03 Feb 2009 @ 1:49 PM 
 

English for office emergencies

 

English for office emergencies


There’s nothing like an emergency at work to spice up another routine day at the office. Check out this office lingo that you may hear your boss using when things aren’t going to plan, when a project is running late, or when the stock-market has crashed!

Working late to meet a deadline

In today’s high-pressure world of business, setting and meeting deadlines is a tricky prospect. A well-managed project plan will have a realistic timeframe and will be pleasing to the customer. An overly-optimistic timeframe may result in a tight deadline and employees having to work late into the night, what we call burning the midnight oil.

 

Successfully meeting a deadline

Despite everyone in the office burning the midnight oil for the last week, it was uncertain whether that deadline would be met in time. Fortunately, everyone’s hard work has paid off and you’ve met the deadlineby the skin of your teeth! This means that you have managed to do something just in time!

When things don’t work out as expected

What seemed like a good solution to a problem may in practice turn out to be insufficient. In such cases we say we have to go back to the drawing board. This literally means that we need to look for new solutions and to design a better plan.

Recovering a frustrated customer

Few things create problems in business more than an unhappy customer, especially if that customer is worth a lot of money to the business! Never fear, use a variety of service skills, sweet-talk and some good old-fashioned apologies to butter-up the customer. Don’t worry, this doesn’t mean spreading butter on your customer; it simply means making your customer feel satisfied and cooperative!

Managing a disaster

Once in a while some really major problem will arise that has serious negative consequences - a stock market crash or a take-over of the company, for example. To keep the business alive in such circumstances, it may be necessary to perform what we call a damage limitation exercise by merging projects, cutting jobs or even closing whole departments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Categories: English
Posted By: admin
Last Edit: 03 Feb 2009 @ 01 49 PM

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