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The phone interview (or phone screen) is often the first step in any hiring process β and it's uniquely challenging for non-native English speakers. Without visual cues, accents and language clarity become more prominent. Without body language, all communication weight falls on words. This episode covers the complete phone interview framework: what to expect, how to prepare, specific vocabulary and phrases, common questions, and a full practice dialogue with analysis.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ 20β45 minutes with an HR recruiter or hiring manager
β’ A full technical interview
β’ The time to negotiate salary in detail
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's a job interview question that stumped you? Share below!π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
A professional self-introduction is the most-used business English skill β and the most underprepared. Whether it's a first day at work, a networking event, a video call, or a job interview, how you introduce yourself shapes how people perceive your confidence and credibility. This episode covers the full framework: the 30-second pitch, context-specific variations, what to include and exclude, and the language of natural professional introductions.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ WHO you are (name + role)
β’ WHAT you do (function / value you bring)
β’ CONNECTION hook (something that makes you memorable or creates common ground)
β’ Warmer tone, mention your background briefly
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Comment below.π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
Saknas det avsnitt?
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Remote work has created an entirely new layer of professional English β asynchronous communication, written clarity, video meeting etiquette, and the challenge of staying connected without physical presence. For non-native speakers, remote work amplifies communication gaps because nuance is harder to read in text. This episode covers the full vocabulary and framework for effective remote work communication.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ Be more explicit than you think you need to be (tone doesn't carry in text)
β’ Front-load the most important information
β’ Signal urgency clearly ("when you get a chance" vs. "urgent
β’ Include context, not just the ask
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Comment below.π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
The follow-up email after a meeting is one of the most high-leverage professional communication tools β and one that most people do poorly or not at all. A well-written follow-up clarifies decisions, assigns accountability, strengthens relationships, and demonstrates professional leadership. This episode covers the structure, language, and strategic purpose of different types of post-meeting follow-ups.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ Documents what was actually decided (prevents "I thought we agreed to...")
β’ Creates accountability (named owner + deadline = more likely to happen)
β’ Advances the relationship (shows you valued the person's time)
β’ Decisions made in the meeting disappear
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's the hardest professional email you've ever had to write?π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
Difficult conversations at work are unavoidable β addressing poor performance, managing conflict between colleagues, confronting unprofessional behavior, delivering unwelcome news, or discussing personal issues affecting work. For non-native speakers, these situations are especially daunting because the language margin for error is small and the stakes are high. This episode provides a complete framework and specific language for the most common difficult workplace conversations.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ Private setting ("Can we grab a few minutes somewhere quiet?")
β’ Right time ("Is now okay, or would [time] be better?")
β’ Frame the intent ("I want to talk about something
β’ Describe behavior, not character
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Comment below.π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
A well-written meeting agenda is one of the highest-leverage professional communication tools β it sets expectations, respects people's time, and determines whether a meeting succeeds or drifts. For non-native speakers, agenda-writing requires precise, concise professional English with specific conventions. This episode covers how to write effective meeting agendas: structure, language choices, the vocabulary of agenda items, and common mistakes to avoid.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ Signals that you respect attendees' time
β’ Allows people to prepare
β’ Creates a structure the facilitator can reference
β’ Provides a record of what was discussed (when distributed afterward)
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's the most awkward meeting moment you've had in English?π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
Corporate buzzwords are everywhere in American business English β and they carry hidden meanings, cultural context, and occasionally, none at all. Learners who don't understand them miss the point of entire meetings; learners who use them without understanding sound hollow. This episode decodes the most common corporate buzzwords: what they literally mean, what they actually mean, when to use them, and when they're just noise.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:β’ Everyone in the room shares the same definition
β’ It saves time vs. a longer description
β’ It's more precise than plain language in that context
β’ It replaces specific thinking
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Comment below.π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
#BusinessEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #EnglishAtWork #B2C1English #TheEnglishEdge #WorkplaceEnglish #EnglishPodcast #CareerEnglish #ESLPodcast #OfficEnglish -
Running a meeting in English β especially with native speakers or senior colleagues β requires a specific toolkit. You need to open confidently, manage participation, handle tangents, move items forward, deal with conflict, and close effectively. This episode covers the full lifecycle of a meeting from the chair's perspective.
π― Key vocabulary:
β’ Facilitator = the person who leads and manages a meeting's process
β’ Parking lot = off-topic items saved for later
β’ Action item = a specific task assigned to a specific person with a deadline
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
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Giving feedback is one of the most nuanced professional English skills. Done wrong, it damages relationships and morale. Done right, it builds trust and elevates teams. This episode covers the complete language toolkit: frameworks professionals use, phrases that land well, how to handle emotional reactions, and differences between British, American, and global feedback styles.
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
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Performance reviews are high-stakes professional conversations. You have to advocate for yourself without sounding arrogant, acknowledge areas for growth without sounding weak, and navigate feedback professionally. For non-native speakers, the challenge is doubly complex: managing the language and managing the emotion at the same time.
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
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Networking events are high-stakes social situations where first impressions matter enormously. For non-native speakers, the challenge is triple: manage your English, manage the social anxiety, and make a genuine connection β all at once. This episode teaches the complete language toolkit: how to introduce yourself, keep conversations going, pivot topics, follow up, and exit gracefully.
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π Subscribe for weekly Business English episodes β B2-C1 level, real workplace scenarios.
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Difficult clients are inevitable in any professional career. The way you respond β your language, tone, and structure β determines whether the situation escalates or resolves. This episode teaches professionals the exact phrases for handling demanding, angry, and unrealistic clients while maintaining composure and protecting the professional relationship.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ Wants more than agreed, faster than possible, at no extra cost
β’ Venting frustration, possibly escalating
β’ Expects professional-grade outcomes from basic-tier budgets / timelines
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.
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Asking for a raise is one of the highest-stakes professional conversations a non-native English speaker will have. The language needs to be confident without being aggressive, prepared without being rehearsed-sounding, and specific without oversharing. This episode gives the full structure: how to prepare, what to say, how to handle pushback, and how to follow up.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ Most people have no script for this
β’ In English, vague or apologetic framing signals weakness
β’ The wrong phrasing can actually harm the outcome even if your case is strong
β’ Non-native speakers often struggle with the exact level of formality required
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.
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A LinkedIn profile in strong professional English is one of the highest-ROI moves a non-native English speaker can make for their career. The About section (summary) is the most important β it's the first thing recruiters and hiring managers read. Yet most people either skip it or fill it with stiff, generic language. This episode teaches the exact structure, phrases, and mistakes to avoid when writing a LinkedIn summary in English.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ The About section is searchable
β’ It's your only chance to show personality in an otherwise data-driven profile
β’ Non-native speakers who write in strong, natural English stand out significantly
β’ A good summary is evergreen
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.
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Online meetings β whether on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, or any platform β have become the default work format globally. But for non-native English speakers, video calls are harder than in-person meetings: you can't read full body language, audio issues create gaps, and speaking up in a group feels riskier. This episode covers the specific phrases professionals need to participate confidently in online English meetings.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ 10+ real English phrases for Zoom and Teams meetings decoded with examples
β’ When to use them β and when NOT to
β’ Cultural context and origin behind each expression
β’ Quick drill: test yourself at the end
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's the most awkward meeting moment you've had in English? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.
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Saying no is one of the most necessary β and most avoided β skills in professional life. For non-native English speakers, the challenge is doubled: not only does saying no feel socially risky, but they often lack the exact English vocabulary to decline gracefully. This episode teaches how to push back, decline requests, and set limits without damaging relationships or appearing difficult.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ Overcommitting leads to poor-quality work and burnout
β’ Saying yes to everything signals that you don't value your own time
β’ Vague non-answers ("I'll try") create ambiguity
β’ Knowing HOW to say no builds confidence in all professional communication
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your biggest challenge with English at work? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.
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Small talk is one of the most underrated professional skills. Many non-native English speakers dread the silence before a meeting starts, the elevator ride with a colleague, or the first 5 minutes of a client call. They freeze, give one-word answers, or stare at their phones. Here's the truth: small talk is not "wasted time" in American and British workplace culture. It builds rapport, signals social intelligence, and makes you more likeable and memorable as a professional. Knowing how to do it well is a genuine career advantage.
In this episode, Morgan and Taylor break it all down β with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
π― What you'll learn:
β’ Builds trust before business
β’ Shows emotional intelligence and social awareness
β’ Creates connection with colleagues, managers, clients
β’ Helps you recover from awkward silences (which everyone experiences)
This is The English Edge β professional English for people who mean business.
π¬ What's your most dreaded small talk situation? Leave a review and let us know!
π§ Follow The English Edge for new episodes every week.