The Ghost in the Boardroom
How much did you actually lose because you were too embarrassed to admit you didn’t understand the question? It is a question that haunts the periphery of international commerce, a ghost that sits in the corner of every boardroom where two languages are competing for the same dollar.
You have likely been there, sitting across from a counterpart whose facial expressions are slightly out of sync with the words you are hearing, wondering if the subtle shift in their brow was a reaction to your price point or a reaction to the butchered syntax of your translation app. You smile, you nod, and you gamble your entire quarter on the hope that “adequate” is enough to bridge the chasm.
The Zurich Failure
Tomás is sitting in a glass-walled office in Zurich, and he is currently losing $248,300. He doesn’t know it yet, but the failure has already been written into the air. He is closing a deal that has taken of groundwork, dozens of late-night flights, and a level of emotional labor that would exhaust a marathon runner.
Across from him, a man named Klaus is speaking in German, a language Tomás understands at the level
