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The Global People Club Sandwich


 
Charcoal artist Dan Pyle showing his process. 

Good Day <<First Name>>
I hope you are enjoying your Sunday. I might just have discovered the best documentary on music ever ("1971") and also spent yesterday out in the art world. Check my Insta for an update on the Dan Pyle exhibition at Queens Art Gallery in Limmatstrasse 257, 8005 Zürich and do let me know if I should send you my notes on him. If you live in Zurich or Basel, please check out his art work in person. 

Speaking of integrating you know that there are various ways to integrate into the host country culture. One of the most important aspect is learning the host country language or languages. Here is a guest post from our friends at BiCortex Languages on the benefits of learning the host country language.

I'm going back to watch "1971" and wish you a relaxed Sunday night.

Kind regards
Angie

***

How Language Makes You Local - The Benefits Of Language Lessons When Moving Abroad

Moving to a new country comes with many challenges, and transitioning into a new society is challenging due to numerous factors. Often, the biggest challenge of moving abroad is that you and your spouse or family do not understand the local language. Not understanding the local language creates many sub or additional challenges, which is why learning your new country's local language is an important part of acclimating, integrating into society, and acculturation. This article discusses how language lessons can help you navigate the many challenges that come with moving to a new country. Some of the challenges that will be discussed include the following:

  • how language lessons help you communicate at work in the country you moved to

  • how language lessons alleviate the stress associated with daily tasks

  • how language lessons lead to socialization, such as making new friends to build up your support network

  • how language lessons help you understand how culture is inherently linked with language

Language lessons are absolutely crucial to adapting to your new home country, getting to know the locals, and integrating into society successfully. Learning the local language is the key to slowly starting to feel like a local.

 

Language Lessons Enable You To Work In The Country You Moved To

One of the most important reasons people take language lessons when they move to a new country is, of course, to be able to communicate effectively at work in their new country. The language ability developed from language tests before moving abroad is often insufficient to communicate effectively at work. While learning a new language might not be required to perform daily job functions, it makes it easier to communicate with colleagues and clients who speak the local language. Additionally, it simplifies understanding the industry jargon and how business is done. Another benefit of language lessons regarding the work environment is that many language teachers provide business language courses tailored to your needs. For example, you can contact seasoned experts like BiCortex Languages, who employ native language teachers and ask for business language teachers to focus on specific topics like industry jargon, finances, negotiations, and presentations. More often than not, especially if you moved abroad specifically for work, your new employer would be happy to pay for your language lessons, so do not hesitate to ask them if they would be willing to pay for a business language teacher for you and your family. They could also put you and some of your colleagues in a group to have language lessons together. Soon enough, your new language ability will help you start feeling like a local at work.

 

Language Lessons Help Simplify Daily Tasks: Grocery Shopping, Reading Traffic Signs, Having Your Hair Cut, Etc. 

Besides having to adapt to working in a new country, one also has to adjust to daily life activities. Simple tasks like grocery shopping, reading traffic signs, or communicating with the person cutting your hair in your new country might prove challenging and stressful if you don't speak, read or understand the local language. Language lessons can effectively help you simplify these tasks by improving your verbal communication skills. While everyone moving to a new country can appreciate occasional miscommunications and often laugh about it, developing vocabulary and basic conversational abilities in the local language can make the difference between ending up with orange hair instead of red when you go to the hairdresser! Being able to read road signs and street names might be the difference between reaching your destination efficiently and taking a long detour. Many experienced language teachers adapt their methodology to the student's needs. For example, if you want to learn a specific vocabulary, like foods or ingredients, to help you navigate shopping in a grocery store, a language teacher can help you. Similarly, if you want to focus on common traffic terminology to help you read road signs and navigate your way around town, then language lessons are your answer. Quite soon, you will be able to read the food labels in grocery stores, know exactly where you're traveling to on the road or in the subway, and tell your hairdresser exactly which haircut you want. You'll be like a local - someone who knows their way around town!

 

Language Enables Socialization - Adapting To A New Environment Requires A New Support Network, And Making Friends Is A Big Part Of This

Moving to a new country means leaving behind your support network, including family, friends, and work colleagues. Losing your support network is often the most difficult part of moving to a new country because you miss your family and friends, and they are no longer just a short drive away. You can't just quickly make plans to see each other or meet up at a coffee shop a few minutes from your house. While moving admin, focusing on work, and trying to navigate daily tasks are extremely important, socialization must not be neglected. You must develop a new support network for successful integration into the community in your new country. Making acquaintances and developing relationships to develop friendships is the first step to building this new support network. However, meeting new people might prove difficult if you speak a different language than they do. Even introducing yourself might seem daunting because you're unsure if you're saying it right, let alone trying to strike up a conversation and make a new friend! Taking language lessons to improve your conversational ability will enable you to start building your new support network. Being able to talk to someone at work, in a store at the mall, as you pass them on the street, or wherever you meet someone in your daily life will enable you to start making friends and integrate into your new community. After a few lessons, you will have a few key phrases in your pocket and enough confidence to invite friends to your new home to share a meal and talk to each other comfortably, just like other locals do! 

 

Language Lessons With A Native Teacher Reveals Culture - How Things Are Said/Things People Say In Their Language Reveal Traditions, Demeanors, And Cultural Traits

Language, culture, heritage, and traditions are intricately intertwined. You might think that language lessons will only teach you new vocabulary and grammar and equip you with new sentences. However, this cannot be further from the truth. Language is much more than that. Because distinct cultures have spoken specific languages for centuries, language and culture have developed in parallel over time, and both can only be understood by learning the other. Language lessons are where culture and language meet, local dialects take center stage, and age-old cultural traditions reveal themselves. The relationship between language and culture can be demonstrated by many examples, such as dialect and local language nuances. Taking language lessons from a native language teacher in your new home country will enable you to learn words and phrases that mean something different than their dictionary definition. You will be able to understand the local language nuances, taking shape in variations of word choice, expressions, and speakers' demeanor. Language lessons will also help you understand dialects. The differences between the dialects often stem from history, traditions, culture, and origin. For example, there is a difference between Egyptian Arabic and Gulf Arabic, European Portuguese and Brazilian Portuguese, and between Standard Afrikaans and Cape Afrikaans, and you can request a language teacher who can speak and teach a specific dialect, which will help you integrate into society and feel more like a local.

 

Language Makes You Local

Whether you take language lessons to communicate more effectively at work, to help you navigate tasks in daily life, to develop a new support network by making new friends, or to help you understand local language nuances and dialects, the benefits of language lessons are endless. In each of these cases, language lessons will help you feel more like a local, making the process of moving abroad (and the many difficulties that come with it) much easier to manage. Your daily life will be much easier, with fewer language-related work challenges, fewer hair-dressing catastrophe risks, a new group of friends with whom to enjoy your hobbies, and the ability to communicate like a local! Even so, you do not have to do it alone! There are so many resources for expats and immigrants that can be life-changing and make a move abroad so much easier. Language schools like the one mentioned in this article are there to support you and help you find the right language teacher. People like Angie at Global People Transitions can support you in your journey abroad. The key is to take advantage of resources and reach out when you need help!

 


HireMeExpress - New Lunch Series

Starting again in April 2023


We will soon start our lunch series again and we will teach you insights on 

Workshop 1:  FRIENDS - Partnering Masters - Building Effective Relationships
Friday, 14 April 23 from 12:00 PM CET till 1:00 PM CET

Workshop 2: FAME - Powerful Missions - Having a Voice in a Sea of Noise
Friday, 21 April 23 from 12:00 PM CET till 1:00 PM CET

Workshop 3: FORTUNE - Persisting Mindsets - Designing Work to Support a Global Lifestyle
Friday
, 28 April 23  from 12:00 PM CET till 1:00 PM CET 

For the first time ever I'm offering these three workshops in person around a lunch table. Seats will be limited to eight and you should be able to join all three of them.

Please sign up here to apply to be invited to the free workshops. You will also receive Angie's 21 POINT FRESH RESUME CHECKLIST and other free tips on finding work in Switzerland.

Alternatively, you can just reply to this email saying "I want friends, fame and fortune.". That works too. 

If you have a friend who needs our support, please forward this email to them.

We will confirm further details with your invitation.
 
Easter is approaching and we offer 20% off on the HireMeExpress Programm for all our readers if you book by 10 April 2023. First come, first served. Maximum eight participants.

All info is in here or you can make an appointment with me via Calendly .


The fee for private individuals for the full program is CHF 2'200 + VAT, so we offer the program to you at the sensational price of CHF 1'760 + VAT.
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Have you been a client in the past or worked with me in any context? Be a darling <<First Name>> and leave me a Google Review here.

I would be really grateful for your review. Kind regards Angie

 
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My parents were hippies and named me after Angela Davis and when I don’t blowdry my hair I could almost have a frizz like her, but my skin is white and I have a German passport. My last name sounds Jewish and many suitcases in the concentration camp in Auschwitz reminded me years ago that my family could have suffered from the Nazis. However, they were Roman Catholics. Not wine-makers as one might assume, just traders and my other grandfather made shoes. My grandmother was a working woman after the second world war. A mother of many. My parents moved away from home to follow their hippie-dream and help underprivileged children. Guess what? That might have made me the person that I am today. In grade seven I wrote my first short story that was actually published in an anthology. I wrote a play and wanted to become a writer/actress. Because I’m good with human relationships I ended up in Human Resources and became an interculturalists and an Expat Coach for people like Heidi and Govind and their children Anya and Anush who speak Hindi, Swiss-German, and English as native languages.

 

On weekdays, I’m on a mission to bring the Human Touch back into Global Mobility. On Saturdays I tend to my container garden, eat Chicken Tikka Masala with my Kashmiri and on Sundays, I dabble in creative writing as my evil twin sister Vivienne M. Sharma.

 

I work as a Career Coach, Expat Helpline, and would like to become the Yoda of Global Mobility. I started my company with my only real asset, a metallic-blue AUDI A4, a decade ago. Besides sitting in airport lounges and sipping on a Bombay Sapphire and Tonic, I dream of living in a hotel suite. My journey led me to work in Germany, the UK, Australia, India and Switzerland and I’m hoping to travel the world as a DIGITAL NOMAD when I grow up. 

 

You would not believe that I was at Madonna’s first concert in Germany, saw Freddie Mercury on stage, had a crush on Simon LeBon and Morten Harket, and to date cannot forget Paul Young’s voice live. I was also once asked in a club in Cochin if I was a professional (Bollywood dancer). Contact me for Global Mobility, Expat Experience, Global Talent and Leadership Development, Culture Transformation, Transcultural Communication, Diversity and Inclusion, Social Recruiting, Global Talent Acquisition, Digital Organization of your Global, Virtual Teams, Global Career Planning, and Transition Planning for Expats and Expat Spouses.







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Global People Transitions GmbH · Forchstrasse 179 · Zurich 8032 · Switzerland