English for Business



Similar documents
English for Business

Exercise What Motivates People To Seek Self Employment?

Money Borrowing money

V1.0. Business. Specimen Assessment Material AS-level Paper /1 Mark scheme. June Version 2.0

Class Activity Cards

klm Mark Scheme Applied Business 8611/8613 General Certificate of Education Financial Planning and Monitoring 2009 examination - January series

Using the TUC Manifesto for Disability Equality. A guide for trade union activists

How To Use Voice Over Ip

Ways to bank. With so many ways to do your banking you ll be spoilt for choice.

Software Copyright. 1. Introduction. Last update: July 2009

Chapter. Enterprise Business Systems

England. Your project and its outcomes. Acknowledgements This booklet has been prepared for the Big Lottery Fund by Charities Evaluation Services.

Buying on Hire Purchase

Macmillan Cancer Support Volunteering Policy

Introducing the Credit Card

Case study 1 - Eileen, 69: A disagreement with a hospital doctor led to the doctor refusing to continue treatment.

Guidelines for Accepting Credit Cards as a Form of Payment for Education, Registration and Other Fees

The most important conditions necessary for any exchange to take place are:

HP 12C Calculations. 2. If you are given the following set of cash flows and discount rates, can you calculate the PV? (pg.

The 4 Ways To Grow Your Business

Chapter 8 Customer Relationship Management Benefits of CRM Helps in improving customer retention and loyalty Helps in generating high customer

The Spark Small Business Guide: Graduating from Marketing to Marketing Automation

Anytime Adviser Checking Account Coach

How to make effective Outbound Contact Center. Taweewut Waicharoen April 9,09

Resource 3.9. A Guide to Online Payment Facilities

Chapter 4 IT Infrastructure: Hardware and Software

How to Improve your next Software Purchase

Age and Insurance: Helping older customers find the cover they need. February 2009

All can damage or destroy your company s computers along with the data and applications you rely on to run your business.

COMPUTER AND COMPUTERISED ACCOUNTING SYSTEM

CONSUMER INTERESTS IN ECO-DESIGN OF COMPLEX SET TOP BOXES

Credit Card Processing Buyer's Guide By the purchasing experts at BuyerZone

Scheme of Work Units 1 and 2: Setting up a Business and Growing as a Business an Integrated Approach

STUDENT WORKBOOK. Welcome to the Trade Your Way: Schools Challenge SCHOOLS CHALLENGE

Best in Class Customer Retention

Penalty Fares information

Mobile Consumers. & You. How to use mobile to your advantage. tradedoubler.com

Vodafone Red Paper Getting closer to your customers Issues Change Solution

Business Ideas Streetcar

33 DISCOUNTED PRESENT VALUE

WHAT IS EQUITY RELEASE? WHY CONSIDER EQUITY RELEASE?

5 TIPS ABOUT MULTICHANNEL FOR INSURANCE COMPANIES. Stanisław Piechowicz. General Manager. Rhythm Enterprise

Credit Repair Made Easy

OVERVIEW OF INTERNET MARKETING

Environmentally Sound Management of E- waste: Emerging Issues, Challenges and Opportunities for Material Recovery and Recycling

INTEREST FREE NON REPAYABLE BUSINESS FUNDING. Charles Brooks Comprehensive BusinessManagement Ltd

Leapfrog customer experience management with omni-channel communications

Arbs2U Is it right for me? 17 October 2014

CASE STUDY NEDERLANDSE ENERGIE MAATSCHAPPIJ (NLE) Energy for growth. How online self-service is allowing NLE to dominate the competition

New to Project Management. Graduates Career Advice

The Entrepreneur s Guide to Financial Maturity Factoring - Financing for Companies Seeking Fast Cash

CORPORATE MEMBERS OF LIMITED LIABILITY PARTNERSHIPS

BUSINESS PLAN OUTLINE

I can t help but feel the market only has room for four players. Undoubtedly, customer

i n s e r v i c e Resident Rights

How To Close A House On A Mortgage

Customer Centricity in the Life and Pensions Industry

Travel and subsistence policy

This document contains four articles that have been combined as a separate booklet and covers two elements of research.

Preparing and Revising for your GCSE Exams

famıly be part of our supporting Alder Hey Children's Charity Children s Charity

On-Demand CRM Executive Brief

MARKETING Market research market strategy target market market mix Market Research

Checking Account. Money Smarts for Kids. Money Skills for Life. Member FDIC. Welcome! What Is a Checking Account? Why Is a Checking Account So Great?

welcome to contents For the most up-to-date information check our website at

Assessment and services from your local council in England

flight attendant lawyer journalist programmer sales clerk mechanic secretary / receptionist taxi driver waiter/waitress

ICT Call to Africa The Basics. By Mabel St.Germaine CEO/Director of Studies London Capital Computer College

Inventory management and GS1 standards

Selecting an ISP. 45% of people in the EU would change ISP if necessary to get a faster Internet connection. (Source: EC)

Data ownership within governance: getting it right

[VIRTUAL PBX OVERVIEW]

The Young Entrepreneur's guide to starting a business (Part 5)

Merchant Cash Advances Provide Key Financing

Transcription:

BGF NYTK English for Business Sample C1 Reading Comprehension 60 minutes 20 marks WRITE ALL THE ANSWERS ON THE ANSWER SHEET. Read the following texts and answer the questions. Text 1 The self-service economy Self-service technologies, such as websites and kiosks, bring both risks and rewards So you want to withdraw cash from your bank account? Do it yourself. Want to install a broadband internet connection? Do it yourself. Need a boarding card issued for your flight? Do it yourself. Thanks to the proliferation of websites, kiosks and automated phone systems, you can also track packages, manage your finances, switch phone tariffs, organise your own holiday (juggling offers from different websites), and select your own theatre seats while buying tickets. These are all tasks that used to involve human interaction. But now they have been subsumed into the self-service economy Many people complain about companies outsourcing work to low-wage economies: but how many notice that firms are increasingly outsourcing work to their own customers? In theory, companies can save money by replacing human workers with automated self-service systems, while customers gain more choice and control and get quicker service. There is even talk of self-service doing for the service sector what mass production did for manufacturing, by enabling the delivery of services cheaply and on a massive scale. Surely the expansion of selfservice into more and more areas is to be welcomed? Not necessarily. When it is done well, self-service can benefit both companies and customers alike. But when done badly who has not found themselves trapped in a series of endless touch-tone menus? it can infuriate and alienate customers. In their desire to cut costs, many companies deliberately make it difficult to get through to a human operator; yet their phone or web-based self-service systems do not always allow for every eventuality. In areas where self-service is only just starting to take hold, this is less of a problem: fuming customers can, after all, always take their business elsewhere. But if every bank were to adopt impenetrable self-service systems, disgruntled customers would no longer be able to express their discontent by voting with their feet. Such a scenario ought to provide an opportunity for some firms to differentiate themselves: some banks, for example, already promise that their telephone-banking services always offer the option of talking to a human operator. But in return for guaranteed access to humans, many firms will simply charge more. As a result, people who prefer not to use self-service systems (such as the elderly) will be forced to pay higher prices. This is already happening: many travel firms offer discounts to customers who book online. Buy your tickets the old-fashioned way and you must pay more. Firms are, in effect, introducing penalty charges to persuade customers to use self-service systems. Some customers might resent this.

8 9 1 7 Another objection to self-service is that while it saves companies money, it does not always save their customers time. In the best cases, it does, of course: checking yourself in at the airport or tracking your own packages on a shipping firm's website can be quicker than queuing or making a phone call. But as more and more tasks are unloaded on to customers, they may start to yearn for the (largely mythical) days of old-fashioned service. Again, this ought to provide an opportunity for specialists (such as travel agents) who can offer a convenient, one-stop-shop service. All of this suggests that there are limits to how far self-service can be taken. Companies that go too far down the self-service route or do it ineptly are likely to find themselves being punished. Instead, a balance between self-service and conventional forms of service is required. Companies ought to offer customers a choice, and should encourage the use of self-service, for those customers that want it, through service quality, not coercion. Self-service works best when customers decide to use a well designed system of their own volition; it infuriates most when they are forced to use a bad system. Above all, self-service is no substitute for good service. The Economist I. Find words or expressions in the text which have the same meaning as the following. II. 1. make someone feel that they do not belong in a place or group (par 3) 2. with a definite intention, not by chance or by accident (par 3) 3. impossible to get into or get through (par 4) 4. voice dissatisfaction (par 4) 5. a situation that could possibly happen ( par 5) 6. find something by looking for evidence that shows where they have gone (par 6) 7. the use of force or threats to make someone do something (par 7) Choose the appropriate options according to the text. 8. Self service systems A) may make clients angry B) provide all the services C) are less problematic D) make it possible to vote with one s feet 9. Penalty charges are introduced A) to avoid higher prices B) to win over the elderly C) to encourage self service D) to express resentment

A B C Text 2 Give us your tired computers A new plan to recycle old PCs may forestall regulation The computer industry is built on the assumption that PCs and electrical devices are replaced every few years. It is a strategy that leaves tons of electronic junk in its wake. Over 130,000 PCs are replaced every day in America alone, and only a tenth or so are recycled. Ingredients such as cadmium, mercury and lead can do terrible things to people and places. In Europe, such e-waste is the fastest growing type of refuse, accounting for 8% of all municipal rubbish. Regulators have taken note. In California, legislation to levy a surcharge on computer sales to defray recycling costs took effect this month. (A European Union directive in 2003 requires equipment-makers to recycle, but it has not yet been implemented in national laws.) Manufacturers such as IBM, Dell and HP have been trying to deflect further legislation by introducing their own recycling programmes. But they have had limited success partly because they tend to charge for recycling unwanted machines. Apple's price for taking back one of its computers in America is $30. Now ebay, the world's leading online auction business, has come up with an innovative way to encourage people to sell, donate or recycle their old machines over the internet. A webbased program reads the redundant computer's components and gives its specifications (like its memory and processor speed). Owners can then ascertain the value of their old PC, put it up for sale and get a special mailing kit to simplify shipping. The site also makes it easy to donate a PC to charity or get it to a nearby recycler. D The scheme is no altruistic act of corporate social responsibility. It began as an attempt by Patrick Jabal, manager of the site's computer and networking category (which does $2.5 billion-worth of transactions a year), to drum up more business. E F Watching people's buying and selling patterns on ebay's site, Mr Jabal, an entrepreneur with an MBA from Harvard Business School, noticed an unmet demand for cheap, old PCs. Though they were plentiful in the closets of ebay users, listing and selling them was problematic. So, in order to increase their supply on the site, he set out to overcome the difficulties that users had often no more than an inability to remember the vital statistics of the machine they had been using. Then he stumbled on the issue of waste and realised that the company could do even more. It was a way to meet a business objective, help the environment, and help confused consumers, he says. It may also turn out to be a clever market-based way to avoid more regulation. The Economist

19 20 14 18 10 13 III. Decide which paragraphs (A F) are summarised below. 10. Efforts to recycle and trade-in 11. Mankind endangered by thrown-away computers 12. How to get rid of old computers through the web 13. Facilitating the sales of old computers IV. Answer the following questions. Choose not more than five words from the text. 14. How have computer companies recently solved the problem of recycling in California? 15. Why is the 2003 EU directive not widespread yet? 16. How do large manufacturers try to avoid regulations? 17. How does ebay help people to sell/donate/recycle their computers? 18. What was the intention of Patrick Jabal s attempt? V. Choose the appropriate options according to the text. 19. The recycling programmes of IBM Dell and HP were not fully successful because A) they limited the number of recyclable computers B) the price of Apple was lower C) they usually require a recycling fee D) the machines were not always wanted 20. After customers have decided to get rid of their computers over the Internet they have to A) look for a shipping firm B) ask somebody to transport it C) get help from ebay D) have to evaluate their old PC

FIGYELEM! KEY Kérjük, ide ragasszon egy ÍRÁSBELI azonosító kódot! Hiánya esetén dolgozata érvénytelen. BGF NYTK English for Business Sample C1 Reading Comprehension 60 minutes First Marker: Second Marker: Score: 20 marks Text 1 1. trapped 2. deliberately 3. impenetrable 4. fuming 5. As a result 6. tracking 7. coercion 8. A 9. C Text 2 10. B 11. A 12. C 13. E 14. By levying surcharge 15. Not yet implemented in national laws 16. Introducing their own recycling programme 17. With a web-based reading program 18. To drum up business 19. C 20. C