Be more effective on the job! Communicate like a native speaker of English with the ultimate guide to today's Business English!
American English speakers use many phrases and expressions on the job. If you don’t know these expressions, you’re left out of the conversation! You’re out of it ... and nothing makes you feel so like a foreigner. This book & CD will help you speak Business English like an American — quickly and confidently.
The Economist is a global weekly magazine written for those who share an uncommon interest in being well and broadly informed. Each issue explores the close links between domestic and international issues, business, politics, finance, current affairs, science, technology and the arts. In addition to regular weekly content, Special Reports are published approximately 20 times a year, spotlighting a specific country, industry, or hot-button topic. The Technology Quarterly, published 4 times a year, highlights and analyzes new technologies that will change the world we live in.
BusinessWeek - World's leading business magazine. Timely, useful, provocative, innovative. (US) Each issue of BusinessWeek features in-depth perspectives on the financial markets, industries, trends, technology and people guiding the economy. Draw upon Business Week's timely incisive analysis to help you make better decisions about your career, your business, and your personal investments.
Business Benchmark is a three-level Business English course for BEC or BULATS exams, which can also be used for general Business English courses.
Business Benchmark helps students get ahead fast with their Business English vocabulary and skills and gives them grammar practice in business contexts. It also helps students prepare for an internationally recognised Cambridge ESOL Business English exam, using real exam papers from Cambridge ESOL. Teachers can choose from the BEC edition or the BULATS edition at the right level for their students.
This book is an introductory text in statistics for students of business and administration in graduate programs leading to a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree, undergraduate programs in colleges and universities, and community and junior colleges. At the MBA or advanced undergraduate level, this text supports an intensive one-term course. At the undergraduate level and in community and junior colleges, the text is suitable for a two-term introductory statistics sequence.