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Intl. Business: How not to be the "ugly American"
Merlin Mann | Jun 19 2006
Getting Through Customs - Articles My friend's dad is a hard-nosed American sales guy. He spent thirty years developing and, in my opinion, mastering the disparate skills of schmoozing, selling, negotiating, and closing. (Man, this guy could close.) But when he started moving into big-time international sales, he realized there was this whole world (literally) of customs, skills, and rhythms he'd have to master -- lest he unintentionally offend a client and blow the deal. When I first heard about some of these differences ("In Japan, brace yourself for several days of intense all-day recreation before business is ever discussed"), I picked up a copy of Kiss, Bow, or Shake Hands, which has tons of fascinating advice on how to adapt your behavior when conducting business outside the US. I wonder how many of these have changed since I read the book in the mid-90s -- the world has shrunk a lot since then. Still, I have to say that as a poorly-traveled American, I do find this stuff fascinating And, now I've discovered the book's authors have this ginormous repository of web-based information. Here's some favorite random factoids, mores, and customs from outside the U.S.:
What customs have you U.S. folks learned traveling and doing business outside the country? More interestingly to me, for you folks based outside the U.S., what American business rites seemed odd, foreign, or illogical to you? 46 Comments
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![]() i find that english escalator...Submitted by nex (not verified) on June 20, 2006 - 5:24am.
i find that english escalator custom funny -- thanks for that comment! it's the same here in vienna -- stand on the right side, walk on the left side is mandated on the subway, people saw how much sense this makes, and the practice spread to other places like shopping malls. in other austrian cities it's not common at all though. so why do i personally find it funny? because i always thought (basically arbitrary) choice of sides has been made because you always overtake on the left side in traffic, thus i would have expected britons to do the reverse. ad olle bergman's comment: do north americans (AFAIK the practice isn't confined to US citizens) really expect an answer to "how are you?"? of course it's weird to use a rethorical question as a greeting, but then greetings often are weird. (in austria, people routinely use "may god protect/bless you" as a form of "good day"/"hello", but they never use it as "goodbye".) so, i could definitely live with that. OTOH, asking "how are you?" and expecting an answer of "fine, thanks" is positively hypocritical. please please only do this when you're really sure you won't cause confusion. PS: the live preview feature for comments works perfectly now in firefox; thanks, merlin! » POSTED IN:
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