Welcome to the Central Coast Sun

 fb yt

DOING BUSINESS IN ASIA Featured
02 April 2016 Posted by 

DOING BUSINESS IN ASIA

Cultural empathy tops language

IN connecting with Asia, Northern Sydney businesses have found that understanding the culture was more important than mastering the local language.

President of the Asia Business Connection Michael Hilliard stressed this in answering claims that Australians needed to speak the language of the country they were doing business with.

“It certainly helps if they speak the local language but it is far more important they understand the cultural differences,” Mr Hilliard told NSBA.

“English is the language of business but it would help if more business people dealing with Asia had a basic understanding of the language.

“When you speak at least a bit of the language, it relaxes the person you’re dealing with and makes them more confident to speak English.”

AQuest Search, a new Asia Pacific executive search business, has found there is a dearth of Asian-speaking executives in Australia, making its job of executive search for Asia-based companies difficult.

But, despite that criticism, university business courses were focussing more on Asian language skills and cultural appreciation.

NSW Opposition Leader Luke Foley said teaching  Asian languages in schools was vital.

“In NSW schools, we are behind Queensland and Victoria in teaching languages such as Mandarin and other Asian languages,” Mr Foley said.

 



editor

Publisher
Michael Walls
michael@accessnews.com.au
0407 783 413

Login to post comments

The Central Coast Sun covers the business and community issues of the NSW Central Coast region. The Central Coast Sun is a prime media source for connecting with the pulse of the region and tapping into it's vast opportunities.