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Kamis, 10 Januari 2019
Rabu, 11 Juli 2018
Selasa, 29 Mei 2018
TUGAS 3 BAHASA INGGRIS BISNIS 2
ACTIVE VOICE AND PASSIVE VOICE
ARTIKEL 1
Rihanna and Madonna Make Costume Changes
for the Met Gala After-Parties
After the red carpet, the cocktails, the
exhibition and the dinner, the Met Gala splintered into after-parties. It was
an opportunity to change outfits. The first stop was the Mark hotel on the
Upper East Side, where Michael Kors hosted several hundred, including former
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Tommy Hilfiger. Katie Holmes arrived at around
11 p.m. after having switched out of her sparkly gown by Zac Posen into yet
another princess dress, also by Mr. Posen, who escorted her.
Where and when did she find the time to
change? “I won’t tell,” Ms. Holmes said. “Got to keep some mystery.” The outfit
swaps can be attributed to two things (1). First, most dresses worn to the Met Gala
are not exactly easy to move around in. Second, in this social media age,
designers and celebrities are looking to get as much bang for their buck.
A quick scan of the room revealed numerous
outfit changes. Mary-Kate Olsen began the night in a vintage Dior gown, while
her sister Ashley wore John Galliano. Both had now abandoned those in favor of
outfits that did not have trains and were somewhat less gothic. The model Karen
Elson ditched her red tulle Dolce & Gabbana gown with an 18-karat gold
filigree bustier in favor of something more basic and black, also by Dolce
& Gabbana.
Definitely better for dancing, especially
with the R&B singer Miguel about to perform. Meanwhile, another after-party
was taking place at Top of the Standard (2), made famous last year by an elevator
feud between Solange and Jay Z. This year’s party (hosted by Yahoo Style, Sarah
Jessica Parker and Katy Perry) was a little quieter, though no less star
studded.
Reese Witherspoon was by the window in a
bright red Jason Wu dress with her “Hot Pursuit” co-star, Sofía Vergara (in
Marchesa), and Ms. Vergara’s fiancé, Joe Manganiello.
Across the way were the fashion designer
Riccardo Tisci, the music producer Diplo and Madonna. Earlier, Madonna had worn
a black floor-length (3) Moschino gown with the name of her album “Rebel Heart”
printed across the bottom. But now she wore an ’80s-inspired leather jacket
with gold dollar signs across it as waitresses brought around sliders and vodka
concoctions.
Solange did not show up this year but was
instead spotted dirty dancing at 3 a.m. with her husband, Alan Ferguson, at Up
& Down on West 14th Street. The party was hosted by Rihanna, whose
trampoline-size yellow dress earlier in the night practically broke the
Internet.
For her after-party, Rihanna rolled up to
the club in a leave-nothing-to-the-imagination sheer black top. Inside, dancing
to a D.J. who calls himself Mazurbate, was a cavalcade of celebrities and
designers including Jessica Alba, Justin Bieber, Jennifer Lawrence, Grimes and
Francisco Costa of Calvin Klein. When did you get here, a reporter asked Mr.
Costa. “Good question,” he said, having long since lost Lorde, his celebrity
bride for the evening. “I don’t even know.”
ARTIKEL 2
Women Entrepreneurs Tend to Be More
Professional
Women entrepreneurs have shown their
movement in the economic development of Indonesia (4). The minister of Cooperatives
and SMEs Sharif Hasan told a group of women entrepreneurs are proactive in
improving the welfare at least in their family (5).
“Women Entrepreneurs is a group of active
women who have dared to take the initiative in economic development in order to
improve the welfare of the family,” said Sharif at the Young Entrepreneur and
Independent Young Technopreneur 2014 in Senayan, Wednesday ( 15/01/2014 ).
Moreover, Sharif said that women
entrepreneurs tend to be more professional (6). “Women entrepreneurs are more
responsible and professional in managing finances,” he said .
Sharif said the government and banks have
supported women entrepreneurs by providing financing access. Such access is
expected to provide an opportunity for women entrepreneurs to develop their
business (7).
“In 2013 the business credit (KUR) has
exceeded U.S. $ 137 billion to 10 million borrowers. All financial access has
been implemented” said Sharif.
ARTIKEL 3
EXO’s Chanyeol and Baekhyun Snap a Cute
Photo with “Superman Returns” Seo Jun
EXO’s Chanyeol recently shared a photo (8) taken with fellow group member Baekhyun and Lee Hwi Jae’s younger twin son, Seo
Jun.
On May 15, Chanyeol posted a picture on his
personal Instagram (9) of the three of them together, along with a caption that
reads, “Finally met twins Seo Un and Seo Jun!!! Kidssss, I wanted to see you.
It’s too bad I didn’t get to take a picture with chic Seo Un ㅠㅠ Kids, this hyung, no, this uncle will visit
again!! #SupermanReturns #NextWeek #TuneIn.”
In the picture uploaded by Chanyeol, he can
be seen posing alongside Seo Jun, with Baekhyun on his other side. While the
two EXO members are smiling brightly for the camera, Seo Jun shows off a chic
expression on his face.
Are you excited for the episode of
“Superman Returns” featuring Chanyeol and Baekhyun to air?
ARTIKEL 4
.
MEMORY LOSS
How it helps: For many people suffering
from memory loss the spoken language has become meaningless. Music can help
patients remember tunes or songs and get in touch with their history (10). This is
because the part of the brain which processes music is located next to memory.
The research: Researchers from Norway's
Sogn Og Fjordane College compared the effects of live, taped and no music on
three different groups of people suffering from post traumatic amnesia - or
memory loss.
The patients were exposed to all three
conditions, twice over six consecutive days. Results showed that when patients
listened to live or taped music, two thirds of them showed significantly
reduced symptoms of anxiety and enhanced orientation, compared to the group that
didn't listen to music.
Which type of music is best? Research shows
that people with memory loss respond best to music of their choice.
Jumat, 27 April 2018
TUGAS 2 BAHASA INGGRIS BISNIS 2
RELATIVE CLAUSE
You Belong With Me
Taylor Swift
You're on the phone with your girlfriend
She's upset
She's going off about something that you said
'Cause she doesn't get your humor like I do
I'm in my room
It's a typical Tuesday night
I'm listening to the kind of music she doesn't like
And she'll never know your story like I do'
But she wears short skirts
I wear T-shirts
She's cheer captain
And I'm on the bleachers
Dreaming about the day when you wake up
And find that what you're looking for has been here the whole time
If you can see I'm the one who understands you
Been here all along so why can't you see
You belong with me
You belong with me
Walkin' the streets with you and your worn-out jeans
I can't help thinking this is how it ought to be
Laughing on a park bench, thinking to myself
Hey isn't this easy
And you've got a smile that could light up this whole town
I haven't seen it in a while since she brought you down
You say your fine
I know you better then that
Hey what you doing with a girl like that
She wears high heels
I wear sneakers
She's cheer captain and I'm on the bleachers
Dreaming about the day when you wake up
And find that what what you're looking for has been here the whole time
If you can see that I'm the one who understands you
Been here all along so why can't you see
You belong with me
Standing by and waiting at your back door
All this time how could you not know
Baby, you belong with me
You belong with me
Oh, I remember you drivin' to my house in the middle of the night
I'm the one who makes you laugh
When you know you're about to cry
And I know your favorite songs
And you tell me about your dreams
I think I know where you belong
I think I know it's with me
Can't you see that I'm the one who understands you
Been here all along so why can't you see
You belong with me
Standing by and waiting at your back door
All this time
How could you not know
Baby you belong with me
You belong with me
You belong with me
Have you ever thought just maybe
You belong with me
You belong with me
Sabtu, 31 Maret 2018
Tugas 1 Bahasa Inggris Bisnis 2
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SENTENCE AND PHRASE
- Sentence is a set of words that is complete in it's self.
=> Example:
* Noun Phrase: best moment, great men, beautiful women.
* Adjective Phrase: a beautiful white woman
* Verb Phrase: will draw, will miss
- Phraseis a small group of words standing together as a conceptual unit typically forming a component of a clause.
=> Example:
* I will buy a new novel in the book store
* They cook a delicious food for me
* We will wash these plates together
Senin, 29 Januari 2018
Tugas Akhir Bahasa Inggris
BUSINESS REPORT
Business report is organisations need accurate,
timely, objective and concise information to make effective decisions. One way
they can obtain such information is from a business report. This document can
be defined as “an organised presentation of information to a specific audience
for the purpose of helping an organisation achieve an objective” (Bowman &
Branchaw, 1988, p. 12). While business reports share similar characteristics,
they also need to be customised for their particular purpose. An informal report may be a brief summary
while longer reports follow a more complex and formal structure.
Informal reports may feature:
•
letter
or memo format
•
minimal
use of headings and visual aids
•
personal
pronouns and contractions
•
a
length from a few paragraphs up to five pages
•
content
primarily for internal audiences
More formal reports however tend to have:
•
a
more standard format organised into separate sections
•
front
and back matter (sections) along with the body of the report
•
a
greater number of headings (including subheadings) and visual aids
•
third
person pronouns and no contractions or slang
•
a
length from five pages to several hundred
•
content
designed for internal and/or external audiences
There are several major steps typically involved in writing a business report.
These include:
There are several major steps typically involved in writing a business report.
These include:
1)
planning
(including determining the scope and target audience )
2)
researching,
organising, evaluating and analysing your information sources
3)
drafting
the body section
4)
devising
conclusions and recommendations based on the findings
5)
further
drafting and editing/proofreading
You need first to consider exactly what you have been asked to do - that is -
the overall purpose of your report. Carefully considering the assessment task
and related criteria should help you clarify:
You need first to consider exactly what you have been asked to do - that is -
the overall purpose of your report. Carefully considering the assessment task
and related criteria should help you clarify:
•
your
objective and readership
•
what
information you need
•
the
format and level of detail required
From
this, prepare an outline (including a working title and the overall structure
of the report, including the major and supporting ideas). Start on your draft early so you can develop
your ideas (editing can come later).
As
you begin taking notes it is useful to arrange an outline of your report –
especially its particular sections – so you can ‘fill in’ these as you go along
(leave the introduction, conclusion and recommendations for later). Focus here on your ideas, evidence and
logical flow. Dividing your report into
sections also ensures the information in your report is easy to find and
follow. Sections need to be clearly
labelled with headings and sub-headings outlining the logical development of
your paper. Always check to find out
what is required including the format and length of your sections.
The flow of information in your report can be
organised in two basic ways – indirectly or directly. The indirect approach
(normally required at university) means you need to persuade your readers to
accept the findings of a report. This
basic structure is 1) background, 2) findings, 3) discussion, 4) conclusions
and 5) recommendations. A direct style
however presents the conclusions and recommendations first followed by an
introduction and the findings (it is often favoured in the business world for
‘time poor’ audiences).
Whether you have an indirect or direct structure,
headings help organise your report. If
one particular section has a number of components to it, consider sub-headings
under your main heading if necessary.
Make sure however, this is done logically so the connections are clear
and the use of font size and style, along with underlining and capitalisation
is consistent (headings normally only have the first letter of the first word
capitalised unless proper nouns are also used).
You can use either functional headings or more
descriptive ones that incorporate content.
The former ‘generic’ type focus on what each section does (as in
‘Introduction’, ‘Findings’, ‘Summary’) whereas descriptive headings reflect
content more explicitly. Some reports
may combine both, generally starting with the former category as in ‘Findings:
what our survey tell us about our customers.
Try
and keep headings short, relevant and consistent. Your headings could use stand-alone verbs or
nouns, adjectives and nouns together, or even more complex constructions like
clauses – including statements and questions.
In terms of the elements of a formal report (that
uses an indirect approach) there are three basic parts:
1) Front Matter
*
Cover
*
Title
Page
*
Executive
Summary
*
Table
of Contents
*
List
of Figures
2) Body of the Report
*
Introduction
*
Findings
and Discussion
*
Conclusions
*
Recommendations
3) Back Matter
*
Appendices
*
References
*
Glossary
(if required)
1. Front Matter
The front matter includes the cover, a title page, an
executive summary (abstract), a table of contents, and a list of figures (if
you have more than five). A letter of
transmittal - a kind of official ‘cover letter’ - is sometimes required in the
business world (not normally a university requirement). Note that all pages in the front matter are
numbered using small Roman numerals.
*
Title
Page
When considering the actual title of your report ensure that
it is somewhat neutral and thus does not imply any particular pre-determined
outcome. Your title page should
comprise:
Ø
the
full title (centred, in bold or upper case)
Ø
the
person/organisation it was prepared for (optional)
Ø
the
person or people who prepared it (and student numbers where required)
Ø
the
due date
Ø
the
lecturer/tutor’s name
Ø
the
name of the subject (and its code)
Ø
no
page number (but is counted as a page)
*
Executive
Summary
An executive summary or ‘abstract’ is very important as some
readers may only read this part. Write
it last, being sure to include a summary of all parts of the report (omitting
examples unless essential) including the:
Ø
‘why’
(purpose)
Ø
‘what’
(scope or breadth of the investigation)
Ø
‘how’
(methodology)
Ø
‘what
you found out’ (major findings with key statistics)
Ø
‘so
what’ (analysis, conclusions and recommendations)
It should be a half
to one page (around 5% - no more than 10%) of the overall length and on a separate
page.
*
Table
of contents
If your report is over several pages, a table of contents
helps readers to locate information quickly by giving them an overview. All section headings and subheadings should
be included, worded and numbered exactly as they appear in the text. You might include a list of illustrations on
a separate page (if you have more than 5 graphic aids). A list of appendices needs the appendix
letter (each separate appendix labelled as Appendix A, Appendix B, etc.), its
title and page number. A glossary may
also be required if you have a large amount of unfamiliar vocabulary, symbols,
abbreviations and/or acronyms.
Table of Contents
|
Page
|
1. Introduction
|
1
|
2. An overview of the product
|
1
|
2.1 Main features
|
1
|
3. Product benefits
|
2
|
3.1
Reducing heating costs
|
2
|
3.1.1 Heating cost reductions by
season
|
2
|
3.1.2 Further savings through
thermostat use
|
3
|
3.1.3 Other associated savings
|
4
|
3.2 Improving house resale value
|
4
|
3.3 Reducing household bacteria
4. Advertising strategies
|
5
|
4.1 Traditional media
|
5
|
4.2 Web 2.0
|
6
|
5. Conclusions
|
6
|
6. Recommendations
|
6
|
Bibliography
Appendices
|
7
|
A. Product development specifications
|
9
|
B. Advertising budget
|
10
|
2.
Body
*
Introduction
Your introduction is really the ‘start’ of the
report so describe here why your report is being written answering such
questions as ‘what is this about?’ and ‘how is it useful?’ This is also where
your page numbering starts. Specifically you need to:
Ø give some brief background information
Ø define the problem/topic, its relevance, scope and any key
terms
Ø state the overall purpose (are you explaining, analysing,
recommending or a combination?) and key objectives
Ø give an overview of the report’s structure including the
sections and their relationship to the issues
Ø detail assumptions, theoretical foundation, scope,
methodology and any limitations or constraints
*
Findings
and discussion
In your findings and discussion sections, present
a factual outline followed by an interpretation of what you found. Note that a frequent complaint from lecturers
is that there is too much description and not enough analysis regarding what
findings actually mean. This section is usually the longest part of a report
and forms the basis of your conclusions and recommendations. As a result,
record all significant information (both positive and negative) and ensure you
have a logical internal structure – this could be based on such organisation as
chronology, order of importance, general to specific, regions or topics.
Findings can be presented in text and/or
graphically. If using graphs or figures,
see the relevant section in this helpsheet for more detail on how to do
this. This section should reflect the
structure outlined in the introduction. It may try and answer questions like:
Ø What were the most significant findings or factors
involved in the topic/ problem?
Ø Did the findings support the theory?
Ø Did you uncover any unexpected or new issues that
need to be considered?
To discuss such questions you may include:
Ø support that the results provide for the hypotheses
Ø a comparison of results with other relevant theory
and/or investigations
Ø factors which may have influenced your results,
e.g. design problems
Ø implications of the results
Ensure that you do more than just describe –
instead make it clear the significance of what you are talking about and how it
might relate to the conclusions and recommendations. Phrases such as ‘therefore it is clear that X
is important in Y’ or ‘With this result in mind, it follows that X is…’.
*
Conclusion
Your conclusion
summarises your study - its purpose, process and findings. You need to include your main ‘opinion’ here,
answering the questions raised by your original purpose so there is a thematic
unity to your report and the recommendations follow logically. You may also need to consider the limitations
and advantages of findings and any unresolved questions or issues. Avoid including any new information.
Adjectives are useful in a conclusion as a way
of condensing your main points: ‘This report therefore clearly highlights that
the advertising campaign was very successful, due to its inclusive and
far-reaching impact with key target audiences such as X and Y’.
*
Recommendations
Recommendations are
the suggested actions based on the report findings. They must be both relevant and feasible
covering:
Ø What needs to be done
Ø Who needs to do it
Ø How, when (in what order if appropriate) and where
it needs to be done
Recommendations
could be for change, improvement or new ideas to improve such areas as service,
productivity or performance. They can be
listed one at a time (often numbered).
Be sure you use a consistent sentence structure for all recommendations
(some examples are below). Think
carefully also about the order they are in and whether or not it would be
useful to group them into appropriate content areas.
These
include:
Ø
verb
(directive)
Hire more technical staff to deal with the ongoing quality
control issue
Ø
passive
with ‘it’ as the ‘dummy’ subject
It is highly recommended that more technical staff be hired
to deal with the ongoing quality control issue
Ø specific subject in passive voice
Technical staff should be hired to deal with the
ongoing quality control issue
Ø specific subject in active voice
Management consider alternative funding
arrangements for the new venture
3.
Back
Matter
*
Appendices
Your appendices (if required) contain optional
material at the end of your report, containing specialised (sometimes
technical) information that may have been too detailed or lengthy to include in
the body. Appendices can be in any
format, however, each appendix must be separate from the others, covering only
one kind of content and format on separate pages. They are generally distinguished by letters
of the alphabet – e.g. Appendix
A, Appendix B, Appendix C, and can be referred to in the text of the report
(i.e. “for the full list of suppliers refer to Appendix B”).
*
References
It is essential to include an accurate reference
list of the material you used in your report.
You will need references when you have included any material (including
statistics, facts and opinions) which is not yours. As there are several referencing systems,
check with your lecturer, tutor or department for guidelines on how to
reference and do this accurately and consistently as lecturers will notice
mistakes in the reference list.
Example:
Jakarta, April 20,
2016
Ms. Prisia Tanuwardana
Chief Executive
Officer
Wardana Financial Firm
Kelapa Jaya Street
number 12
Dear, Mr. Kaynan
Jejaka
I am writing this
letter to invite you in a business meeting, regarding to our cooperation. The
topic that will be brought is about my intention and plan to do research and
audit. I am as the leader of a financial firm expects the cleanness of my
institution and keeping trust of my clients to invest their fund in my company.
This meeting is confidential because I need to analyse the report of the audit
by myself. I have arranged the schedule of the meeting.
Date : Friday, April
22, 2016
Time : 09.00 a.m. to
11 a.m.
Place : Prista Coffee
Shop
Thank you very much
for your attention. I hope that we could have great work together. We look
forward to hearing from you soon.
Sincerely yours,
Ms. Prisia Tanuwardana
Chief Executive
Officer
Wardana Financial
Firm
Reference:
Bowman, J.P. and Branchaw, B.P. (1988). Business Report Writing,
2nd ed Chicago: The Dryden Press
Canberra University (n.d.) Academic Skills Centre: Report Writing. Retrieved
January 4, 2011 from http://www.canberra.edu.au/studyskills/writing/reports
Charles Sturt University and New South Wales Department of
Education and Training. (n.d.) Writing a
Business Report. Retrieved November 19, 2010
from http://www.hsc. csu.edu.au/business_studies/intro/writing/writing.html
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