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Foram encontradas 70 questões.

64963 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text II

Knowledge workers fuel innovation and growth, yet the nature of knowledge work remains poorly understood—as do the ways to improve its effectiveness. The heart of what knowledge workers do on the job is collaborate, which in the broadest terms means they interact to solve problems, serve customers, engage with partners, and nurture new ideas. Technology and workflow processes support knowledge worker success and are increasingly sources of comparative differentiation. Those able to use new technologies to reshape how they work are finding significant productivity gains. This article shares our research on how technology can improve the quality and output of knowledge workers.

Knowledge workers are growing in numbers. In some sectors of the economy, such as healthcare providers and education, they account for 75 percent of the workforce; in the United States, their wages total 18 percent of GDP. The nature of collaborative work ranges from high levels of abstract thinking on the part of scientists to building and maintaining professional contacts and information networks to more ground-level problem solving. Think of a buyer for a retail chain whose distributed web of contacts span resourceful professionals as fashion designers in Tokyo to experts on manufacturing in Brazil.

For companies, knowledge workers are expensive assets — earning a wage premium that ranges from 55 percent to 75 percent over the pay of workers who perform more basic production and transaction tasks. Yet there are wide variations in the performance of knowledge workers, as well as in their access to technologies that could improve it. Our research shows that the performance gap between top and bottom companies in collaboration-intense sectors is nine times that of production- or transaction-intense sectors. And that underscores what remains a significant challenge for corporations and national economics alike: how to improve the productivity of this prized and growing corps of workers.

Unfortunately, the productivity measures for collaboration workers are fuzzy at best. For production workers, productivity is readily measured in terms of units of output; for transaction workers, in operations per hour. But for knowledge workers, what might be thought of as collaboration productivity depends on the quality and quantity of interactions occurring. And it’s from these lessthan- perfectly-understood interactions that companies and national economies derive important benefits. Consider the collaborative creative work needed to win an advertising campaign or the high levels of service needed to satisfy public citizens. Or, in a similar vein, the interplay between a company and its customers or partners that results in an innovative product.

Raising the quality of these interactions is largely uncharted territory. Taking a systematic view, however, helps bring some of the key issues into focus. Our research suggests that improvements depend upon getting a better fix on who actually is doing the collaborating within companies, as well as understanding the details of how that interactive work is done. Just as important is deciding how to support interactions with technology — in particular, Web 2.0 tools such as social networks, wikis, and video. There is potential for sizeable gains from even modest improvements. Our survey research shows that at least 20 percent and as much as 50 percent of collaborative activity results in wasted effort. And the sources of this waste—including poorly planned meetings, unproductive travel time, and the rising tide of redundant e-mail communications, just to name a few—are many and growing in knowledge-intense industries.

There are some companies that already are tackling aspects of this collaboration–technology nexus. A wellknown multinational company selling networking and communications technology, for example, was eager to improve interactions between its technology specialist sales teams and enterprise customers. Frequent travel and stepped-up job requirements had resulted in overstretched teams whose effectiveness had become diminished. The company tackled the problem by mandating the use of its own video technologies, as well as other collaboration tools to reach more customers and business partners by shifting a large portion of inperson meetings to virtual interactions. Policy and governance changes ensured that technology use became part of daily workflows and not an added task. Internal surveys showed that 78 percent of the targeted employees reported increased productivity and improved lifestyles without diminishing customer or partner satisfaction.

But most companies are only beginning to take these paths. That’s because, in many respects, raising the collaboration game differs from traditional ways of boosting productivity. In production and transaction work, technology use is often part of a broader campaign to reduce head counts and costs—steps that are familiar to most managers. In the collaboration setting, technology is used differently. It multiplies interactions and extends the reach of knowledge workers. That allows for the speedier product development found at Proctor & Gamble and improved partner and customer intimacy at Cisco. In general, this is new terrain for most managers.

Adapted from the article written by James Manyika, Kara Sprague and Lareina Yee, published in McKinsey Quarterly, 27 October 2009. http://whatmatters.mckinseydigital.com/internet/using-technology-toimprove- workforce-collaboration

Choose the title that appropriately matches the focus of Text II.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64962 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early.

All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

Mark the item that describes the tone of the closing line of Text I: “Check for e-mails from Rob. With an R.”

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64961 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early.

All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

In “even though...” and “All in all,” could be correctly replaced with

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64960 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early.

All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

In terms of reference, it is correct to affirm that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64959 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

Check the only alternative in which the expression in boldtype has the same meaning as the item given.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64958 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

In “I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.”, “I would have preferred” could be correctly replaced by

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64957 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

The feature the author criticized about the presentation is the

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64956 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

All of the following fragments from the text contain instances of informal language, EXCEPT

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64955 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

In “It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves…”, the expression “fall over oneself” means

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
64954 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: IBGE

Text I

Ten Things I Liked (and Hated) About Your Presentation

8:02 AM Wednesday November 4, 2009 HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW

You just gave an important talk about a new initiative. Maybe 40 employees were there, all “key players,” you called us. I was the guy in the back of the room with the curly hair. You’ve seen me a bunch of times, mostly in the stairwell and the cafeteria. Bob is what you call me. (Name’s actually Rob, but I’ll try not to hold that against you.) If my opinion really mattered, I’d tell you what I liked about your presentation to your face. I probably wouldn’t mention what I didn’t like. But here, why not lay it all out for you? You can take it or leave it.

1. I arrived early, and I appreciated that you were ready to start on time. The fact that you spent the first 12 minutes making the rest of us wait for our bosses to show up? Not so much.

2. Your overview was good. You didn’t force us to sit through a bunch of stuff we already know. Thing is, one of the new items — the part about reconfiguring the A5 systems — was a bit of a shocker, and it’ll affect my work a lot. You aware of that?

3. Loved the flow chart, even though those are usually yawners. Helped me see exactly where I fit in (minus the A5 overhaul). But that chart and your “benchmarks table” were the only handouts I really needed. The others are already in the recycling bin.

4. I got the importance of aligning the new initiative with our current ones. But you used the word “alignment” on so many slides and in so many different ways that I often didn’t know what was being aligned with what. Kind of ironic, if you think about it.

5. I appreciated the effort at humor. But most of your jokes got laughs only from folks at your level. It showed that you were more focused on them than on the rest of us. I understand the pressure, but I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple times. And I wasn’t the only one.

6. Analogies are cool. They usually help me understand. That said, why sports every single time? The threeminute riff on NBA players lost me completely.

7. I liked the takeaway points for employees in each unit. Hated that you called them “action items.” We all know terms like that come in a can.

8. Good snacks — thanks for those. It was interesting how you and the other bosses fell over yourselves to give us frontliners first dibs. I would have preferred first dibs during the Q&A.

9. The invitation to e-mail you with questions was a nice touch. Unfortunately, you still haven’t answered the message I sent you last month (or the follow-up I sent last week). I know you’re busy, but empty gestures are kind of a drag.

10. Ending on time was excellent. Too bad those who showed up late also left early. All in all, your presentation was better than most I’ve sat through. I’ll talk to my boss about that A5 shocker. And I might be following up with you about it, too. Check for emails from Rob. With an R.

Slightly adapted from http://blogs.harvardbusiness.org/demaio/2009/11/ ten-things-i-liked-and-hated-a.html

The sentence “...I couldn’t help rolling my eyes a couple of times.” implies that the author was feeling

 

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