national stereotypes may take longer to remove. The danger lies in the speed and intensity of the assumptions, perceptions and predic- tions about other people on very thin information and evidence, and our attribution of the supposed characteristics of a whole group to its individual members. Stereotypes can take two different forms: traits that we admire – ambition, cleverness, boldness, industry, modesty; traits that we deplore – laziness, stupidity, untrustworthiness. • • 290 Cross-Cultural Communication Students should be aware of their stereotypical views of people from other cultures. By using a simple exercise, ‘What do you know about people from these cultures?’, they can list separately the characteristics they perceive as ‘positive’ from the ‘negative’ ones. Trainers can then discuss any ascribed stereotypes and question whether such generalizations are in any way valid. This short exercise could be used, for example, by a businessman instructed at very short notice to go to the ‘Baltic States’ to ascertain the market for a Download 1.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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