US - Engleski Jezik II
US - Engleski Jezik II
US - Engleski Jezik II
Silva Mitrovi
SECOND YEAR
ENGLISH
Fifth Edition
Belgrade 2009.
PREFACE
Welcome to the second edition of the Second Year English, the second book of
a four-year course in English language for the students who are learning English
business language at the Singidunum University, Belgrade.
The first edition of Second Year English was published in 2002. I felt it
was time to revise it for two reasons. Firstly, information technology, rapidly
changing business environment, workforce composition, and the like, has
brought a number of new words and expressions into everyday use. Secondly,
I have collected feedback from the previous users and incorporated many of
their helpful suggestions into this revised edition.
What is the same in this second edition?
This revised book retains the features as follows:
Each unit of this book is opened with a list of learning outcomes that
describes what the student should be able to understand after reading
this unit.
Each unit of this book concludes with a concise summary organised
around the opening learning outcomes.
Every text in this book ends with a set of unit and multi-choice
questions.
Each unit of this book contains vocabulary and grammar outcomes not
only to increase reading and comprehension skills of the students, but also
to leave them with the opportunity to increase their powers of expressing
their own opinions and presenting their own arguments.
Each unit in this book ends with a set of review and discussion questions
designed to foster higher-order comprehension, thinking, and speaking
skills, and, in turn, can help the students to be more eective managers.
What is dierent in this second edition?
In this new edition each unit has been revised to ensure that students
are provided with a larger, more technical vocabulary. This has been done by
cutting and reshaping or adding or expanding several area topics. Also, some
new sections have been created to contextualise vocabulary and provide more
grammar information about the presented vocabulary. In other words, it is
intended to help students not only to learn the meanings of words, but also how
they are used.
PREFACE
iii
iv
BRIEF CONTENTS
PREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .iii
CONTENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii
FIRST TERM
UNIT 1
UNIT 2
UNIT 3
CAREER MODULE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
SECOND TERM
UNIT 4
UNIT 5
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:
BUSINESS AT THE SPEED OF THOUGHT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
UNIT 6
UNIT 7
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Appendix 3
Appendix 4
GLINDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
GLOSSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
vi
CONTENTS
PREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii
FIRST TERM
Unit 1
LEARNING OUTCOMES
ORGANISED ACTIVITIES AND MANAGEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Getting things done through and with other people
Unit Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Unit Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Multi-choice questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vocabulary and Grammar Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dening and Rephrasing the Term
4
4
5
6
Phrasal Verbs
The Gerund
The Tenses
Management by Objective: Hewlett-Packard
vii
Unit 2
LEARNING OUTCOMES
ORGANISATIONAL MEMBERS: MANAGERS AND OPERATIVES . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Top, middle and rst-line managers
Operatives or operative employees
Unit Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Unit Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Multi-choice questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Vocabulary and Grammar Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Dening and Rephrasing the Term
Mintzbergs Managerial Roles
The Tenses
Management skills: One managers perspective
Unit 3
LEARNING OUTCOMES
MANAGERS AS CHANGE AGENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Change within an organisation needs a catalyst
viii
PLANNING CLASSIFICATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Strategic plans vs. tactical plans
Short-term plans vs. long-term plans
Specic plans vs. directional plans
Single-use plans vs. standing plans
DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Choosing among alternatives
DECISION-MAKING STYLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Directive decision-making style
Analytic decision-making style
Conceptual decision-making style
Behavioural decision-making style
POWER DISTANCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Decision-making practices dier from country to country
Unit Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Unit Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Multi-choice questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Vocabulary and Grammar Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Dening and Rephrasing the Term
Word Study: Words Similar in Sound
Articles: The Denite Article
Changing Mitsubishi
Career
Module
A PROFESSION, ADVACEMENT,
OR A LIFETIME SEQUENCE OF JOBS
ix
SECOND TERM
Unit 4
LEARNING OUTCOMES
TECHNOLOGY AND ITS IMPACT ON TODAYS ORGANISATIONS . . . . . . . . . 76
Transformation process
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Managers in companies will increasingly be seeking
acquisition of new technologies
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Technology is reshaping information systems and oce workows
Unit Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Unit Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Multi-choice questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Vocabulary and Grammar Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Dening and Rephrasing the Term
Articles: The Indenite Article
Technology can be used to improve customer service
The Tenses
Computer-aided design
Unit 5
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:
BUSINESS AT THE SPEED OF THOUGHT
LEARNING OUTCOMES
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Business at the speed of thought
Prepositions
What is robotics?
Articles
Internet Relay Chat
xi
Unit 6
LEARNING OUTCOMES
MARKETING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Marketing and marketers
Prepositions
Lastminute.com
The Tenses
OGara-Hess & Eisenhard Armouring Company
Unit 7
LEARNING OUTCOMES
SEGMENTATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144
Marketing and marketers
TARGETING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Niche marketing
Dierentiated marketing
Undierentiated marketing
POSITIONING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
Perceptual map
The Tenses
Buying decisions: The dinner party
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
xiii
Appendix 3
Appendix 4
GLINDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
GLOSSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
xiv
UNIT 1
ORGANISED ACTIVITIES
AND MANAGEMENT
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Management
Forms of Management
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of management
and managers. Here are the key points from this unit.
Board of directors is a group of directors responsible for running a
company and usually have legal responsibilities to it. They are elected by
the shareholders.
Management refers to the process of getting things done, eectively and
eciently, through and with other people.
Manager refers to an individual in an organisation who directs the activities
of others.
Managing director is a company director who is responsible for the
day-to-day running of a company.
President is the chief ocer of a company in the US. He is responsible
for deciding and carrying out company policy. In the UK, it refers to
a title sometimes given to a former chairman or managing director of a
company.
Shareholder is an owner of shares in a company, or a stockholder.
Treasurer is a person who keeps records of the money obtained or spent by
an organisation, and who is responsible for investing any surplus.
Trouble-shooter is a person whose job is to solve major company
problems, such as those caused by industrial disputes, machine faults,
bad management, etc.
Unit Questions
1. Describe the historical roots of contemporary management practices.
2. Identify common factors characterising the managers of the 2000s.
3. Explain the simplest form of management.
4. Describe the management structure of companies.
5. Explain the U.S. system.
4
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. Trouble-shooting manager is:
(a) A person causing trouble and annoyance.
(b) A person who checks on workers progress and handles any problems
that arise.
(c) A person who traces faults, but does not bother to correct them.
2. Only a generation ago, successful managers valued:
(a) Instability, predictability and eciency.
(b) Stability, unpredictability and eciency.
(c) Stability, predictability and eciency.
3. In Anglo-American common-law and European civil-law countries:
(a) Every partner is entitled to take part in the management of the rms
business, unless he is a limited partner.
(b) Every partner is entitled to take part in the management of the rms
business, unless he is an unlimited partner.
(c) Every partner is not entitled to take part in the management of the rms
business, unless he is a limited partner.
4. A board of directors:
(a) Manage the companys aairs and reach decisions by a minority vote but
do not have the right to delegate any of their powers, or even the whole
management of the companys business, to one or more of their number.
(b) Collectively manage the companys aairs and reach decisions by a
majority vote, but also have the right to delegate any of their powers, or
even the whole management of the companys business, to one or more
of their number.
(c) Individually manage the companys aairs and do not reach decisions by
a majority vote, but have the right to delegate any of their powers, or
even the whole management of the companys business, to one or more
of their number.
UNIT 1 - ORGANISED ACTIVITIES AND MANAGEMENT
(c) Vice-president
(d) Shareholder
(e) Management
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1.
The Egyptian pyramids and the Great Wall of China prove that projects
of enormous scope, engaging tens of thousands of people, were started
well before modern times.
2.
3.
He would suddenly come in and out of the various work areas under
his control.
4.
5.
But many yesterdays stars have died out because they did not adjust to
ever-present technological, social, political, economic and legal changes.
6.
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on the
right-hand side:
(a) Evidence
(1) To engage in, to apply oneself to, or to
embark on
(b) To assign
(2) To set in motion, to launch
(c) Supervision
(3) To select for a duty or oce, to appoint
(d) Ever-present
(4) To devise, to formulate, to plan, to form
(e) To conceive
(5) All together, one and all, as a team
(f ) Collectively
(6) At all times, always
(g) To undertake
(7) Facts, data, grounds
(h) To mount
(8) Oversight, management
(d) Fill in the blanks in the text with these words.
The human side of enterprise
management
manager
managing
managerial
manageable
supervise
supervisor
supervision
supervising
supervisory
1. manage
1. To manage a company, its shareholders elect a board of directors.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
2. direct
1. He directed the company through a dicult time.
2.
3.
4.
5.
3. administrate
1. He will be appointed to administrate all aairs.
2.
3.
4.
5.
3.
As you already know, articles in English signal deniteness (the) or indeniteness (a, an)
in certain nouns and help us to identify what information has already been given and
what is new information. Still, you make more mistakes about the use of the denite
and indenite article than about almost any other of the English language complicated
diculties. To increase your powers of expressing yourselves in English with ease and in
clear grammatical English, let us consolidate, step by step, what you have already learnt
about the use of articles through revision.
(a) Fill in the blank with the denite article or leave it blank to indicate that
no article is necessary.
whole world is ghting for peace.
1.
2.
Retailing is
public.
3.
general
best.
4.
This is
5.
6.
7.
best friends.
8.
South America.
Africa.
9.
He goes to
14.
cornet.
(b) Fill in the blank with the appropriate article or leave it blank to indicate
that no article is necessary.
Management of human resources
Personnel administration refers to
management of
people
in working organisations. It is also frequently called personnel management,
industrial relations, employee relations, and manpower management. It represents
a major subsystem in
4.
If you look at the words that appear in boldface in the sentences such as I fell down or
Would you like to come over? or I wanted to push him o, you see that each of the words
tells us more about the verb. Down, over and o are used as adverbs.
However, if you look at the words that appear in boldface in the sentences and ask
the questions: Down what? Over what? Off what?, you see that you have to supply
in each sentence a noun: I fell down the wall. Would you like to come over the river?
I wanted to push him off his bicycle. Down, over and off have now ceased to be
adverbs because they no longer tell us anything on their own about the verb. So, what
do we now call down, over and off? We call them prepositions because each one of
them is placed in front of a noun.
Not all words become prepositions by being placed in front of nouns. Very many
prepositions concern movement or position: up, down, in, out, always, of course,
followed by some thing (or person).
But the relationship may be in time. E.g. She worked hard before the examination.
My friend is waiting
As we came
we saw a man.
.
11
5.
PREPOSITIONS
If prepositions, such as at, in, of, with, for, to, without, about, instead of, in spite of, by,
before, after, are followed by a verb, the verb ends in ing.
E.g. How about going to the theatre tomorrow evening?
E.g. She is good at telling jokes.
E.g. He went to bed instead of studying for his exam.
E.g. I prefer walking to riding a bicycle.
E.g. After swimming for an hour I felt exhausted.
(a) Complete the sentences using by, in, of, without, after, before, about, for -ing.
The rst one has been done for you.
spend time with customers
do the job
decide
go on courses
get the production manager position join the company authorise her partner
think about the consequences
plan and control
work
of getting the production manager position
1.
He has no chance
2.
3.
4.
5.
properly.
6.
7.
8.
He was interested
9.
She thought
.
for the IBM.
to negotiate in her behalf.
operating systems;
machines to be used
the ve
their use;
6.
most
PHRASAL VERBS
As you already know, phrasal verbs are idiomatic combinations of a verb and adverb, or a
verb and preposition (or verb with both adverb and preposition).
Many verbs in English can be used together with an adverb or preposition.
E.g.
The boy walked down the street.
(verb + preposition)
E.g.
She opened the door and looked inside.
(verb + adverb)
However, a verbal combination (verb + adverb or verb + preposition) can have not only its
normal meaning, but can also mean something dierent.
E.g.
He held up his right hand and swore his oath of allegiance to the queen.
E.g.
American criminals, Bonnie and Clyde held up gas stations, restaurants,
and banks. (robbed)
There are three types of phrasal verb:
(i) Verb + adverb
E.g.
I cant believe she was taken in by him. (deceived)
(ii) Verb + preposition
E.g.
They set about solving the problem. (started)
(iii) Verb + adverb + preposition
E.g.
We had to put up with the inconvenience. (to endure without complaint)
Replace the verbs in boldface in these sentences with phrasal verbs using the
verbs and particles from the boxes below. The rst one has been done for you.
13
7.
THE GERUND
You already know that either gerund or infinitive can be used after certain verbs.
For example, after begin, start and continue you can use either gerund or infinitive
without any difference. But if the verb following begin/start is a verb of knowing or
understanding, it is usually put into infinitive.
E.g.
He started providing nancial services
or
He started to provide nancial services,
but
He began to understand the problems related to the provision of nancial
services.
However, you also know that gerund must be used:
(a) After certain verbs.
E.g.
He enjoys telling jokes.
(b) After possessive adjectives.
E.g.
Excuse my interrupting you.
(c) When the verb is placed immediately after a preposition.
E.g.
After dropping out of school he started his own business.
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms (either gerund or
innitive).
14
1.
2.
He began
3.
8.
4.
There is no use
5.
6.
He attempted
7.
8.
9.
They began
done by re.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms.
Management by objective: Hewlett-Packard
Hewlett-Packard
(ENDORSE)
(DO). It
(RANK) among
15
all employees, the president of CSL attempted to get everyone out of the
building. Condent that he had removed employees from the immediate
threat, the president ran from the building. In hot pursuit was Matthew
Beck. With police ocers arriving in the parking lot, the president
tripped and fell to the ground. In spite of pleas from the president not to
kill him, Beck twice red his 9-mm weapon. Moments later, Beck shot
again a self-inicted wound that ended the horror.
6. We all know that there are no guarantees in life. Yet going to work should
not be a game of chance. That frightful day in March proved that things
do unexpectedly transpire four CSL ocials and Matthew Beck died at
the scene.
Questions
1. Do you believe that tragedy at the CSL oce could have been prevented?
Why or why not? Defend your position.
2. Stress interviews are designed to see how a job applicant reacts when faced
with a pressure situation. Do you believe that stress interviews can help
identify future employees who may have a potential for violence? Explain.
3. Matthew Becks manager appeared to handle the situation properly. Beck
had an opportunity to have his complaint heard, was suspended with
pay for a period of time to recollect himself, and was welcomed back
as a contributing member of the lottery team. In this instance, however,
something went wrong. What would you recommend management of the
Lottery oce do dierently to avoid this tragedy happening again?
17
UNIT 2
MANAGERS AND MANAGEMENT
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Managers Titles
Management Process
Supervisors responsible
for directing day-to-day
activities of operative
employees.
21
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of organisations,
managers, operative employees, management processes, etc. Here are the key
points from this unit.
Controlling has to do with the process of monitoring performance,
comparing it with goals, and correcting any signicant deviations.
Eectiveness means doing the right task and refers to the goal attainment.
Eciency means doing the thing correctly and refers to the relationship
between inputs and outputs. It seeks to minimise resource costs.
First-lime managers are usually called supervisors. They are responsible
for directing the day-to-day activities of operative employees.
Leading includes motivating employees, directing the activities of others,
selecting the most eective communication channel, and resolving
conicts.
Management process refers to planning, organising, leading and
controlling.
Middle managers are individuals at levels of management between the
rst-line manager and top management.
22
Unit Questions
1. Describe the dierence between managers and operative employees.
2. Classify the three levels of managers and identify the primary responsibility
of each group.
3. Explain what is meant under the term management.
4. Dierentiate eciency from eectiveness.
5. Can an organisation be ecient and yet not be eective? Explain.
6. Describe the four primary processes of management.
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. Organisational members can be divided into:
(a) Two categories: operatives and supervisors.
(b) Three categories: top, middle and rst-line managers.
(c) Two categories: operatives and managers.
UNIT 2 - MANAGERS AND MANAGEMENT
23
24
(b) Controlling
(d) Leading
(e) Operatives
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
After the goals are laid down, the plans clearly and precisely expressed,
the structural arrangements determined, and people hired, trained,
motivated, something may still go wrong.
UNIT 2 - MANAGERS AND MANAGEMENT
25
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on
the right-hand side:
(a) To oversee
(b) Title
(2) To go wrong
(c) To warrant
(d) Commonality
(e) To go amiss
(f ) To monitor
an oce worker
Gold-collar workers
a manual worker
Pink-collar workers
an elderly worker
White-collar workers
a female worker
(e) Complete the following. The rst one has been done for you.
26
1.
Head of department
2.
3.
4.
5.
Process of management
6.
7.
8.
9.
Department head
(f) Use the given table to complete the below given passage.
Mintzbergs Managerial Roles
Role
Description
Identiable activities
Interpersonal
Figurehead
Leader
Responsible for the motivation and activation Performing virtually all activities
of employees, for stang, training, and that involve employees.
associated duties.
Liaison
Informational
Monitor
Seeks and receives wide variety of special Reading periodicals and reports,
information; emerges as nerve centre of as well as maintaining personal
internal and external information about the contacts
organisation.
Spokesperson
Decisional
Entrepreneur
Disturbance
handler
Resource
allocator
Negotiator
27
2.
28
(vii) With few (a small number) and little (a small quantity) to denote what the speaker
considers a small number/small quantity.
E.g.
He has a few friends. (Depending on the speaker it can mean two or three
or twenty or thirty.)
However, if few and little are used without article, they can have an almost negative
meaning, and can usually be replaced by hardly any.
E.g.
Few people understood the problem. (Almost nobody understood it.)
E.g.
We had little time for planning. (Almost no time at all.)
(viii) After many, such, quite, rather, no less.
E.g.
Many a worker was disappointed with the company policy.
(ix) After so, too, as, when followed by adjective + singular noun.
E.g.
He is too bad a manager.
(a) Fill in the blank with the indenite or denite article.
1.
rose has
pleasant smell.
2.
week.
3.
dark.
4.
He was
5.
Hague is
Court of Justice.
6.
He is
honourable man. You know him. He is
man you met yesterday.
7.
8.
There is
tree is in blossom.
9.
In our history,
courage of our soldiers.
fear of
lawyer by profession.
seat of
International
day.
beautiful tree in one of those gardens.
lot has been written about
hour.
thing.
12. There is
boy standing at
boy is young and fair looking.
13. She earns
necessary things.
14.
door.
most
garden.
29
CONTINUOUS, CONTINUAL
E.g. We have had continuous cold weather for three weeks. (Going on for a long time
without a break.)
E.g. The Star Cinema: Continuous Performance, 2 p.m.-11.30 p.m.
E.g. I am tired of your continual complaints. (Going on for a long time with only a few
breaks; repeated very often.)
E.g. Continual headaches made it impossible for her to study properly.
In the space provided copy the correct form from within the parentheses.
The rst one has been done for you.
1.
responsible to
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
His face seems (familiar to, familiar with) me, but I cant
quite place him.
8.
9.
10.
31
4.
Rewrite the below given sentences as to create a noun from a phrasal verb.
The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
We must run through the agenda to make sure that nothing has been missed.
4.
5.
The witness testied that the accused played a key role in eorts to cover up
the involvement in drug trac.
6.
32
5.
33
Read the information and complete each sentence. Use a relative clause Type 1
or Type 2. Use commas where necessary. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
This evening I met John. I did not see him for ages.
3.
The CEO stayed at the Grand Hotel. A friend of ours recommended it.
4.
5.
6.
7.
6.
PREPOSITIONS
You already know that every preposition has an object; with its object and any modiers,
the preposition makes a prepositional phrase.
E.g. Behind the table stood a man with a grey hat on his head. (objects: table, hat, head)
E.g. At the end of the hour the teacher looked about the room, put her books into a bag,
threw some papers into a basket behind her, and walked out of the room. (objects:
end, hour, room, bag, basket, him, room)
E.g. In spite of the heat, the food placed in front of us looked appetizing. (objects: heat, us)
However, if we put the indirect object before the direct object, we can omit the
prepositions to and for. We can easily illustrate this omission by constructing sentences
like the following:
34
(a) Use the construction without preposition (if possible) to rewrite the
following sentences. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
4.
The insurance companies always try to oer better services to their clients.
5.
6.
7.
8.
35
7.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms.
Management skills: One managers perspective
37
Questions
1. Why did the assistant manager fail to sell the device? (Give at least ve
reasons.)
2. What would you do if you were (a) in Mr. Smiths place, (b) in Mr. Tanakas
place?
3. Consider the following case: Two businessmen, a North American and a
Latin American, were negotiating an agreement. The gentleman from the
South kept getting closer and closer to his counterpart from the North,
who kept backing away. Both were oended. The meeting ended on the
wrong foot. Why?
4. Or, take the case of a Chocolate Company that tried to sell its exquisite
chocolate packed in luxury purple package in Latin America. Despite its
carefully planned campaign, it sold nothing. Why?
5. What value do courses in economics, law, anthropology, philosophy, political
science, psychology and sociology have for managers? Give an example of
one application to management practice from each of these disciplines.
39
UNIT 3
MANAGERS AS CHANGE AGENTS,
PLANNERS AND DECISION MAKERS
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Change Agent
Planning Classications
Decision-making Process
Decision-making Styles
Groupthink
Power Distance
for the coming semester, you are using a standing registration plan at your
university. The dates change, but the process works in the same way semester
after semester.
DECISION-MAKING PROCESS
Almost all managers do requires them to make decisions, which is typically
described as choosing among alternatives. But this view is overly excessive
because the making of decisions is a process rather than a simple act of choosing
among alternatives. The decision-making process is a set of eight steps that
begins with identifying a problem, moves through selecting an alternative that can
alleviate a problem, and concludes with evaluating the decisions eectiveness.
43
POWER DISTANCE
Research shows that, to some extent, decision-making practices dier from
country to country. For example, in India, power distance and uncertainty
avoidance are very high, and only senior-level managers make decisions. Senior
managers in Sweden encourage lower-level managers and employees to jointly
take part in decisions that aect them (so-called management by objective). In
Italy, managers tend to rely on tried and proven alternatives to resolve problems.
Decision-making process in Japan is much more group oriented than in the
United States. Before making decisions, Japanese CEOs collect a large amount
of information, which is then used in consensus-forming group decisions called
ringisei. Senior managers in France and Germany adapt their decision styles to
their countrys culture, i.e. while autocratic decision-making process is widely
practiced in France, extensive rules and regulations are to be followed by German
managers when decisions are made.
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of change agents,
planning classication, decision-making process, decision-making styles, groupthink,
power distance, etc. Here are the key points from this unit.
Analytic decision-making style is characterised by a high tolerance for
ambiguity combined with a rational way of thinking.
Behavioural decision-making style is characterised by intuitive thinking
and a low tolerance for uncertainty.
Calm waters metaphor refers to a description of traditional practices in
and theories about organisations that likens the organisation to a large ship
making a predictable trip across a calm sea and experiencing an occasional
storm.
Change is an alteration of an organisations environment, structure,
technology, or people.
Change agent is a person who initiates and assumes the responsibility for
managing a change in an organisation.
Conceptual decision-making style is characterised by a very broad outlook
and a tendency to look at many alternatives.
Decision-making process refers to a set of eight steps that, in brief,
includes identifying a problem, selecting a solution, and evaluating the
effectiveness of the solution.
44
Directional plan refers to exible plans that set out general guidelines.
Directive decision-making style is characterised by low tolerance for
ambiguity and a rational way of thinking.
Groups refer to two or more interacting and interdependent individuals
who come together to achieve particular objectives.
Groupthink refers to the withholding by group members of dierent views
in order to appear to be in agreement.
Long-term plan extends beyond ve years.
Management by objective (MBO) is a system in which specic performance
objectives are jointly determined by subordinates and their supervisors,
progress towards is periodically reviewed, and rewards are allocated on the
basis of that progress.
Power distance is a measure of the extent to which a society accepts
the fact that power in institutions and organisations is distributed
unequally. A high power distance society accepts wide differences in
power in organisations. Employees show a great deal of respect for
those in authority. Titles and rank carry a lot of weight.
Problem is a discrepancy between an existing and a desired state of
aairs.
Ringisei refers to consensus-forming group decisions.
Short-term plan covers less than one year.
Single-use plan is used to meet the needs of a particular or unique
situation.
Specic plan refers to plans that have clearly dened objectives and leave
no room for misinterpretation.
Standing plans is a plan that is ongoing and provides guidance for
repeatedly performed actions in an organisation.
Strategic plans refer to plans that are organisationwide, establish overall
objectives, and position an organisation in terms of its environment.
Tactical plan refers to plans that specify the details of how an organisations
overall objectives are to be achieved.
White-water rapids metaphor is a description of the organisation as a
small raft navigating a raging river.
UNIT 3 - MANAGERS AS CHANGE AGENTS, PLANNERS AND DECISION MAKERS
45
Unit Questions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. If managers performed their jobs in organisations that never faced changes,
there would be:
(a) Great need for planning, and decision-making would be simplied.
(b) Little need for planning, and decision-making would be more complex.
(c) Little need for planning, and decision-making would be simplied.
2. The calm waters metaphor envisions organisations as:
(a) Stable and predictable, disturbed only by occasional crisis.
(b) Unstable and predictable, disturbed only by occasional crisis.
(c) Stable and unpredictable, disturbed only by occasional crisis.
3. The most popular planning classications are those referring to plans in terms
of their:
(a) Strategic and tactical breadth, long-term and short-term breadth.
(b) Breadth, time frame, specicity, and frequency of use.
(c) Long-term and short-term plans, specicity and frequency of use.
46
(c) Groupthink
(d) Management by
Objectives
(e) Change Agent
47
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1.
2.
3.
While directional plans set out the essential features, specic plans
clearly dene objectives and leave no room for wrong representation.
4.
5.
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on the
right-hand side:
(a) To face
(1) Owing to
(b) Ongoing
(c) Return
(3) Disadvantage
(d) Due to
(e) Drawback
(f ) Day-to-day
(d) Fill in the missing words by choosing from the below given box.
48
and
and take the
eectively.
2.
7.
8.
2. all ready
already
3. all together
altogether
4. canvas
canvass
49
5. capital
Capitol
6. cite
site
sight
7. complement
compliment
8. desert
dessert
9. dining
dinning
10. formerly
formally
11. its
its
12. later
latter
13. lose
loose
14. personal
personnel
In the space before each sentence copy the italicised word that is correctly
used in the sentence. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
its
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
50
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
3.
51
(vi) Before school, university, hospital, church, prison, we omit the when we are
thinking of the general idea of these places and what they are used for. However, we
use the when we are thinking of a specic place.
E.g.
My son goes to school every day.
but
I went to the school to meet my sons teachers.
E.g.
Why arent you at university today?
but
I cant nd my way to the university.
E.g.
The injured were taken to hospital.
but
I went to the hospital to visit the injured.
E.g.
They go to church every day.
but
Where is the church that is being repaired?
E.g.
Tom is in prison for burglary.
but
His brother went to the prison to visit him.
(a) Fill in the blank with the appropriate article or leave it blank to indicate
that no article is necessary.
1.
Smiths go to
2.
3.
4.
student at
newspaper.
5.
courage and
6.
Scots have
7.
8.
I prefer watching
9.
back of
television to listening to
job she
environment.
radio.
carvings.
52
hospital.
wood.
church to see
13. When
object in
breakfast.
operation. He is still in
chair is made of
10. I went to
class is reading
third brightest
(b) Fill in the blank with the indenite or denite article or leave it blank to
indicate that no article is necessary.
Changing Mitsubishi
Mitsubishi Motors Corporation president, Katsuhiko Kawasoe, was
bearer of bad news. In
scal year 1997, his company had lost more than
$800 million. Mitsubishi,
fourth largest automaker in
Japan,
was suering from weak truck and bus markets at home. Additionally,
company had been slow to take on Toyota and Honda in
hot minivan
and sport-utility sectors.
Closer analysis suggests that Kawasoes problems involve
lot
more than its product line.
major problem lies in
roots of
larger system of which it is
part. Mitsubishi Corporation,
super-conglomerate, owns Mitsubishi Motors,
Bank of
Tokyo,
worlds largest bank), Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and dozens
of other businesses.
groups annual revenues of $370 billion equaled
to 10% of Japans GDP.
Much of
Mitsubishi empire is isolated in many ways from
real world of competition. Mitsubishi companies do things
way they have been doing them for more than
century. Executives,
for
most part, pay little attention to
market, and
organisations culture focuses on
past. For example, when a reporter
asked
senior Mitsubishi executive why his company didnt follow such
U.S. management practices as downsizing,
executive sternly replied:
Employment is more important than prots If foreign investors dont see
merit on our stock they can sell it. Mitsubishi executives believe that it would
be un-Japanese to re anyone or close down plants. And these same executives
seem to lack incentives to respond to
sort of market pressures that
might make their counterparts in North America or Europe change.
4.
53
suxes that have been added to roots or to other words to form nouns. Here are some
common ones that help us to recognise nouns: -age postage; -ance, -ence (performance,
dierence); -dom (freedom); -hood (womanhood); -ion (exhaustion); -ism (heroism);
-ment (achievement); -ness (goodness); -or, -er (debtor, adviser); -ure (pleasure), etc.
On the other hand, the describing words include adjectives and adverbs. An adjective
is a word that describes or limits a noun or pronoun. There are several suxes which,
when added to other words or roots, form adjectives: -able, -ible (bearable, exible);
-al (marginal); -ant, -en (woolen, golden); -ent (observant, dependent); -ar (muscular);
-ary (elementary); -ful (doubtful); -ic, -ical (historic, historical); -ish (foolish); -ive
(massive); -less (aimless); -ous (famous); -y (noisy), etc.
Another describing word is the adverb, a word that modies anything except a noun
or pronoun. Most adverbs of manner and some adverbs of degree are formed by adding
ly to the corresponding adjective: nicely, beautifully, dreadfully, menacingly, etc.
A verb is word that expresses action, existence, occurrence, etc., by combining with a
subject to make a statement, ask a question, or give a command. As you are already
familiar with inected forms of the verb and the common auxiliaries used in verb
phrases, lets see what happens when sux en combines with nouns and adjectives that
refer to or describe a quality or state in order to form verbs. Thus formed verbs describe
the process of causing something to be in a particular state or to have a particular quality.
For example, if a re blackens a wall, the ames make the wall turn black, or if a river
deepens, it becomes deeper than it was before.
(a) Complete the following list by adding the appropriate sux. (Use the
dictionary to complete the list successfully.) The rst one has been
done for you.
VERB
to assume
NOUN
assumer
ADJECTIVE
assumable
ADVERB
assumably
assumption
assumed
assumedly
assuming
assumingly
to operate
54
to predict
to evaluate
to force
to decide
(b) Here are 8 words with identifying part-of-speech label. In the spaces at
the right you are to write related words of the part of speech indicated.
(Do not use adjectives ending in -ing or -ed.) The rst one has been
done for you.
1. wide (adj.)
width
(n.)
widen
(v.)
2. hasten (v.)
(n.)
(adv.)
3. clearly (adv.)
(n.)
(v.)
4. openness (n.)
(v.)
(adv.)
5. pleasant (adj.)
(n.)
(v.)
6. abound (v.)
(n.)
(adj.)
7. short (adj.)
(v.)
(adv.)
8. insistence (n.)
(v.)
(adj.)
55
5.
What is used:
(i) When the question asks for a selection from an indenite unknown number.
E.g.
What reasons did she give for her absenteeism?
E.g.
What computer programmes do you know?
(ii) When no selection is possible because the answer must be specic.
E.g.
What is your telephone number?
E.g.
What is the Italian word for lunch?
E.g.
What time does your plane leave?
Which is used:
(i) When the question asks for a selection from a limited number.
E.g.
Which word is in the wrong place in this sentence?
E.g.
Which bus are you taking, the 10.30 or the 12.30?
E.g.
Which of these writings is yours?
However, if there is a wider choice, either what or which may be used, depending upon
whether the speaker is thinking of all the possibilities or of only a limited number of them.
E.g.
What train shall we go by? (A speaker has in mind an indenite number of
possible trains.)
E.g.
Which train shall we go by? (A speaker has in mind a limited number of
possible trains, perhaps the fastest.)
Fill in what or which. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
What
subjects is he studying?
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
56
6.
CONDITIONAL SENTENCES
Conditional sentences have two parts: the if-clause and the main clause. There are three
types of conditional sentences, each of which contains a dierent pair of tenses.
(i) Probable condition the verb in the if-clause is in the simple present tense and the verb
in the main clause is in the simple future tense.
E.g. If the CEO approves the plan, the company will undergo serious restructuring.
Simple Present Tense
The conditional clause in the above sentence represents an open condition, and implies that
it is quite probable that the action in the if-clause will be performed. We make such statements
when the action or event mentioned is being actively considered or appears likely to happen.
(ii) Improbable condition the verb in the if-clause is in the simple past tense and the verb
in the main clause is in the present conditional tense.
E.g.
If the manager explained his decision, the employees would support him.
Simple Past Tense
This type, like the rst, refers to the present or future, and the past tense in its if-clause is
not a true past tense but a subjunctive, which indicates improbability or unreality.
(a) This conditional sentence represents what is possible.
E.g.
If she sold at a higher price, she would realise the prot.
(b) This conditional sentence represents something hypothetical or imaginary.
E.g.
If he had more information, he would make a better decision.
(c) This conditional sentence represents something contrary to the present fact.
E.g.
They would help if they knew how.
All the three sentences are grammatically identical; but contextually they are rather
dierent. They represent three points on a scale of decreasing probability.
If we wish to express possibility, we can use might instead of should/would, and if we want
to express permission or ability, we use could.
E.g.
The company might add 500 jobs if the board of directors approved the plan.
E.g.
If I only knew, I could tell you where to go.
(iii) Impossible condition the verb in the if-clause is in the past perfect tense and the verb in
the main clause is in the perfect conditional tense.
E.g.
If he had performed his part of the contract, I would have paid o his debt.
Past Perfect Tense
Here we know that that the condition cannot be fullled because the sentence refers only
to past events, i.e. this sentence is completely hypothetical. The past perfect tense is used to
indicate unreality he didnt perform, so I didnt pay o.
We can also use might or could + perfect innitive instead of should/would in the main
clause. This modies the meaning of the conditional sentence.
E.g.
If someone had been with him, he might not have been drowned.
UNIT 3 - MANAGERS AS CHANGE AGENTS, PLANNERS AND DECISION MAKERS
57
(a) Put the verbs in brackets into the correct tense to complete the following
conditional sentences. The rst one has been done for you.
catches
1.
2.
If we stayed at a hotel, it
3.
My boss
4.
5.
If I
6.
If Mary
7.
8.
(b) Read the situations and complete the conditional sentences. The rst
one has been done for you.
1.
2.
will nish
However minor changes had been introduced, the employees resisted them.
they
If managers
(PULL TOGETHER),
(FINISH) on time.
3.
pull together
(BE) simplied.
He is a natural-born manager. If he
(MANAGE) to achieve
(BE) a
5.
6.
The company was faced with new production decreases and grievances,
absenteeism, and job turnover increases. If the change manager
(LIST) the alternatives that
the problems, the company
(SOLVE)
(DO) better.
(c) For each situation, write a sentence beginning with If. The rst one has
been done for you.
1.
2.
They dont visit their mother very often because she lives so far away.
3.
4.
5.
I dont want his advice, and thats why I am not going to ask for it.
6.
He was able to nish his work because the bank granted him a loan.
59
7.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms.
The aftermath of organisational change: Stress
(CREATE) stress, which
(CHARACTERISE) by
(BECOME)
(IDENTIFY) in 70%
60
61
Questions
1.
2.
Give your opinion on the following statement: The more people have invested
in the current system, the more they resist change. Defend your position.
3.
4.
62
CAREER MODULE
them with your abilities and skills. Will certain jobs require you to move? Do you
have the educational requirements necessary for the job? If not, what additional
schooling would be needed? Does the job oer the status and earning potential
that you aspire to? What is the long-term outlook for jobs in this eld? Because
no job is without its drawbacks, have you seriously considered all the negative
aspects? When you have fully answered questions such as these, you should have
a relatively short list of specic job goals.
Lastly, test your career possibilities against the realities of the organisation or
the job market by talking with knowledgeable people in the elds, organisations, or
jobs you desire. These informational interviews should provide reliable feedback
as to the accuracy of your self-assessment and the opportunities available in the
elds and jobs that interest you.
ADVERTISMENTS OR ANNOUNCEMENTS
If you see an advertisement and think there is a potential match between what
you can oer and what the organisation wants, you need to throw your hat into
the hiring ring.
Advertisements for employment appear in all media, including radio, television
and the Internet. However, newspapers and magazines are usually the main
source for vacancies. Most advertisements use abbreviated forms to announce
conditions of employment, especially in small ad section for appointments. For
example: Wntd sec. full-time fr smll mnfg co. Gd slry. 5-day week, hrs 9-5 usl bnfts.
(Wanted, secretary for full-time employment for small manufacturing company.
Good salary, ve days a week, hours of work 09.00 to 17.00, and the usual benets
in terms of conditions and holidays.)
Other abbreviations that might appear include clk (clerk), accnts (accounts),
mngr (manager), asst (assistant), vacs (vacations), etc.
CAREER MODULE
65
Social skills and competences. Give a description of living and working with
other people, in multicultural environments, in positions where communication
is important and situations where teamwork is essential (for example, culture
and sports).
Organisational skills and competences. State facts relevant to co-ordination
and administration of people, projects and budgets; at work, in voluntary work
(for example, culture and sports).
Technical skills and competences. Identify your skills regarding computers,
specic kinds of equipment, machinery.
Artistic skills and competences. List your music, writing, design and
other skills.
Other skills and competences. State skills and competences not mentioned
above.
Driving licence(s)
Additional information. Give any other information that may be relevant,
for example, contact persons, references, etc.
Annexes. List any enclosed annexes.
Therefore, a CV must be a sales tool giving key information that supports
your candidacy, highlights your strengths, and dierentiate you from other job
applicants. An example of the type of information that should be included is shown
in a Sample CV. Also, notice that voluntary experience is noted on the CV.
67
Moreover, note that covering letters should be addressed to a real person and
not To Whom It May Concern. Otherwise, the recruiter will assume that you
are on a shing expedition in hope of generating some positive response. This
technique seldom works in job hunting. You may not always know the name and
title, but with some work you can get it. You can telephone the company and ask
for it, or go to the reference section in a library, or try to nd it on the Internet.
If everything else fails, send your covering letter and CV to one of the ocers,
preferably the ocer in charge of employment or administration, or even to the
president of the organisation.
Body of the letter. The letter itself consists of 3 to 6 paragraphs. In other
words, it should include opening (reference and information); summary of details;
explanation of previous experience; reasons you are applying; and close.
Opening. If replying to an advertisement, it is better to simply state what
you are doing, and remember to give a date of reference.
(i) Reference. You may say: In reply to your advertisement in this months edition
of Economist, I should be grateful if you would consider my application for the post
of Bank Trainee.
If someone associated with the company suggested you write to them, you can
say: I was recommended by . who is currently working in/who has had a long
association with your rm/who is one of your suppliers/customers, to write to you
concerning a possible post in your /the . department.
(ii) Information. Your CV should be mentioned in the second paragraph to a
letter answering an advertisement. E.g. I am enclosing my CV for the position of
Bank Trainee or The enclosed CV is for the above post, etc.
Summary of details. You may begin your third paragraph as follows: You
will see that I graduated from (name of university) in (date) where I acquired
(degree; diploma; certicate).
If you have had a job or more than one job, you could explain why you left each
position. This is often left for an interview. But you should never use explanations
such as leaving for more money, better fringe benets, etc. Also, you should not
state that you were bored with the work you were doing. After all, you accepted the
job. Explanations for leaving a company could include the following: I left (name
of rm) in (date) as (new employer) oered me a chance to use my skills (skills
of specialised knowledge, e.g. languages, knowledge of computers, etc.) or I joined
(name of company) in (date) as they oered an opportunity for advancement, being
a much larger concern.
Explanation of previous experience. Most application letters give limited
space to expand on previous duties in a company; what you did; how many people
were involved, what your detailed responsibilities were, etc. Without elaborating
too much or boasting, you should stress your responsibilities and authority in
68
FORMAT
Word-processed or hand-written? Should your CV and the accompanying
covering letter be word-processed or hand-written? In the English-speaking
world, an employer would usually prefer to receive a CV and a covering
letter that are word-processed for several reasons. Firstly, a hand-written
CV and covering letter could be considered unprofessional. Next, many
recruitment agencies and some employers like to electronically scan CVs.
Lastly, it will be much easier for you to update and modify your CV to target
it to a specific employer.
How many pages? It is usually best to limit your CV to a maximum of 1 to
2 pages, especially if you have no work experience. If you put more than this, the
CAREER MODULE
69
employer has too much to read. In addition, if you put everything in your CV, you
will have nothing new to say at the interview.
What quality paper? Remember that several people may read and handle
your CV and covering letter. These will also be important documents during your
interview. Choose a good quality, fairly heavy paper so that it will remain in good
condition at all times.
What sort of typeface? The font should be easy to read (Times New Roman/
Ariel), the style must not be hard on the eyes (avoid script or italic font) so as to
make the recruiters job easier. Do not use all capitals! Capitals are very dicult
to read and may be considered impolite in the English-speaking world. Also, your
CV must be printed on a quality printer.
Proofreading. Irrespective of whether it is a paper copy or an electronic
version, your CV and covering letter need proofreading, for errors can be deadly.
Also, remember to proofread on the hard copy, not on the computer.
Signing. If you are using a paper version, sign each covering letter individually.
INTERVIEW
Once you have made it through the initial screening process, you are likely to
be called for an interview. Interviews play a critical role in determining whether
you will get the job. Few individuals, if any, get a job without an interview. No
matter how qualied you are for a position, if you perform poorly in the interview,
you are not likely to be hired.
The reason interviews are so popular is that they help the interviewer
determine if you are a good fit for the organisation in your level of motivation
and interpersonal skills or not. Popularity aside, however, how interviews
are conducted can be problematic. Although interviewers mistakes or bias
should not be part of your interview, it is important for you to know that they
exist and that they can be overcome through a technique called impression
management that attempts to project the sort of image that will result in
a favourable outcome. For example, suppose that you find out in the early
moments of the interview that your interviewer values workers who are
capable of balancing work and personal responsibilities. Stating that you like
to work but also reserve time to spend with your family and friends may create
a positive impression. Also, you need to understand that interviewers have
generally short and inaccurate memories. Research has shown that most only
remember about half of what you say. Although taking notes can help them
remember more, what they remember most will be the impression you make
both favourable and unfavourable.
70
71
Mrs. J. Hastings
Personnel Ocer,
International Computing Services PLC,
City Road,
London EC3 4HJ
25 Westbound Road,
Borehamwood,
Herts,
WD6 1DX
8 September, 20__
CV
SECOND YEAR ENGLISH
Curriculum Vitae
Date of Birth:
Name:
Present address:
Herts, WD6 1DX
Telephone number:
Marital status:
25 February, 19___
Carol Brice
25, Westbound Road, Borehamwood,
081 953 9914
Single
1995-2000
Work experience:
Jan 2003 present
Type of Company:
Post:
Responsibilities:
73
Personal interests:
Mother tongue:
Other Languages:
English
While working I have also attended various evening
courses for French and Italian.
French
reading skills: excellent
writing skills: excellent
verbal skills: excellent
Italian
reading skills: very good
writing skills: very good
verbal skills: very good
Organisational skills
and competences:
Technical skills and competences: Practical knowledge to use a computer: Microsoft Oce
(Word, Excel, Power Point), Internet Explorer and Microsoft
Outlook. Moreover, while working I have been on a special
Information Technology course at the City College.
Other skills and competences:
Driving licence:
B category.
References:
74
UNIT 4
TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Technology
Transformation Process
Technology Transfer
Information Technology
Workow Automation
TRANSFORMATION PROCESS
All organisations produce goods or services through the transformation
process. In a very simplied fashion, every organisation has an operations
system that creates value by transforming inputs into outputs. The system
takes inputs people, capital, equipment, materials and transforms them
into desired nished goods and services. For example, there is a transformation
process operating in your university. Being a service organisation, Universitys
administrators bring together instructors, books, journals, multimedia materials,
computer labs, and similar resources to transform unenlightened students into
educated and skilled individuals. The point is that the transformation process is
as relevant to service organisations as it is to those in manufacturing. And the
study and application of this transformation process to organisations is called
operations management.
77
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Globe Silk, a Malaysian company that originally was in clothing business,
decided to diversify. One such project was to buy the technology from an Australian
rm that would enable them to make crash helmets for cyclists. Globes Silks
management then added a feature to the helmets a ashing light. By combining
foreign technology with internal innovation, the company was able to create a
highly successful and protable new product.
In todays global village, both countries and individual organisations are
concerned with technology transfer, the transfer of knowledge from one
country to another for the development of new products or for improvements
in a production process. For instance, Globe Silks purchase of crash-helmet
technology is an example of technology transfer for the purpose of creating a new
product. When a manufacturer in Taiwan hires a Japanese rm to install stateof-the art robotic equipment in the Taiwanese manufacturing plant, you have an
example of improvements in a production process.
Managers in companies, especially in developing countries, will increasingly
be seeking strategies that will facilitate acquisition of new technologies. These will
include mergers, joint ventures, hiring of foreign consultants, and sending sta to
foreign markets to acquire new technological expertise. And they are likely to locate
in those countries where government policies are most supportive.
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Todays organisations are information-processing machines. With new
technologies available, managers need to understand how to best use the
information they provide and to ensure that organisational activities are
proceeding as planned. With a greater importance placed on efficiency,
effectiveness, and productivity, managers must develop well-designed
operating systems and tight controls to compete in a global economy.
Let us highlight, therefore, how technology is reshaping information systems
and oce workows, changing the way internal communications are handled,
and providing high-tech support for organisational decision-making.
The term system in MIS implies order, arrangement and purpose. Further, it
focuses specically on providing management with information, not merely data.
These two points are important and require elaboration.
A library serves as a good analogy of the dierence between data and
information. Although it can contain millions of volumes, a library does not do
users much good if they cannot nd what they want quickly. That is why libraries
spend a lot of time cataloguing their collections and ensuring that volumes are
returned to their proper locations. When accessibility is enhanced, the data are
able to be translated into useful information.
Organisations today are like well-stocked libraries: There is no lack of
data. There is, however, a lack of ability to process the data so that the right
information is available to the right person when he or she needs it. A library
is almost useless if it has the book you want, but you cannot nd it, or it takes
a week to retrieve it from storage. On the other hand, MIS has organised data
in a meaningful way and can access the information in a reasonable amount of
time. Data are raw, unanalysed facts, such as numbers, names, or quantities.
As data, these facts are relatively useless to managers. When data are analysed
and processed, they become information.
79
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of technology,
transformation process, productivity, worker obsolescence, technology transfer,
management information system, etc. Here are the key points from this unit.
Data refer to raw, unanalysed facts, such as numbers, names, or quantities.
Information is analysed and processed data.
Input in industry refers to something that is put into a business, a system, or
a process, and has an eect on it. E.g. people, capital, equipment, materials,
etc. In computing it refers to the information that is put into a computer.
Management information system (MIS) is a system used to provide
management with needed information on a regular basis.
Operations management is the study and application of the transformation
process.
Output in industry refers to the quantity of goods produced by a worker, a
machine or an organisation. E.g. nished goods and services. In computing
it refers to the information produced by a computer.
Productivity can be expressed in the following ratio: Outputs/(labour +
capital + materials).
Service organisation is an organisation that produces non-physical outputs
such as educational, medical, or transportation services.
Technology is concerned with how an organisation transforms its inputs
into outputs.
Technology transfer refers to the transfer of knowledge from one country
to another for the development of new products or for improvements in a
production process.
Transformation process is the process through which an organisation
creates value by turning inputs (people, capital, equipment, materials) into
outputs (goods and services).
Workow automation is a method of improving the process of creating
and transferring documents by automating the ow of information.
80
Unit questions
1. Explain how technology can improve productivity?
2. Describe what the term management information system means.
3. State the dierence between data and information using a library as an
analogy.
4. Explain how workflow automation can solve much of the delay in a
typical office.
5. Why will employees also have to change if they want to survive?
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. In its purest form technology is:
(a) How an organisation transforms its outputs into inputs.
(b) How an organisation transfers its inputs into outputs.
(c) How an organisation transforms its inputs into outputs.
2. Global village relates to:
(a) The world considered as the home of all nations and peoples living
interdependently.
(b) The village considered as the home of all nations and peoples living
interdependently.
(c) The world considered as the home of all nations and peoples living
independently.
3. The term management information system implies:
(a) Disorder, arrangement and purpose.
(b) Order, arrangement and purpose.
(c) Order, disarrangement and purpose.
UNIT 4 - TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS
81
4. Data are:
(a) Raw, analyzed and processed facts, such as numbers, names, or
quantities.
(b) Raw, analyzed information, such as numbers, names, or quantities.
(c) Raw, unanalyzed facts, such as numbers, names, or quantities.
5. Workow automation can solve much of the delay because:
(a) It greatly slows down the process of creating and transferring documents
by automating the ow of information.
(b) It greatly improves the process of creating and transferring documents by
automating the ow of information.
(c) It greatly improves the process of creating and transforming documents
by automating the ow of information.
(a) Match the terms on the left-hand side with the denitions on the righthand side.
(a) Workow
(b) Mainframe
(c) Information
(d) Information technology (4) The amount of work to and from an oce,
department, or employee.
(e) MIS
82
(b) Replace the expressions in bold-face with expressions from the text
which have the same meaning.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Hanc graduated from High School and did as his father did before him.
6.
Rob Hanc was in his late twenties when he was directly confronted with
new reality his skills did not meet the requests of his employers.
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on the
right-hand side:
(a) Obsolescence
(b) To substitute
(c) State-of-the-art
(d) Teller
(e) To highlight
(f ) Conduit
(d) Tick the sentence having the same meaning as the sentence taken from
the text.
1.
83
2.
3.
4.
2.
84
E.g.
(a) Fill in the blank with the appropriate article or leave it blank to indicate
that no article is necessary.
1. For
speculation.
2.
merchant, even
honesty is
4.
user and
record of
6.
consultant on
Web.
nancial
vendor
Internet.
Internet security.
electronic trail,
7. Electronic storefront is
85
(b) Fill in the blank with the appropriate article or leave it blank to indicate
that no article is necessary.
Technology can be used to improve customer service
midst of the Christmas rush,
In
into Silvermans,
sales
oor,
saleswoman condently checked Benny Thompsons record: He
wears size large, looks best in Polo rugby shirts and Levi Dockers (items he looked
at recently but didnt buy), works as .. nancial analyst, and enjoys rafting. No
problem,
saleswoman said. I can take care of this gift for you. Sit down
and have
cup of coee.
customer left
relieved
satisfaction of knowing
Christmas gift he wanted and in
right size.
3.
86
You must also bear in mind the fact that a large proportion of English words have
come from Greek and Latin sources. Let us use for an example a word that you all
know, unpredictable. The heart of the word is dic, from a Latin verb meaning say.
This root form, combined with two prefixes and one suffix, gives us the meaning
not (un) capable of (able) saying (dic) beforehand (pre). Here are given but a
few in the form in which they are most easily recognised in common English words:
a-/an- meaning without (atheist, anarchy); bene- meaning well (benefactor); bimeaning two (bicycle); contra- meaning against (contradict); mal- meaning bad,
wrong (malpractice); non- meaning not (nonsense), semi- meaning half (semifinals);
trans- meaning over, across (transmit); un- meaning not (undo); uni- meaning one
(unicorn), etc.
However, some of these prexes can be used with two dierent meanings. Prex anticombines with nouns and adjectives to form words which describe someone or something
that is opposed to the thing referred to by the original noun or adjective. For example, if
somebody is anti-apartheid, they are opposed to apartheid. On the other hand, it also
combines with nouns and adjectives to form words which describe one thing as being
intended to prevent or destroy another. For example, an anti-virus software looks for and
removes viruses in programmes and documents on your computer. Here are given some
other prexes: pre-, extra-, etc.
E.g. The international anti-apartheid campaign was intensied. (opposition)
E.g. He installed a good anti-virus software programme. (prevention)
E.g. The two nations nally agreed to return to pre-war conditions. (before)
E.g. Everyone has certain preconceptions of what a drug addict is. (already)
E.g. He is an extra-bright child. (very)
E.g. Many people believe that cats are capable of some kind of extra-sensory perception.
(outside or beyond)
(a) Give opposites of the below given words by using a suitable prex. The
rst one has been done for you.
in secure
manageable
regular
ocial
similar
formally
patiently
relevance
literate
closure
certainly
considerate
87
(b) Prex anti- can be used with two dierent meanings, and so can prex
pre-. Tick A if anti- means opposition, i.e. if pre- means before. Tick
B if anti- means prevention, i.e. if pre- means already. The rst one has
been done for you.
A B
1.
2.
The jury reached the decision that the killing was premeditated.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
After tting the anti-theft device to her car, she hoped it would be safe.
8.
4.
PREPOSITIONS
Supply the missing prepositions in the below given text.
The place where tradition meets technology: The SiloCaf example
the port
as technologically advanced as
crop
coee processed
all
the New
Orleans facility.
the technology, the company could not simply
meet customer demands. As a result, SiloCaf is addressing these challenges
using information systems and computer technology.
Mossimo Toma is SiloCaf s systems and resources manager. He is responsible
overseeing the coee-blending process. Each week, 10 million
pounds
coee come
all
SiloCaf s warehouse
it is loaded
a coee-roasting company.
40 million pounds
its facility
a pound
its possession.
the roasting
the
89
making the various coee blends. SiloCafs employees receive continually updated
each one
statistical reports
coee.
roasters.
You might think that this high-tech control would be expensive. It is not!
the blend-consistency challenge is to use
SiloCaf s solution
technology that is relatively simple and inexpensive. In fact, the companys
investment was a mere 1 per cent
expenditures.
5.
90
(ii) In reported hypothetical situations, tense changes are not made if the event has
reference to a possible future.
E.g.
Anne said: If you came back tomorrow, I would be able to help you.
Anne said that if I came back the next day she would be able to help me.
(iii) If the event is clearly hypothetical and impossible, time changes are made.
E.g.
Tom said: If I had a book, I could read it.
Tom said that if I had had a book he could have read it.
Indirect speech and reporting verbs.
(i) Verbs followed by that + clause (with* can be followed by a person). Examples are:
add
conrm
feel
predict
say
admit
consider
hope
promise*
state
agree
decide
imply
reassure*
suggest
announce
deny
insist
reckon
suppose
argue
doubt
mean
remark
tell*
believe
estimate
mention
repeat
think
claim
expect*
object
reply
threaten*
complain
explain
persuade
report*
warn*
(ii) Verbs followed by person + to. Examples are:
advise
forbid
invite
ask
instruct
order
persuade
remind
tell
warn
suggest
E.g.
congratulate
decide
greet
interrupt
introduce
91
(a) Complete each sentence with one suitable verb. Do not use say. The rst
one has been done for you.
remarked
1.
2.
I thought Bob would say something about his new girlfriend. But he didnt
even
her.
3.
The employees
on them.
4.
The witness
the cross-examination began.
5.
that an
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Customer:
Employee:
Never mind, can you move your cursor around the screen?
There isnt any cursor: I told you, it wont accept anything I type.
Does your monitor have a power indicator?
Whats a monitor?
It is the thing with the screen on it that looks like a TV. Does it have
a little light that tells you when it is on?
I dont know.
Well, then look at the back of the monitor and nd where the power
cord goes into it. Can you see that?
Yes, I think so.
Great. Follow the cord to the plug and tell me if it is plugged into the
wall.
Yes, it is.
When you were behind the monitor, did you notice that there were
two cables plugged into the back of it.
No.
Well, there are. I need you to look back there again and nd the
other cable.
Okay, here it is.
Follow it for me, and tell me if it plugged securely into the back of
your computer.
I cant reach.
Uh huh. Well, can you see if it is?
No.
Even if you put your knee on something and lean way over?
Oh, it is not because I dont have the right angle its because its
dark.
Dark?
Yes the oce light is o, and the only light I have is coming in from
the window.
Well, turn on the oce light then.
I cant.
No? Why not?
Because theres a power failure.
A power a power failure? Aha. Okay, we have got it licked now.
UNIT 4 - TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS
93
6.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms.
Computer-aided design
(CONTINUE) to redene how
Technology also
products
design (CAD)
(ALLOW) designers
to create and
dramatically
(LET) engineers
and
(PLAN)
products,
94
95
4. And best of all, for a business that had consistently had money problems,
French no longer has to worry about carrying inventories: We have no
inventory problems because we have no inventory, says French. Everything
we make is presold.
Questions
1.
2.
3.
What downside, if any, do you see for (a) the organisation and (b) employees
of replacing humans with computerised technologies?
96
UNIT 5
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:
BUSINESS AT THE SPEED OF THOUGHT
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Digital Technology
Robotics
E-commerce
99
101
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of information
technology, digital technology, neural networks, groupware, e-commerce, etc.
Here are the key points from this unit.
Computer-aided Design (CAD) refers to computational and graphics
software that allows the geometry of a product or component to be
graphically displayed and manipulated on video monitors.
Digital technology relates to the study and development of devices that
store and manipulate numbers.
E-commerce refers to any transaction that occurs when data are processed
and transmitted over the Internet.
Electronic meeting is a type of nominal group technique in which
participants are linked by computer.
Expert systems are software programmes intended to encode the relevant
experience of an expert and allow a system to act like that expert in analysing
and solving ill-structured problems.
Groupware is a term used to describe software programmes developed to
facilitate group interaction and decision-making.
Invoice is a document stating the amount of money due to the organisation
issuing it for goods or services supplied.
Neural networks use computer software to imitate the structure of brain
cells and connections among them.
Re-engineering has to do with the design of new business processes, usually
in conjunction with digital systems, to improve corporate responsiveness
to changing business conditions.
Robotics refers to the science or study of the technology associated with
the design, fabrication, theory, and application of robots.
102
Unit questions
1. What did the 1980s and the 1990s have to do with and explain what the
2000s will be about?
2. Given the fact that we have been in Information Age for about 30 years why
hasnt the nature of business changed at a greater pace?
3. Identify how the tools of the digital age technology are beneting
managers.
4. Explain what is meant by the terms neural networks and groupware.
5. How can products be designed more eciently?
6. In what ways can production process be enhanced?
7. What is robotics?
8. In what ways can customer services be improved?
9. Why is e-commerce one of the greatest phenomena in business today?
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. Business is going to change more in the next ten years than it has in the last fty:
(a) Because of a disarmingly simple idea: velocity.
(b) Because of a disarmingly simple idea: the ow of digital information.
(c) Because of a disarmingly simple idea: quality and re-engineering.
2. Most companies are using digital tools:
(a) To monitor their basic operations.
(b) To obtain, share, and act on information in new and remarkable ways.
(c) For new processes that radically improve how they function.
3. One of the greatest phenomena we have witnessed in business today is:
(a) Faster access to information.
(b) E-commerce.
(c) Making airline reservations, purchasing a car, investing in the stock
market, etc.
UNIT 5 - INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: BUSINESS AT THE SPEED OF THOUGHT
103
4. Neural networks:
(a) Enable a manager to be on top of some problems in the nick of time and
enhance the production process.
(b) Disable a manager to be on top of most problems in almost no time at all
and enhance the production process.
(c) Enable a manager to be on top of most problems in almost no time at all
and enhance the production process.
5. Groupware allows management:
(a) To conduct electronic meetings in which people sit around the table and
make decisions.
(b) To conduct electronic meetings in which people make decisions that are
networked together.
(c) To conduct meetings in which up to 50 people sit around the table and
make decisions.
(a) Match the terms on the left-hand side with the denitions on the righthand side.
104
(a) E-commerce
(b) Groupware
(d) Re-engineering
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1.
The 2000s will be about speed and about how information access will change
the mode of living of consumers and their anticipation of business.
2.
Most companies are using digital tools to control their basic operations.
3.
Too many senior managers seem to take the lack of prompt access to
information as granted, because so many of them have worked for so long
without information close at hand that they dont realise what they are
failing to take advantage of.
4.
5.
The tools of the digital age enable us to easily acquire, use jointly with others,
and act in accordance with information in new and remarkable ways.
6.
7.
8.
They not only enable a manager to be fully informed about most problems
without delay, but also improve the production process.
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on the
right-hand side:
(a) To assimilate
(b) Velocity
(c) To alter
(d) Fingertips
(e) To ag
(f ) Expertise
(g) Fraud
(h) Bill
(i) To encode
(j) Gap
105
(d) Fill in the missing words by choosing from the below given box.
Lands End: enhancing customer service
product information
features
retailer
total
current
e-commerce
launching
sales assistant
Lands End, the U.K. largest clothing
its U.K.
on-line
prior
experience
browsing
is
sales are
to synchronise their
the
to purchase.
2.
DECIPHRING COMPUTERS.
(a) Match the computereses acronym on the left-hand side with the name
on the right-hand side.
106
1.
CADD
2.
CPA
(b) Internet
3.
MOTD
4.
OFC
5.
EDI
6.
CAI
(f )
7.
INET
8.
DSS
9.
IRC
(i)
(b) Match the expression on the left-hand side with the explanation on the
right-hand side.
(a) Distance Learning
(1) Data about data: e.g. the title, subject, author and size of a
document constitute metadata about the document.
(b) Eating your own dogfood (2) Adam Smiths concept that a free and open market will
enable buyer and seller to nd one another and agree on the
theoretically correct price for any goods or services. The wealth
of information and connection enabled by Internet make it
possible for buyers and sellers to approach the perfect price.
(c) Intranet
(3) The idealised oce in which information is entirely stored,
manipulated and transferred digitally rather than on paper.
(d) Knowledge Worker
(4) The principle that software should be simple enough that
a user can do most transactions in less than 3 minutes, or
about the time it takes to soft-boil an egg.
(e) Metadata
(5) The new way of living and working that will become
common as consumers and workers take advantage of
digital devices.
(f) Paperless Oce
(6) Employees assigned to a single, repetitive task with little
autonomy.
(g) Perfect Price
(7) Employees fundamental task is analysing and manipulating
information.
(h) Soft-boiled Egg Rule
(8) The practice of a company using its own products internally
as a nal test of capability before selling the products to
customers.
(i) Task Worker
(9) A network designed to organise and share information and
carry out digital business transactions within a company.
(j) Web Lifestyle/Workstyle (10) An educational system in which the teacher and students
are separated in time and or space and use technology, such
as the Internet to communicate.
(k) Avatar
(11) A hidden feature of a computer program that may contain a
hidden command, an animation, a humorous message, or a
list of credits for the people who developed the program.
(l) Electronic mall
(12) In virtual reality environments such as certain types of
Internet chat rooms, a graphical representation of a user.
(m) Easter egg
(13) A virtual collection of online businesses that aliate with
the intention of increasing the exposure of each business
through the fellow businesses.
(n) Netspeak
(14) The set of conventions for writing English in e-mail, IRC, and
newsgroups. Netspeak is characterised by acronyms (such as
IMHO or ROFL) and clarifying devices such as emotags and
emoticons. Use of Netspeak should be governed by netiquette.
UNIT 5 - INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: BUSINESS AT THE SPEED OF THOUGHT
107
(c) Decipher the netcronym after reading the example and write it in full in
the space provided. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
3.
INTERROGATIVES: WHO
Who has the form whom, used as direct and indirect object, and the possessive form whose.
E.g.
Who is our greatest actor?
E.g.
Who went to visit aunt Mary last week?
Who is both singular and plural.
E.g.
Who is that man?
E.g.
Who are those men?
Who is used when there is an unlimited choice, which when the choice is limited.
E.g.
Who wants to go to Italy with me in my car?
E.g.
Which of you can take turns at driving the car?
The examples below illustrate the use of who, in spoken English, and where whom would
be used in formal written English.
E.g.
Who did you give the ticket to?
or Whom did you give the ticket to?
E.g.
Who are you talking about?
or Whom are you talking about?
E.g.
Who did you help?
or Whom did you help?
There is no dierence in meaning but the rst is more usual than the second.
In formal written English the preposition is immediately followed by whom. But in ordinary
spoken English it is more usual to move the preposition to the end of the sentence.
E.g.
With whom did you go?
Who did you go with?
108
What
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
(b) Turn the following statements into questions, asking about the words in
bold-face. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
109
4.
A
WORD STUDY
WORDS SIMILAR IN SOUND
Although similar in sound peace and piece dier in their meaning.
Peace means the absence of war or other hostilities
E.g.
Making peace is much harder than making war.
Piece means an element of a larger thing; a portion
E.g.
Id like another piece of pie.
Exactly the same appears in other groups of words. Here are given some of them.
1. instance
instants
2. past
passed
3. presence
presents
4. principal
principle
110
5. quiet
quite
6. shone
shown
7. stationary
stationery
statue
stature
statute
8. than
then
9. their
there
theyre
10. to
too
two
11. whose
whos
In the space before each sentence copy the italicised word that is correctly
used in the sentence. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
stationery
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
111
(i) Match the words or phrases on the left-hand side with the word similar
in meaning on the right-hand side.
(a) Read between the lines
1. Alliance
(b) Leisure
2. Faint
3. Condential
(d) Legislative
4. Collapse
(e) Partnership
5. Cause
(f ) O the record
6. Conclude
(g) Slump
7. Relaxation
8. Lawmaking
(ii) In the space before each sentence copy the italicised word that is
correctly used in the sentence. (Use your dictionary.) The first one
has been done for you.
1.
work
2.
3.
4.
5.
112
drink it down. Moreover, many words by their very nature can have no antonym. If gun has
no precise synonym (rearm, automatic weapon, rod, or recoilless rie, all of which are
likely to appear in a list of synonyms for gun), still less does it have an antonym. For even
no-gun would not be an exact antonym, if there is such a word.
Therefore, there are no antonyms in any exact sense, i.e. no words having the exact opposite
meaning, but words or phrases that can be used in a sentence in place of another word.
(i) Match the words or phrases on the left-hand side with the word opposite
in meaning on the right-hand side. (Use your dictionary.)
(a) Timidly
1. Accidental
(b) Swift
2. Tightly
(c) Take in
3. Doubtfully
(d) Loosely
4. Divergent
(e) Deliberate
5. Dierently
(f ) Surely
6. Boldly
(g) Parallel
7. Slow
(h) Similarly
8. Exclude
(ii) In the space before each sentence copy the italicised word that is wrongly
used in the sentence. (Use your dictionary.) The rst one has been done
for you.
1.
insucient
2.
3.
4.
5.
113
5.
PREPOSITIONS
Supply the missing prepositions.
What is robotics?
Another
assisting
means
production
assembly lines.
the tail
(makers
orthopedic implants and surgical instruments), robots
now perform the more labour-intensive tasks, enabling workers to be retrained
jobs requiring more skills.
the bakery industry,
too, robots have been able to enhance productivity far beyond what is possible
human labour. For example, robots can handle
1,000
15,000 products
minute,
wrapping
packaging.
those basic robots came
industrial robotics, computer-controlled machines that manipulate materials
and perform complex functions.
6.
ARTICLES
Supply the missing articles.
Internet Relay Chat
service that enables
IRC server,
channel to
channel. Generally,
is dedicated to
channels name.
channels, enables
user to join
channel
user can
7.
115
(a) Correct any verb forms which are impossible or inappropriate. Write the
correct answer in the space provided. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
A number of banks in the area have been being robbed by an armed gang.
A number of banks in the area have been robbed by an armed gang.
2.
As I passed the river, I could see that the old bridge was reconstructed.
3.
4.
5.
6.
There is nothing more annoying than been interrupted when you are speaking.
117
Questions
1.
2.
3.
4.
118
UNIT 6
ABOUT MARKETING AND MARKETING
MIX, MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS AND
PROMOTIONAL TOOLS
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Marketing
Marketing Mix
Marketing Terms
Marketing Communications
tools should put across the organisations message in a way that ts what the
particular group of consumers and customers would like to hear, whether it be
informative or appealing to the emotions. Price means that the product should
always be seen as representing good value for money. This does not necessarily
mean that it should be the cheapest available, for customers are usually willing to
pay a little more for something that really works well for them.
However, with the increase in service provision the 4-P model does not
provide a full enough picture. As a result, Booms and Bitner proposed a 7-P
model, to include three additional factors. People, since virtually all services
are reliant on people to perform them. For example, the demeanour of waiters
in restaurants forms a crucial part of the total experience for the consumers; in
a way, the waiter is a part of the product the consumer is buying. Process, since
services are usually carried out with the consumer present, and the process by
which the service is delivered is, again, part of what consumer is paying for. For
example, there is a great deal of dierence between silver-service meal in an
upmarket restaurant and a hamburger bought from a fast-food outlet. Physical
evidence, since almost all services contain some physical elements. For example,
a restaurant meal is a physical thing, even if the bulk of the bill goes towards
providing intangible elements of the service, such as the dcor, the atmosphere,
the waiters, even the dishwashers.
Therefore, it is important to recognise that the elements need to be combined
as a mix. Like a recipe, one ingredient of the mix will not substitute for another,
and each ingredient must be added in the right quantities at the right time if the
mix is to prove successful in achieving consumer satisfaction, and therefore no
two rms will follow exactly the same marketing approach.
121
Wants become demands when the potential customer also has the means
to pay for the product. Some marketers have made their fortunes from nding
ways for people to pay for the products, rather than from merely producing the
product. The demand for a given product is therefore a function of need, want
and ability to pay.
A product is a bundle of benets. This is a consumer-oriented view, because
consumers will only buy a product if they feel it will be of benet. For example,
diners in a restaurant are not merely buying a full stomach - they are buying a
pleasant evening out; also, customers in a bar are not buying zzy water with
alcohol avourings in it they are buying a social life. However, a distinction
should be made between physical goods and services. For marketers both of these
are products, since they may well oer the same benets to the consumer. For
example, an afternoon at a football match, or a case of beer, might serve the same
morale-raising function for some men.
Publics are any organisations or individuals that have actual or potential
inuence on the marketing organisation.
Markets are the actual and potential buyers of the rms products. Few rms
can capture 100% of the market for their products; marketers more commonly
aim for whichever portions of the market the rm can best serve. The remainder
of the customers would go to the competition, or just be people who never hear
of the products and therefore do not buy it. Even giant rms, such as Coca-Cola
have less than half of the market for their product category. For this reason
marketers usually break down the overall market into segments (groups of
customers with similar needs and characteristics) and niches (very specic need
and product categories).
Price is the amount of money a product is sold for. Value is what the product
is worth to the customer or consumer. The value is always higher than the price,
or no business would result, but individual customers will make a judgement as to
whether the product is good value or poor value. If the product is poor value, the
customer will try to nd alternatives; if the product is good value, the customer
will remain loyal. The decision about value for money is, of course, subjective;
what one customer considers a great bargain, another customer may see as a
waste of good money.
MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
Communication requires the active participation of both the sender and the
receiver, so the messages not only have to contain the information the organisation
wishes to convey, but must also be suciently interesting to the consumers (or
the organisations other publics) for them to pay attention.
122
123
Unfortunately, it is also the most expensive promotional tool for the rm. On
average, a sales representative on the road will cost a rm around 50,000 p.a.
and will probably only call on 1,600 prospects or so in that time, at best. Selling is
therefore only used for high-order value or highly technical products that need a
lengthy decision-making procedure.
Public relations or PR is about creating favourable images of the company or
organisation in the minds of consumers. The PR managers have the task of coordinating all the activities that make up the public face of the organisation and,
inter alia, include: organising press conferences, sta training workshops, events
such as annual dinners, handling incoming criticisms or complaints, grooming
senior management for the press or TV appearance, etc.
The basic routes by which PR operates are word-of-mouth, press and TV news
stories, and personal recommendation. PR is not advertising because it is not paid
for directly. Advertising can be both informative and persuasive, but PR is used
for conveying information only.
Some organisations may rely mostly on advertising and public relations both
of which build sales long term. And some may emphasise sales promotion, often
useful for low-value items, and personal selling, i.e. face-to-face communication
between a salesperson and a customer - for making quick increases in sales.
Therefore, no two rms will follow exactly the same approach.
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of marketing,
marketing mix, marketing communications, promotional tools, etc. Here are the
key points from this unit.
Advertisement is a paid insertion of a message in a medium.
Advertising is the act of making a product, a service, a job vacancy, an
event, etc., publicly known. It needs to be planned and targeted to the right
segment in order to avoid wasting money and eort on people who will not
buy the product.
AIDA is an acronym for Attention, Interest, Desire and Action the four
stages of response to communication.
Communication requires the active participation of both the sender and
the receiver. Communications work best when there is a feedback.
124
125
Unit questions
1. Identify the original concept of marketing and explain what marketing is
about.
2. Dene the following marketing terms: customer, consumer, need, want,
demand, product, market, price, value.
3. Explain the marketing mix concept.
4. Explain the reasons for proposing the 7-P model and describe the model.
5. Dene marketing approach and explain why each organisation tends to
have its own approach to the mix.
6. Explain advertising and public relations and state what they are intended to
achieve.
7. Dene sales promotion and personal selling.
126
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. Marketing is about:
(a) What the consumer needs and wants, and seeing that the company
provides it.
(b) What the consumer needs and demands, and seeing that the company
provides it.
(c) What the consumer needs and values, and seeing that the company
provides it.
2. Demand is:
(a) A need that can be paid for.
(b) A want that can be paid for.
(c) A want that cannot be paid for.
3. Markets are:
(a) Groups of customers or consumers with similar needs and wants.
(b) Groups of customers or consumers with similar needs and demands.
(c) Groups of customers or consumers with dissimilar needs and wants.
4. The four Ps stand for:
(a) Product, process, publicity and price.
(b) Product, place, people and price.
(c) Product, place, promotion and price.
5. Customers in a bar are not buying zzy water with alcohol avourings in it:
(a) They are also buying an evening out.
(b) They are buying a social life.
(c) They are buying a full stomach.
6. AIDA stands for:
(a) Action, involvement, decision and aftercare.
(b) Aversion, internalisation, deconstruction and acceptance.
(c) Attention, interest, desire and action.
UNIT 6 - ABOUT MARKETING AND MARKETING MIX, MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS ...
127
(f ) Brand name
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1. Often, customers are also consumers, so the terms might be used in the
place of each other.
2. A product is a package of benets.
3. People dining in a restaurant are not only buying food to stu themselves
- they are buying an enjoyable evening out.
4. Product is more than simply the aggregate of its physical characteristics,
for it includes subsidiary elements such as the brand image, etc.
5. Place means that the product should be within reach from every place the
target group of customers nd it easiest to shop the High, order through
a catalogue, or a delivery to the door.
128
(b) To capture
(c) Fringe
(d) To conduct
(e) Insertion
(f ) On average
(g) Voucher
(7) Additional
(h) To groom
(i) Demeanour
(j) Complaint
(k) Word-of-mouth
(l) Diner
(m) Stallholder
(n) Bulk
129
(d) Match the marketing job titles on the left-hand side with the job
descriptions on the right-hand side.
1. Brand Manager
2. Salesperson
5. Public Relations Manager (e) A person who nds out what each customer
needs, and tries to arrange for it to be
delivered.
130
6. Product Manager
(f )
7. Sales Manager
(e) Match the price name on the left-hand side with the product/service on
the right-hand side.
1.
Rent
2.
Tuition
3.
Fee
4.
Fare
(d) Your at
5.
Rate
6.
Interest
(f )
7.
Toll
8.
Premium
9.
Dues
(i)
Government/public services
10. Retainer
(j)
11. Salary
(k) Education
12. Commission
(l)
13. Wage
Insurance
2.
(o) Magazine
131
132
And, etc.
Because etc. (etcetera) means and so forth, then and etc. would
mean and and so forth.
Anyplace, anywheres Colloquial and dialectical for anywhere. Similar colloquial forma
are anyways for anyhow, every place for everywhere, no place for
nowhere, some place for somewhere.
E.g.
Being that,
being as how
E.g.
Both sides had no doubt that (not but what) their cause for just.
Cunning, cute
Fewer, less
E.g.
E.g.
Fewer (not Less) students are taking courses in marketing this year.
Food costs less, but we have less money to spend.
Figure
E.g.
Fine
E.g.
In regards to
E.g.
Kinda, sorta
Undesirable forms.
E.g.
E.g.
Mad
E.g.
Most
E.g.
Many (not Lots of) families lost everything during the war.
The oods caused us much (not lots of) trouble that spring.
Colloquially it is often used to mean angry. In formal English, it
means insane.
Why was she angry (not mad) because I did not lay the table.
Colloquial for almost. At the formal level it is the superlative form of
much and many.
Almost (not Most) one-quarter of the states workers are employed in service
industries.
133
(a) In the column of gures at the left encircle the number or numbers of the
correct answers. (Use your dictionary constantly for this exercise.) The
rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
(b) Each sentence has two words or expressions italicized. If you think
that a word or expression is unappropriate in serious writing, write the
appropriate form at the left. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
almost
many
2.
3.
134
4.
5.
They were not really going anyplace, for after a while they
stopped in spite of the fact that they could of gone farther.
6.
Among you and me, he was mad because he failed his exam
the rst time he took it.
(c) In the blanks provided write three synonyms for each of the words
at the left. (Use your dictionary constantly.) The first one has been
done for you.
1.
angry
2.
custom
3.
perceive
4.
market
5.
dier
enraged
infuriated
cross
(d) In the blanks provided write three antonyms for each of the words
at the left. (Use your dictionary constantly.) The first one has been
done for you.
1.
joy
2.
clear
3.
hope
4.
safety
5.
admit
grief
sorrow
sadness
135
3.
PREPOSITIONS
Supply the missing prepositions.
Lastminute.com
Lastminute.com oated
March 2000,
a valuation of 370m,
having been launched only
November 1998. Lastminute.com sells services such as theatre tickets, hotel
rooms, ights, restaurant booking and even hairdressing appointments .
Lastminute.com is that customers can book the
4.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with the correct verb forms.
OGara-Hess & Eisenhard Armouring Company
(BE)
OGara-Hess & Eisenhardt Armouring Company
the worlds leading automobile security provider, supplying armoured cars for
presidents, UN peace observers, corporate senior executives. The company
(COMMEND) by the UN after an OGara armoured
Chevrolet Suburban
in Kosovo and
inside
(FIT) the armour inside the door panels, oor, roof, etc.
(REINFORCE). It
(BE)
(BE)
OGara also
terrorist driver training, which
137
Low
Market Growth
High
Low
Star
Problem Child or
Question Mark
Cash Cow
Dog
However, the important point is to know the customer. After reading the
examples try to answer the below given questions in order to better understand
how big, powerful and global companies launched their products on market and
which marketing eorts they have chosen to attract consumers.
1. Mars is a market leader not only in candy, but also in pet food. In Germany,
Mars has compiled the names of virtually every cat-owning German family
by contacting veterinarians and also advertising a free booklet entitled
138
How to Take Care of Your Cat. Those who request the booklet, ll out
the questionnaire, so Mars knows the cats name, age, and birthday. Mars
now sends a birthday card to each cat each year, along with a new-catfood sample or money-saving coupons for Mars brands. Do the cat owners
appreciate that? You bet!
2. Calyx & Corolla (C&C) is a direct floral retailer started by a visionary
entrepreneur, Ruth M. Owades. Customers can order fresh flowers and
bouquets from a four-colour catalogue by phoning 1-800-877-0998 or
by placing an order on the Web site at www.calyxandcorolla.com, which
also shows floral bouquets, plants, preserved designs, and corporate
gifts. The fresh flower order goes immediately to one of the 25 growers
in the C&C network, who picks and packages the flowers and ships
them via FedEx. The flowers arrive fresher and last about 10 days longer
than flowers ordered from store-based retailers. Owades credits her
success to a sophisticated information system and her strong alliances
with FedEx and the growers.
3. In Japan, 2 million teenagers carry NTT DoCoMo phones available from
NTT (Nippon Telephone and Telegraph). They view manga cartoons, haiku
poetry, and snow falling on the Hokkaido mountains. They spend a lot of
time sending and receiving instant messages from friends. They can also
use phones to order goods. A person wanting a new pair of running shoes
can look up shoes, then Nike, then the style and size, and order a pair of
shoes. The persons address in the system and the shoes will be sent to the
7-11 store nearest their home or oce. The person can pick up shoes at that
store or pay the store to deliver the shoes. Each month, the subscriber will
receive a bill from the NTT listing the monthly subscriber fee, the usage
fee, and the cost of all the transactions. The person can then pay the bill at
the nearest 7-11 store.
4. Battered by competition from the sweeter Pepsi-Cola, Coca-Cola decided
in 1985 to replace its old formula with a sweeter variation, dubbed the
new Coke. Coca-Cola spent $4 million on market research. Blind taste
tests showed that coke drinkers preferred the new, sweeter formula, but
the launch of New Coke provoked a national uproar. Market research
had measured the taste but failed to measure the emotional attachment
consumers had to Coca-Cola. There were angry letters, formal protests,
and even lawsuit threats, to force the retention of The Real Thing.
Then, weeks later, the company withdrew New Coke and re-introduced
its century-old formula as Classic Coke, giving the old formula even
stronger status in the marketplace.
UNIT 6 - ABOUT MARKETING AND MARKETING MIX, MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS ...
139
5. Canon has developed a system that allows customers to return spent printer
cartridges at Canons expense. The cartridges are then rehabilitated and
sold as such. Canon makes it easy for customers to return used cartridges.
All they need to do is drop the prepaid package o at a United Parcel
Service collection station. Canon reported collection of 12,175 tons of
toner cartridges worldwide in 1999, which represented a 100 per cent
recycling ratio. The programme has helped build Canons reputation as
an environmentally friendly company.
6. Nicholas G. Hayek, Swatchs founder, launched Swatch watches in 1983.
Within a few weeks, every German knew Swatch. Swatch is a lightweight,
water-resistant, shockproof electronic analogue watch with a wide variety
of colourful faces and bands celebrating famous artists, sports, and
space events, and anniversaries. Over 200 million Swatches have been
sold in over 70 markets worldwide. Here are some examples of Swatchs
promotion and advertising.
Swatch issues new watches throughout the year, but launches limited
editions of snazzy watch designs only twice a year. Only Swatch Club
members can bid to buy them. Swatch may produce only 40,000 units
and yet receive orders from 100,000 or more collectors. The company will
sponsor a drawing to choose the lucky collectors who can buy the watch.
Christies, the auction house, holds periodic auctions of early Swatch
watches. One collector paid $60,000 for one of the rarer ones.
Swatch continues to innovate and keep people buzzing about its
state-of-the-art products. Alongside the standard plastic watches there
are new developments such as the Irony (a metal Swatch), a lightpowered Swatch Solar, and a melodious alarm clock called the Swatch
Musical. Swatch has created the first pager in a wristwatch, the Swatch
the Beep, as well as an e-watch equipped with electronic mail and
Internet access.
Swatch clearly has written the marketing book on how to build a cult
following by supplying superior styling, merchandising, and promotion.
140
Questions
1.
2.
3.
After reading the below given list of slogans, which some authors nd among
the best: (a) nd the ones you like or dislike; (b) state what company, in your
opinion, issues the most corrupt forms of advertising; and (c) say whether the
ideals of a nation can be told by its advertisements.
(1) British Rail
(2) Ford
(4) Michelin
Everywear.
(6) West
141
142
(10) Jaguar
(12) Avis
Get Lucky.
(14) 7-Up
The Uncola.
UNIT 7
SEGMENTATION, TARGETING
AND POSITIONING
LEARNING OUTCOMES
BUSINESS VOCABULARY OUTCOMES
Topic Areas
Segmentation
Targeting
Positioning
SEGMENTATION
Segmentation is concerned with grouping consumers in terms of their needs
in order to identify a group of people who have a need or needs that can be met
by a single product, i.e. the process of categorising them into groups with similar
needs. For example, if a manufacturer produces a standardised product by a
mass-production method, the rm would need to be sure that there are sucient
people with a need for the product to make the exercise worthwhile.
TARGETING
Having divided the market into segments, managers must decide which
segment will be the best to target, given the rms overall objectives. Normally,
the managers will choose the most protable segment, but equally a rm may
decide to aim for a particular segment of the market that is currently neglected,
on the grounds that competitors are less likely to enter the market. The process of
selecting a segment to aim for is called targeting.
UNIT 7 - SEGMENTATION, TARGETING AND POSITIONING
145
POSITIONING
Positioning has been dened as the place a product occupies in a given market,
as perceived by the relevant group of customers; that group of customers is
known as the target segment of the market. Usually, positioning refers to the place
product occupies in the consumers perceptual map of the market; for instance,
as a high quality item, or as a reliable one, or perhaps as a cheap version.
Consumers build up a position for a product based on what they expect
and believe to be the most pertinent features of the product class. Marketers
therefore need to nd what the pertinent features of the products are in the target
consumers perceptions. The marketer can then adjust the mix of features and
146
benets, and the communications mix, to give the products its most eective
position relative to the other brands in the market. Sometimes the positioning is
led by the consumers, sometimes by the marketers.
Ultimately, product positioning depends on the attitudes of the particular
target market, so the marketer must either take these attitudes as they are and
tailor the product to fit those attitudes, or must seek to change the attitudes
of the market. Usually it is easier and cheaper to change the product than it is
to change the consumers, but sometimes the markets attitudes to the product
are so negative that the manufacturer feels constrained to reposition the
product. For example, Skoda cars had to fight hard to throw off the negative
connotations of the vehicles Eastern European origins. Not wishing to be
classed with Ladas, Yugos and Polski Fiats and thus share the perception of
poor workmanship and unreliability, Skoda made great efforts to emphasise
Volkswagens takeover of the company and to position the car next to VW in
the consumers mind.
Skoda has pointed out that, under the auspices of VW ownership, the
companys quality control and engineering procedures have been greatly
improved. Skoda was, in any case, the jewel in the crown of Eastern European
car manufacture, so the firm has been able to demonstrate that the cars are
made to a high standard.
Unit Summary
This unit has been about the terms, concepts and denitions of segmentation,
targeting and positioning. Here are the key points from this unit.
Behavioural segmentation refers to grouping potential customers
according to their activities, attitudes and lifestyles.
Core benets are the benets that would apply to all consumers of the
product category. For example, all cars provide the core benet of personal
transportation.
Demographic segmentation refers to grouping potential customers
according to their position in the structure of the population.
Dierentiated marketing is concentrating eort on a segment or segments
by oering a product which the target customers would see as superior.
UNIT 7 - SEGMENTATION, TARGETING AND POSITIONING
147
Unit questions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
148
Multi-choice questions
Use these questions to check your understanding of the chapter. For each
question there is only one right answer, either (a) (b) or (c).
1. Dividing markets into groups of customers with similar needs is called:
(a) Segmenting.
(b) Targeting.
(c) Perceptual mapping.
2. The purpose of segmentation is:
(a) To ensure that resources are used in the most eective way.
(b) To make it easier to nd customers.
(c) To help customers understand what our products are.
3. Segmenting a market according to where people shop is an example of:
(a) Geographic segmentation.
(b) Psychographic segmentation.
(c) Behavioural segmentation.
4. For a segment to be viable, it needs to be accessible:
(a) Via lifestyle.
(b) Via some communications medium or another.
(c) Via targeting.
5. Positioning is the process of:
(a) Putting the product in the right process.
(b) Putting the product in the right place in the customers mind.
(c) Putting the product in the right place within a retail store.
149
(b) Targeting
(c) Psychographic segmentation (3) The process of positioning products, events, and
experiences in relation to one another.
(d) Perceptual mapping
(e) Geographical segmentation (5) Selecting the segments that would be most eective
in meeting the rms overall aims.
(f) Positioning
(b) Replace the expressions in boldface with expressions from the text which
have the same meaning.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The private market might segment further to include those who use their
cars chiey for traveling to and from their daily work, those who use them
for leisure-time activities, etc.
150
6.
7.
Consumers gradually develop their liking for a product based on what they
expect and believe to be the most relevant characteristics of the product
class.
(c) Match the expressions on the left-hand side with the expressions on the
right-hand side:
(a) To throw of
(b) Exercise
(c) To encompass
(d) Viable
(e) To customise
(f ) Pertinent
(g) To assess
(h) Under the auspices of (8) To free or rid of, reject, or renounce
2.
(i) Via
E.g.
E.g.
151
Because/Reason is
E.g.
E.g.
Couple
E.g.
Dierent from,
dierent than
E.g.
Enthuse
E.g.
Like, as, as if
E.g.
E.g.
Plenty
E.g.
So, such
Sure
E.g.
E.g.
Swell
E.g.
E.g.
152
Colloquial for surely, certainly, indeed, very, very much. Sure has also
correct uses as in We are not sure about his plan. He made several
sure investments.
The assignment was surely (not sure) dicult.
Certainly (not Sure), your objections will be considered by the court.
Not to be used as a general term of approval meaning good,
excellent, attractive, desirable, and so on.
He gave an informative (not swell) lecture.
He played an intelligent (not swell) game.
Each sentence has two words or expressions italicised. If you think that a
word or expression is unappropriate in serious writing, write the appropriate
form at the left. If a word or expression is correct, write C in the space. The
rst one has been done for you.
1.
professor
mathematics
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
3.
153
Another common type of noun modier, as in geography book, is called noun adjunct, a
word that, although a noun by form, is used to modify another noun.
Notice that modiers of nouns usually appear in a xed order: determiners come rst, then
true adjectives, then noun adjuncts.
E.g.
The
Several
sudden
clever
sleet
playground
storm
directors
noun
An adverb, on the other hand, usually modies a verb, an adjective, or an adverb. Many
adverbs end in ly, such as happily, quickly, beautifully, and the like. Some adverbs do not
end in ly, and these happen to be the most frequently used words in speech and writing:
before, down, for, hence, now, often, then, there, up, well, etc.
Some adverbs have two forms, one without and one with ly: cheap, cheaply; close, closely;
deep, deeply; hard, hardly; high, highly; late, lately; loud, loudly; quick, quickly; right,
rightly; slow, slowly, etc. In some of these pairs the words are interchangeable; in most
they are not. As the idiomatic use of adverbs is a very complex problem, here are cited
but a few examples.
E.g.
Some words can be used either as adjectives or adverbs, as the following examples will show.
E.g.
154
close
far
fast
hard
late
He usually arrives late. (adv.) She arrived at a late hour. (adj.)
There are two main trouble spots concerning the right use of adverbs and adjectives.
(i) Misusing an adjective for an adverb. A word is an adverb if it modies a verb, an
adjective, or another adverb. The words that usually cause trouble here are good, bad,
well, sure, surely, ne, real, most, almost.
E.g.
E.g.
She wanted that prize very badly (not very bad). (modies wants)
(ii) Misusing an adverb for an adjective. Beside verb to be, words with which mistakes
are common are seem, become, appear, prove, grow, go, turn, stay, remain.
E.g.
The house seems empty. (house is empty)
or
Their plans became apparent. (plans were apparent)
(a) In some of the following sentences an adverb or adjective is incorrect.
Underline the incorrect form and write the correct form in the space at
the left. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
badly
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
(b) In the space provided copy the correct form from within the parentheses.
The rst one has been done for you.
1.
severe
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
155
(c) Replace each word group in italic type with an appropriate adverb. The
rst letter of each one has been provided for you. The rst one has been
done for you.
1.
silently
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
4.
PHRASAL VERBS
Phrasal verbs cause problems for the student not only because of their meaning, which
cannot always be guessed from the meaning of the verb, but also because of their grammar.
Sometimes the parts of the phrasal verbs can be separated. We can say, for example:
(a)
The soldiers blew up the bridge.
(b)
The soldiers blew the bridge up.
Some phrasal verbs are always used as in (a), such as leave o in: He left o working.
Others must always be used as in (b) as with keep open in: She kept the door open.
Blow up is an example of a phrasal verb where you can use either (a) or (b).
;i
(a) Replace the verbs in boldface in these sentences by using phrasal verbs
from the box. The rst one has been done for you.
wash out
call upon
1.
call off
divide up
put in
give in
156
2.
3.
Deliver your marketing plans to your MD when you have developed them.
4.
5.
6.
(b) To end up with: Find and underline the phrasal verbs in the below
given text. Rewrite the text in your own words. You must use your
dictionary for this.
To end up with
Everything seems to be going up these days. Prices are going up, and that
makes the cost of living go up. Those people whose wages and salaries go up are
fortunate; they can manage, perhaps, to keep up with rising costs.
Populations are going up, too, and if the world becomes overcrowded, there
may be more wars. Then, when the atomic bombs drop, everything will go up in
smoke and dust, and it will be all up with civilisation.
We must not give up hope, however. Lets cheer up, and not look only
on the dark side. Even though troubles pile up, good fortune will turn up
occasionally. Servants may leave so that we have to wash up after our meals,
but we may still, when the work is done, be able to put our feet up for a few
minutes. We may, when we go out in the car find the roads up, or so bad that
our tyres go flat and have to be pumped up. Yet when we get home, we may
perhaps enjoy, if we sit up late a wonderful broadcast of opera from Milan or
Rome. Things do look up sometimes.
Life is full of ups and downs. We may feel depressed and fed up now, but good
luck will turn up again soon. So, once again, cheer up.
UNIT 7 - SEGMENTATION, TARGETING AND POSITIONING
157
5.
158
The objective case is used as the direct or indirect object of a verb (or verbal), as the object
of the preposition, or as the object of the innitive. Here again, you will have no trouble
with simple, standard constructions. But watch out for the following trouble spots:
(i) When whom is the object of the verb, it comes at the beginning of the clause instead of
after the verb.
E.g.
E.g.
Tom was the man whom everybody trusted. (Everybody trusted whom.)
E.g.
She is the girl whom mother wants me to marry. (Object of the verbal to marry.)
(ii) When the pronoun is the object of a preposition or a verb, you may have trouble with
two constructions.
(a) When the pronoun comes before the preposition.
E.g.
Whom are you going with? (With whom are you going?)
Mother told Anne and me to come in at twelve. (Not Anne and I. You wouldnt
say, Mother told I, would you?
E.g.
(a) In the space before each sentence copy the italicised word that is correctly
used in the sentence. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
me
2.
3.
No one seemed to care what we/us boys did in our free time.
4.
5.
159
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
(b) In each of the following sentences there is a misused pronoun. Find the
pronoun and then write its corrected form in the space provided at the
left. The rst one has been done for you.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The policeman told Tom and I to park the car near the shop.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
160
6.
PREPOSITIONS.
Supply the missing prepositions
Buying behaviour: Family-life cycle model
Demographics is the study
factors such
the models used is a
buying
the
baby products,
the needs of the
the other hand, full nest 2 means that the children are
school or old enough to be left
decisions.
Next comes the empty nest. The children have grown up and left home.
Income is
most cases.
161
Lastly comes the solitary survivor stage. One partner is widowed, and
probably retired. Income drops sharply, and although expenditure is now
its lowest, expenditure
health-oriented products, social
clubs and medical services is likely to rise. Decisions are sometimes made
grown-up children, but most purchase choices are made
the individual alone.
However, the family life-cycle model is tending to break down as the divorce
rate rises.
Furthermore,
Australia, immigration
South-East Asia is
the country.
the
Therefore, marketers need to monitor these changes
demography if they are to remain able to segment the market effectively.
7.
THE TENSES
Fill in the blank spaces in the text with correct verb forms.
Buying decisions: The dinner party
(LIVE) together
(WORK), they
(PUT) the house in order, and for almost
(SPEND) every evening and
(GET) themselves
(SETTLE IN). Steve thought that the
(BE) that their social life
(DIE). So they
(DECIDE) to invite
only their four closest friends for dinner. Two of the guests
(BE) vegetarians, and one
(NEED) some
(DECIDE) he
(WANT)
(BUY) more. So on the
(GO) to a large department
and
(BUY) his ingredients; he
(HAVE) to detour to a specialised food shop to nd the palm oil; but he
(SHOP) there regularly and he
(KNOW) he
163
(FIND) that
(BE) more of a nuisance than she
(ANTICIPATE).
Of course, once they properly
(GET) many more uses and Helen did nally succumb, and
use the dishwasher.
164
165
6. Overall, although men are still not carrying out the major part of the
household tasks, there is evidence of a change in attitude and with it
an increase of stress. On the other hand, men report that their lives are
happier and healthier. Whatever the business marketers are in, the changes
in mens lifestyle oer new opportunities and new threats.
Questions
1. What new segments of the market might be apparent from this survey, and
how might marketers approach these segments?
2. How might a sportswear manufacturer benet from the changes reported?
3. What implications for marketing to women are implicit in the above
research? (Take into consideration how various decisions were divided
between Steve and Helen, or what heuristics Steve used in planning the
menu, or what the factors in post-purchase evaluation of the dinner
service were.)
4. What implications for marketing are there in the above research?
5. How might retailers respond to this research?
166
Appendix 1
Sequence of Tenses
A sentence can contain a main verb and one or more subordinate clauses.
A subordinate clause is a group of words containing a subject and verb and
forming part of a sentence.
E.g.
We knew that the car was expensive.
E.g.
He lent it to me because he trusted me.
E.g.
She swam faster than they did.
It is necessary to learn to know which is the main verb of a sentence because of
the important rule about the sequence of tenses.
When the main verb of a sentence is in a past tense, verbs in subordinate
clauses must be in a past tense also.
Tense of verb in
main clause
Present
Past
Present
Past
Present
Past
Present Perfect
Past Perfect
Present
Past
Tense of verb in
subordinate clause
Future
Conditional
Present Perfect
Past Perfect
Present
Past
Present
Past
Present Continuous
Past Continuous
Note that a clause cannot be formed with an innitive alone and that innitives,
therefore, are not aected by the above rule.
E.g.
She wants to learn English. She wanted to learn English.
The rule about the sequence of tenses applies also to indirect speech when the
introductory verb is in a past tense.
167
Appendix 2
The Conditional Tenses
169
170
If he had taken his grandmothers advice he would have been a rich man.
Appendix 3
The Innitive
The innitive may occur either with the particle to (full innitive or innitive
with to) or without the particle (plain innitive).
1. The plain innitive is used:
(i)
I heard him open the door. I saw her cross the street.
He watched them climb the hill.
2.
(i)
(ii) As the subject of a verb, and can be placed at the beginning of the sentence.
It is more usual though to put the pronoun it rst and move the innitive
or innite phrase to the end of the sentence.
E.g.
(iii) After certain verbs that are followed by an object. The most important of
these are: tell, order, compel, force, make, let, allow, permit, warn, advise,
request, forbid, etc.
E.g.
171
The Perfect Innitive is formed with the innitive of have and the past
participle: to have worked; to have done.
Modal Auxiliaries + Perfect Innitive construction is used:
(i) When the exact truth of the matter is not known.
E.g.
He must have been in a meeting yesterday. (We are not sure, we just suppose.)
172
Appendix 4
The Passive Voice
You are supposed to know how to swim. (It is your duty/you should know.)
though
He is supposed to be in Paris.
could mean
either
He ought to be there.
or
(c) Note that an innitive placed after a passive verb is normally a full innitive.
Active: We saw them leave the house.
He made us work.
Passive: They were seen to leave the house. We were made to work.
However, let is used without to.
Active: They let us go.
Passive: We were let go.
Appendix 4 - The Passive Voice
173
Active voice
Passive voice
simple present
present continuous
simple past
past continuous
present perfect
past perfect
future
conditional
present innitive
perfect innitive
present participle/gerund
perfect participle
drives
is driving
drove
was driving
has driven
had driven
will drive
would drive
to drive
to have driven
driving
having driven
is driven
is being driven
was driven
was being driven
has been driven
had been driven
will be driven
would be driven
to be driven
to have been driven
being driven
having been driven
174
GLINDEX
175
177
President is the chief ocer of a company in the US. He is responsible for deciding
and carrying out company policy. In the UK, it refers to a title sometimes given to
a former chairman or managing director of a company.
Price is what something costs.
Problem is a discrepancy between an existing and a desired state of aairs.
Process, as one of the Booms and Bitners additional 3-Ps, refers to the usual
presence of the consumer during all or part of the process of providing the service;
e.g. Lufthansas improved method of seating passengers (boarding window-seat
passengers rst and aisle-seat passengers last) makes the airline more pleasurable
to y with.
Product is a bundle of benets; it is only worth what it will do for the consumer.
Productivity can be expressed in the following ratio: Outputs/(labour + capital
+ materials).
Promotional mix is the combination of PR, advertising, personal selling and sales
promotion leading to purposeful marketing communications.
Prospects refer to individuals who are prepared to talk to a salesperson about
their needs.
Psychographic segmentation refers to grouping potential customers according
to their personality traits.
Public relations (PR) are activities intended to convey an organisations messages
to its public.
Publics refer to those groups and individuals that have a direct or indirect impact
on an organisations activities.
Re-engineering has to do with the design of new business processes, usually
in conjunction with digital systems, to improve corporate responsiveness to
changing business conditions.
Ringisei refers to consensus-forming group decisions.
Robotics refers to the science or study of the technology associated with the
design, fabrication, theory, and application of robots.
Sales Promotion is a temporary oer used to increase immediate sales.
Segmentation is the process of categorising consumers into groups with similar
needs.
Service organisation is an organisation that produces non-physical outputs such
as educational, medical, or transportation services.
Shareholder is an owner of shares in a company, or a stockholder.
Short-term plan covers less than one year.
GLINDEX
179
180
GLOSSARY
administer (v.)
to administer nances
administration (n.)
government administration
administrative (adj.)
administrative agency
administrative skills
administrator (n.)
advertise (v.)
advertisement (n.)
advertiser (n.)
advertising (n.)
advertising boarding
advertising campaign
advertising manager
advertising message
advertising space
propagandna/reklamna/oglasna agencija
oglasna tabla/pano
reklamna kampanja
lice zadueno za propagandni budet kod oglaivaa
propagandna poruka
oglasni prostor
aegis (n.)
under the aegis
zatita, pokroviteljstvo
pod pokroviteljstvom
appraisal (n.)
procena, ocena
appraise (v.)
proceniti, oceniti
GLOSSARY
181
appraisement (n.)
slubena procena
behaviour (n.)
buying behaviour
behavioural (adj.)
behavioural sciences
behavioural segmentation
bihevioristiko
bihevioristike nauke
segmentacija prema ponaanju potroaa; podela
trita ija je osnovna injenica da se razliite grupe
potroaa razliito ponaaju, imaju razliite kupovne
navike i razliite navike u nainu korienja proizvoda
board (n.)
board of directors
conciliation board
co-ordinating board
editorial board
executive board
nancial supervisory board
managing board
Boston consulting group matrix (n.) BCG portfolio matrica; matrica Bostonske konsultantske grupe nudi etiri tipa stratekih poslovnih
jedinica: zvezdu, koja oznaava trinog lidera, ke
kravu (zreo proizvod), znak pitanja (problematian
proizvod), i psa (stagnirajuu poslovnu jedinicu), i
za svaki od njih nudi strategiju
brand (n.)
brand image
brand leader
brand loyalty
brand manager
brand mark
brand name
own brand
brand personality
182
marka, skup atributa proizvoda objektivnih i subjektivnih, racionalnih i simbolikih koji formiraju
unapred projektovanu predstavu o proizvodu u
svesti potroaa
predstava koju javnost ima o odreenoj marki
marka proizvoda sa najveim ueem na tritu
vernost kupca odreenoj marki
direktor ili izvrni direktor odgovoran za marketing
odreene marke
zatitini znak robne marke; simbol, crte ili svojstvena
boja ili slovo koji ne mogu da se izgovore
ime robne marke, komercijalni naziv (re, slovo, broj),
grupa rei ili slova (brojevi)
proizvodi koji se posebno pakuju za neku prodavnicu i
nose njeno ime na etiketi
svojstvena slika/predstava stvorena o proizvodu, koja
odraava njegov karakter i prednosti koje prua
brand positioning
branding (n.)
family branding
business (n.)
competence (n.)
competent (adj.)
compute (v.)
computer (n.)
raunar, kompjuter
computer-aided design (CAD)
projektovanje pomou raunara
computer-aided instruction (CAI) obuka pomou raunara
computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) proizvodnja pomou raunara
computer-assisted instruction (CAI) obuka pomou raunara
computer-assisted learning (CAL) uenje pomou raunara
computer-assisted teaching (CAT) nastava pomou raunara
computer conferencing
raunarska konferencija (meusobna veza vie osoba
pomou raunara koji se nalaze na razliitim mestima,
a povezani su komunikacionim sredstvima)
computer crime
kompjuterski kriminal
computer literacy
raunarska pismenost
computer network
raunarska mrea
Computer Press Association (CPA) Udruenje izdavaa raunarske tampe
computer science
nauka o raunarima, raunarska nauka
computer security
bezbednost raunara, obezbeenje raunara
computer users group
raunarska korisnika grupa
consumer (n.)
end consumer
consumer credit
counsel (v.)
183
counsel (n.)
customer (n.)
customer loyalty
customer satisfaction
data (n.)
data acquisition
data bank
database
database administrator
database analyst
database management system
database manager
datacom
data conferencing
data entry
data le
data library
data processing
data management
(pl.) podaci
prikupljanje podataka, proces pribavljanja podataka iz
drugog izvora, obino iz odreenog spoljanjeg sistema
baza podataka, veliki skup podataka
baza podataka
administrator baze podataka, lice koje upravlja bazom
podataka
analitiar baze podataka
sistem upravljanja bazom podataka
administrator baze podataka
razmena podataka, prenos podataka (Skraenica za
data communications.)
razmena podataka u okviru konferencije, istovremena
razmena podataka izmeu geografski udaljenih uesnika
konferencije
unos podataka, unoenje podataka
datoteka podataka
biblioteka podataka
obrada podataka
upravljanje podacima (od prikupljanja i unoenja,
preko obrade, do izlaza i smetaja)
datum (n.)
(sing.) podatak
decision-making (n.)
decision-making body
direct decision-making
decision-making process
demarketing (n.)
184
demographic (adj.)
demographic category
demographic segmentation
demografski
grupisanje na osnovu starosti, pola, obrazovanja,
prihoda ili drugih promenljivih demografskih faktora
segmentacija/podela trita na osnovu demografskih
karakteristika potroaa
demographics (n.)
demography (n.)
digit (n.)
cifra
digital (adj.)
digital cash
digital technology
direct (v.)
direct (adj.)
direct marketing (DM)
direct selling
direction (n.)
in pursuance to your directions
directive (n.)
directly (adv.)
director (n.)
acting director
board of directors
executive director
managing director
non-executive director
GLOSSARY
185
directorate (n.)
directory (n.)
eect (v.)
to eect a compromise
eect (n.)
detrimental eect
personal eects
side eect
eective (adj.)
eective date
eective entrance
eective rate of exchange
eectiveness (n.)
cost eectiveness
eciency (n.)
ekasnost, sposobnost, uinak; isplativost; ekonominost; produktivnost (najbolje korienje radi postizanja najboljeg cilja)
ecient (adj.)
Email Spam
electronic procurement/
e-procurement (n.)
electronic publishing/
e-publishing (n.)
ensure (v.)
execute (v.)
execution (n.)
execution for debt
executive (n.)
executive (adj.)
executive authority
business executive
executive clerk
187
executive committee
executive operational
executive power
senior executive
generic (adj.)
generic demand
generic name
generic product
generic brand
groupware (n.)
industrial (adj.)
industrial advertising
industrijski
industrijska propaganda; oglaavake i promotivne
aktivnosti za investicione robe sirovine i profesionalne
usluge usmerene ka drugim preduzeima koja ih koriste
ili ih mogu koristiti u svom proizvodnom procesu
industrijsko trite; pojedinci ili rme koji kupuju
odreene proizvode radi korienja u proizvodnji
druge robe ili pruanja usluga koje se potom stavljaju u
promet uz odreeni prot ili za potrebe sopstvenog
poslovanja
industrijski marketing vezan za poslovno trite gde su
kupci protne i neprotne organizacije
industrial market
industrial marketing
188
industrial services
industry (n.)
advertising industry
cottage industry
heavy industry
light industry
primary industry
secondary industry
service industry
tertiary industry
information (n.)
information management
internet (n.)
Internet (n.)
189
Internet etiquette
Internet Explorer
Internet marketing
Internet Protocol (IP)
Internet Relay Chat (IRC)
Internet security
Internet service provider
Internet etika
Majkrosoftov pretraiva Web-a
Internet marketing
Internet protokol
kanal za interaktivni razgovor na Internetu
bezbednost na Internetu
dobavlja Internet usluga, posrednik za Internet usluge
intranet (n.)
intraware (n.)
softver za intranet
invoice (v.)
fakturisati
invoice (n.)
as per invoice enclosed
detailed invoice
to extend an invoice
to make out an invoice
faktura
prema priloenoj fakturi
specicirana faktura
specicirati fakturu
ispostaviti fakturu
lead (v.)
to lead a business
lead (n.)
to take the lead
leader (n.)
market leader
leadership (n.)
leadership cadres
collective leadership
vostvo, rukovodstvo
rukovodei kadar (politiki)
kolektivno rukovodstvo
leading (adj.)
leading article
leading circles
leading company
leading question
manage (v.)
to manage a business
manageable (adj.)
190
management (n.)
manager (n.)
acting manager
advertising manager
assistant manager
branch manager
business/commercial manager
department manager
deputy manager
executive manager
rst-line manager
general manager
manager
middle manager
191
personnel manager
plant manager
production manager
product manager
project manager
purchasing manager
sales manager
top manager
ef kadrovske slube
ef pogona
menader/direktor proizvodnje
menader/direktor ili izvrni funkcioner zaduen za
marketing konkretnog proizvoda
rukovodilac projekta
direktor nabavke, ef nabavke
direktor prodaje, komercijalni direktor, ef prodaje
najvii rukovodilac (rukovodilac najvieg nivoa)
managerial (adj.)
managerial competencies
managerial position
upravni, menaderski
organizatorske sposobnosti
rukovodee mesto/poloaj
managing (adj.)
managing board
managing clerk
managing director
market (n.)
ea market
open-air market
market day
market stall
captive market
industrial market
labour market
black market
market leader
market segment
market segmentation
market share
marketable (adj.)
marketing (n.)
dierentiated marketing
192
industrial marketing
marketing communications
marketing environment
marketing management
marketing manager
marketing mix
marketing plan
marketing research
marketing strategy
mass marketing
target marketing
undierentiated marketing
mass (v.)
mass (n.)
the masses
mass (adj.)
mass consumption
mass customisation
mass production
mass marketing
massed promotion
markup (n.)
markup on cost
markup pricing
masovni
masovna potronja
masovno prilagoavanje; marketinka strategija u
okviru koje rma prilagoava osnovni proizvod ili
uslugu radi zadovoljenja potreba individualnih potroaa
masovna proizvodnja, serijska proizvodnja
masovni marketing (cilj mu je da dopre do velikog
broja ljudi
masovna promocija; komunikacioni napori usmereni
na udarne/vrne periode, kao to su praznici
poveanje cene nekog proizvoda; bruto-prot;
mara prota
poveanje cena; oblik formiranja cena na bazi trokova;
poveanje vrednosti za odreen procenat na cenu
kotanja ili dotadanje trokove
poveanje prodajne cene; oblik formiranja cena na bazi
trokova; poveanje prodajne cene za odreeni
procenat na nabavnu cenu ili cenu kotanja
formiranje viih cena
GLOSSARY
193
Me generation (n.)
netiquette (n.)
operate (v.)
easy to operate
to operate a rm
to operate at decit
to operate stocks
operating (adj.)
operating costs
operating policy
operating prot
operation (n.)
business operations
operations research
to put into operation
subsidiary operation
operational (adj.)
operational board
operational services
operational sta
operative (n.)
operative
radnik, rukovalac
radnik
operative (adj.)
to become operative
operative division/units
operative employee
operator (n.)
personal (adj.)
personal selling
194
personnel (n.)
advanced training of personnel
personnel committee
personnel department
experienced personnel
personnel les
personnel management
personnel manager
personnel ocer
recruitment personnel
re-training of personnel
skilled personnel
place (n.)
place utility
positioning (n.)
brand positioning
product positioning
president (n.)
prevail (v.)
prevailing (adj.)
price (n.)
bargain price
cost price
price allowance
price band
price ceiling
price xing
GLOSSARY
195
price oor
price label
price tag
pricing (n.)
produce (v.)
to mass produce
proizvoditi, praviti
masovno proizvoditi
produce (n.)
product (n.)
generic product
product engineer
product image
product life cycle (PLC)
product management
product manager
product portfolio
product positioning
product competition
product placement
product positioning
product recall
product sampling
product warranty
production (n.)
batch production
proizvodnja
serijska proizvodnja
productivity (n.)
productivity of labour
a pick up in productivity
produktivnost
produktivnost rada
poveanje produktivnosti
196
promote (v.)
to promote a new product
promotion (n.)
promotional (adj.)
promotional campaign
promotional management
promotional mix
promotional tools
psychographic (adj.)
psychographic segmentation
psychographics (n.)
public (adj.)
public image
public relations (PR)
197
recruit (v.)
regrutovati, angaovati
recruiter (n.)
recruitment (n.)
personnel recruitment
regrutovanje, angaovanje
angaovanje kadrova/personala/osoblja
re-engineer (v.)
re-engineering (n.)
reposition (v.)
repositioning (n.)
sale (n.)
sale as seen
sale by description
jumble sale
the sales
sales (adj.)
sales assistant
sales campaign
sales force
sales manager
sales oce
sales orientation
sales promotion
sales target
198
prodajni
pomonik u prodaji
prodajna kampanja
prodajna snaga/grupa prodavaca/trgovakih putnika
direktor prodaje
prodajna kancelarija
prodajna orijentacija
unapreenje prodaje
planovi prodaje
salesgirl (n.)
(A) prodavaica
salesman (n.)
scope (n.)
scope of activity
scope of work
within the scope of
segment (v.)
podeliti, deliti
segment (n.)
segmentation (n.)
behavioural segmentation
demographic segmentation
geographic segmentation
psychographic segmentation
service (n.)
service charges
civil service
continuous service
service industry
service level
service mark
service marketing
services (n.)
industrial services
public services
199
shareholder (n.)
standing (n.)
nancial standing
standing (adj.)
customer of long standing
standing agreement
standing plan
stalan, ustajao
stalan kupac, dugogodinji kupac/muterija
stalan ugovor
stalan plan
star (n.)
supervise (v.)
supervision (n.)
under supervision
workers supervision
supervisor (n.)
nadzornik, nadglednik
supervisory (adj.)
supervisory board
supervisory body
nadzorni,
nadzorni odbor
organ nadzora
support (v.)
support (n.)
target (v.)
to target a market
ciljati
ciljati na jedno trite; planirati prodaju robe na jednom
tritu
target (n.)
target market
target marketing
target population
targeting (n.)
200
technology (n.)
advanced technology
information technology
obsolete technology
technology transfer
transferee of technology
state-of-the-art technology
tehnologija
moderna tehnologija
informaciona tehnologija
zastarela tehnologija
transfer tehnologije, prenos tehnologije
korisnik tehnologije
savremena tehnologija
blagajnik
tremendous (adj.)
ogroman
trouble-shooter (n.)
value (n.)
good value (for money)
want (n.)
wobbler (n.)
shelf wobbler
process rada
automatizacija procesa rada
aplikacija za praenje procesa rada (skup programa
koji pomau u praenju i kontroli svih aktivnosti u
jednom projektu, od poetka do kraja)
workgroup (n.)
radna grupa; grupa korisnika koji rade na zajednikom projektu delei datoteke, obino preko lokalne
mree
GLOSSARY
201
X-brand (n.)
202
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CIP -
,
811.111`276.6:33(075.8)
, , 1955Second Year English / Silva Mitrovi. 5th ed. - Beograd : Univerzitet Singidunum,
2009 (Loznica : Mladost Grup). - XIV, 205
str. : ilustr. ; 24 cm
Tira 400. - Glossary: str. 181-202. Bibliografija: str. 203-205.
ISBN 948-86-7912-211-7
) -
COBISS.SR - ID 169531916
2009.
Sva prava zadrana. Ni jedan deo ove publikacije ne moe biti reprodukovan u bilo kom
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