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global business languages

Read the following article, which contains global business languages. Have you searched the net for years searching for information about this topic? You’ve come to the right place.

The following topics also appear at Collegelearners.

We know for sure that doing business in the language of your client is one of the keys to international business success. Overseas consumers are increasingly demanding information in their own language – 60% of online consumers rarely or never buy from English-only websites. Also consider that 72.4% are more likely to buy products that have information available in their native language.

Clues to the most useful business languages can be found in a comprehensive 2017 report by the British Council, Languages For The Future. They combine evidence from their โ€˜four economic indicatorsโ€™ to give a ranking of important economic languages. The indicators are as follows:

  • Emerging high-growth markets
  • The language needs of business
  • Current UK exports
  • UK governmentโ€™s future trade priorities

Top 10 Languages Needed For Economic Purposes (British Council)

RankLanguage‘Score’2013 position
1French22German
2German21French
3Chinese20Spanish
4Arabic19Arabic
5Spanish16Mandarin
6Dutch13.5Dutch
7Polish10Portuguese
8Italian8Russian
9Japanese7Swedish
10Hindi6Polish

Another clue to important business languages is by analysing IMF figures. The following table shows languages sorted by their share of the worldโ€™s GDP.

The Top 10 Business Languages of the World in 2018 by GDP (IMF)

RankLanguageGDP($US Billions)% of World GDP
1English28.08820.77%
2Chinese26.5619.64%
3Spanish8.176.04%
4Arabic7.15.25%
5Japanese5.634.1%
6Hindustani5.514.07%
7French4.473.3%
8German4.383.2%
9Russian4.183.1%
10Portuguese3.72.7%

Some honourable mentions – Italian, Polish, Turkish, Indonesian and Korean – who narrowly miss out on this list, but are by no means insignificant business languages.

For comparison, it may also be useful to see these rankings alongside some slightly older research. In 2013, Common Sense Advisory provided an empirical study based on a World Online Wallet (WOW) โ€“ defined as โ€˜the total economic opportunity, both online and offline, calculated by associating a share of a countryโ€™s GDP to all major blocks of that society.โ€™ Here is what their study showed us.

Top Business Languages by Percentage of WOW โ€“ Source Common Sense Advisory 2013

RankLanguageGDP(in $US Billions)% of WOWCumulative% of WOW
1English$ 16,19335.8%35.8%
2Japanese$ 4,74410.5%46.3%
3German$ 3,4677.7%54.0%
4Spanish$ 3,4477.6%61.6%
5Simp. Chinese$ 3,2147.1%68.7%
6French$ 2,6996.0%74.7%
7Italian$ 1,2072.7%77.4%
8Portuguese$ 2,1142.5%79.9%
9Arabic$ 1,1022.4%82.3%
10Russian$ 1,0312.3%84.6%
11Dutch$ 9302.1%86.7%
12Korean$ 9242.0%88.7%
13Trad. Chinese$ 5601.2%89.9%
14Swedish$ 4741.1%91.0%
15Norwegian$ 4511.0%92.0%

Although methodologies differ and each studyโ€™s results tell us slightly different things, all three point us in the direction of the most important business languages. Hereโ€™s a little bit more information about each one to help to inform your exporting decisions.

Business-lang.png?mtime=20181126101936#a

Which are the most important business languages?

English

Truly a global lingua franca, English retains its top spot as the language of over 378 million native speakers, and over 1.1 billion total speakers.

Chinese

Chinaโ€™s status as a gargantuan economic powerhouse is no longer any secret. Mandarin counts over 1.1 billion total speakers among its ranks; remarkably similar to English. With the biggest growth rate averages and the second-largest economy in the world, Chinaโ€™s immense importance can no longer be ignored.

Spanish

Any forward-thinking marketing campaign or export strategy would be well-advised to not overlook the Spanish language. The sheer volume of native Spanish speakers presents businesses with a golden opportunity. Along with the language being the third most popular on the Internet, some of the fastest-growing economies are those of Spanish-speaking countries.

Arabic

An historic, complex language that has given birth to scientific, mathematical and philosophical advances, Arabic is making a 21st century comeback as a language of business. With extremely favourable GDP statistics, having your business message available to the 400 million+ Arabic speakers has never been so important. Growing internet penetration among Arabic-speaking countries means that your businessโ€™ ability to speak the language has never been such a sound investment.

French

French is spoken on all five continents of the world and accounts for 20% of world trade in goods. With over 220,000,000 worldwide speakers, itโ€™s not hard to see why la langue francaise is a major business language.

Japanese

A classic language of international business. As a language of only 125,000,000, Japanese punches above its weight thanks to the incredibly high purchasing power of consumers. This should come as no surprise: Japan is an extremely high-tech, diversified and online economy. Did you know that Japan is the third largest global eCommerce marketplace?

Hindi, or โ€˜Hindustaniโ€™

Many linguists consider Hindi and Urdu – of India – to be dialects of one language, โ€˜Hindustaniโ€™. And whilst English proficiency is good in this part of the world, speaking the language of over 500 million can gain your business a competitive edge.

Top-Business-Langs.jpg?mtime=20181126102

German

With Europeโ€™s largest population, largest economy and with the fifth-largest global economy, Germanโ€™s status as a major business language needs little further explanation or justification.

Russian

Despite falling somewhat into the shadow of Chinese and others, itโ€™s still impossible to overlook the importance of Russian for international business. Itโ€™s the second most popular Internet language – which means the online marketing opportunities are endless.

Portuguese

Driving Portugueseโ€™s importance as a business language is the immense growth and promise of the Brazilian economy. The booming purchasing power of the average Brazilian consumer makes this language of over 215,000,000 a particularly enticing prospect – and thatโ€™s not forgetting the not-so-small matter of Portugal, a major European economic player. If youโ€™re looking to get ahead of the curve as a business, Portuguese represents a very smart investment.

Dutch

Despite Dutch claiming only 23 million native speakers among its ranks, The Netherlands has the highest Internet usage as a proportion of its population in the world – making it a very wise investment for online marketing.

Polish

An Eastern Slavic language with over 40,000,000 speakers globally; the second most spoken Slavic language after Russian. Thereโ€™s no mistaking the importance of speaking Polish if youโ€™re a UK exporter.

Italian

The very substantial economic clout of Italy, coupled with native Italian speakers accounting for over 54 million Internet users makes Italian a sound investment – particularly for UK exporters.


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