The Lord works in mysterious ways!Hank W. wrote:Flavit Jehovah et Dissipati Suntantstar wrote: And the thing is, IF EU laws say the national language of Europe is now Spanish then what happens then?

The Lord works in mysterious ways!Hank W. wrote:Flavit Jehovah et Dissipati Suntantstar wrote: And the thing is, IF EU laws say the national language of Europe is now Spanish then what happens then?
I do understand that the Finnish workplaces are expecting everyone to communicate in English. But by and large, those are for the reasons that you detailed.Cory wrote:I speak Finnish 'cause I live in Finland. That was a no-brainer when I moved here 10 years ago.raamv wrote: I dont see where more and more jobs in Finland require speaking English!! If the customers are Finnish, where is the need to serve in English?
Many many companies, small and large, are expecting more and more employees to have some sort of knowledge of English. Not because they are serving English speaking people in Finland but because more of these companies are being swallowed by non-Finnish corporations and whose company language is English or because some of their important customers are outside of Finland.
I am a consultant in the business arena and here's a list of just a few companies I've worked with who surprisingly (?) expect their workers (both blue-collar and/or white-collar ) to speak something passibly English.. Skanska, YIT, Orion-Pharma, Uponor, UPM, Inspecta, Veho and Lindström to name a few. These companies do not insist upon their employees speaking English because they are serving foreign people in Finland...they must speak English to communicate with colleagues and customers living outside of Finland.
Totally agree with this. I mean the Finnish system is getting there.. It has taken our Southern Neighbors only 20 years to realize that their integration program really works..EP wrote:But that does not mean that I would like to be served in English.
EP wrote:But that does not mean that I would like to be served in English.
You both miss the point that Cory made very well. English is the language in many companies such as the company for which I work. The offical language was already English even before I arrived ... even though there were zero foreigners working there... only Finns. For a good while there was me and 180 Finns. But like many Finnish companies, lots of their business is from abroad, and folk from abroad tend not to speak Finnish.Tizwaz wrote:Companis will not change their working language to english for one or two foreigners, they instead do not hire immigrants.
And in turn, I think you will live to see the day when many of those jobs which require fluency in the Finnish language have been offshored to Romania, India and China. The jobs which are most secure are the ones with an international aspect = English language.Tizwaz wrote:You will have died of old age far before joblife has turned into one where finnish no longer is requirement for majority of duties in Finland.
mCowboy wrote:Ok, here's something I've been thinking about for some time now. My prediction is a positive polarization of Finnish society. There will be roughly 2 groups of people; the people who create added value to Finland and the people who service them.
The first group is the people working in companies, which export. The money from the export comes back to Finland fueling the economy. As already seen, the labor intensive work is moving out of Finland, so Finland needs (and support) companies, which rely more on brain power than physical power. So companies need to specialize in hi-tech (in all fields, especially in forestry and metal industries), bio-sciences, IT, consulting and R&D. Finland needs to sell information, concepts, services and expertise instead of products. For example, there's no reason why paper companies shouldn't stay here developing the industry, when the actual products are manufactured in low-cost labor countries, especially Finland has high level education and educated people available for pretty much the lowest cost in the Western Europa and North America.
The second group is providing services to the first group. Social & health services, EMS, stores, services & food industry etc. The work they do does not bring more money to Finland, but it will support the first group whose work does. Because of this very reason, the salary on those fields is and will not be competitive with the first group. It's also most likely that increasing number of this work will be done by immigrants.
That's the only way Finland can survive in this change created by the globalization.
Sorry, but this is not a good arguement. Many Asian and African looking people are Swedish at birth or from childhood... and therefore learn Swedish at school... just because they look different does not mean they are recent immigrants. I know here in Finland we do not have so many of these situations, but this will change over the generations.raamv wrote:Totally agree with this. I mean the Finnish system is getting there.. It has taken our Southern Neighbors only 20 years to realize that their integration program really works..EP wrote:But that does not mean that I would like to be served in English.
so it ll take mebbe 10-20 for this to work here...
( One day at Stockholm will prove it to you..Listen to an Asian looking or African looking person when they start to speak..: Perfect Swedish flows outta their veins)..
precisely the point ofMölkky-Fan wrote:Sorry, but this is not a good arguement. Many Asian and African looking people are Swedish at birth or from childhood... and therefore learn Swedish at school... just because they look different does not mean they are recent immigrants. I know here in Finland we do not have so many of these situations, but this will change over the generations.raamv wrote:Totally agree with this. I mean the Finnish system is getting there.. It has taken our Southern Neighbors only 20 years to realize that their integration program really works..EP wrote:But that does not mean that I would like to be served in English.
so it ll take mebbe 10-20 for this to work here...
( One day at Stockholm will prove it to you..Listen to an Asian looking or African looking person when they start to speak..: Perfect Swedish flows outta their veins)..
And am yet to walk into company where english is official office language. Big companies are mainly english speaking, yes. But they have these few foreign guys and resources to waste.sinikala wrote:
You both miss the point that Cory made very well. English is the language in many companies such as the company for which I work. The offical language was already English even before I arrived ... even though there were zero foreigners working there... only Finns. For a good while there was me and 180 Finns. But like many Finnish companies, lots of their business is from abroad, and folk from abroad tend not to speak Finnish.
Except, finnish school system is rather excellent at producing highly educated finns as well. Yes, there is room for highly educated foreigners. But that does not mean they have free ride without a problem, unless they happen to be lucky enough to hit situation and area which currently needs desperately workers....
And in turn, I think you will live to see the day when many of those jobs which require fluency in the Finnish language have been offshored to Romania, India and China. The jobs which are most secure are the ones with an international aspect = English language.
Exports are what brings home the bacon, the future of Finland lies in selling expertise and technology to the rest of the world. Domestic service industries are not going to help the Finnish economy (0/10 to you know who).
The point is not about foreigners with basic Finnish language skills providing counter service in English in Stockmann, it's the perception that some Finnish companies and the recruitment process in Finland are perhaps a little behind the times. Anecdotal evidence that even with the right skill-set, and when there is an obvious shortage of skilled workers, it is notoriously hard to get an in with a Finnish company. This will change. This is changing. But slowly.
I think we have a pretty good picture from the above of how you think, and how many Finnish companies operate. What we are trying to explain to you is that for Finland to be competitive in the future, the above needs to change, and is changing.Tiwaz wrote:Mid to small sized businesses, ones that actually do majority of employment, are predominately finnish speaking in office. Handling foreign contacts is not that bad as, like many have noted, higher educated finns tend to deal relatively well in english.
So why would this small to medium sized company want to hire foreigner who would require all paperwork reworked to english? For international contacts? Hire well educated finn...
If you can't find one, settle for something less perhaps.
It produces some, but takes a long time to produce them... Don't believe everything you read about the educational system here, it really isn't all that it's made out to be, especially not at tertiary level.Tiwaz wrote:Except, finnish school system is rather excellent at producing highly educated finns as well.
Workers are needed across every section. Finland has a shortage of skilled labour. I'm not sure how you missed this?Tiwaz wrote:Yes, there is room for highly educated foreigners. But that does not mean they have free ride without a problem, unless they happen to be lucky enough to hit situation and area which currently needs desperately workers....
In many cases Finland seem unable to do just that. You have a relatively small tertiary education system, not covering all bases. How do you think I got my job? They were unable to find a local with the correct skills.Tiwaz wrote:They have to compete with finns, who have locally accepted education, who speak language, who speak other languages as well, who know how to behave. Finns are not incapable of training skilled specialists from finnish stock.
If your colleagues share similar attitude to you, then to be honest, it's no great surprise that there were zero. You finally seem to be closing in on the point. Looking round your office there are no foreigners because nobody in your recruitment staff has employed one.Tiwaz wrote:International aspect does not save immigrant, I work in smallish company which does a whole lot of foreign dealings. Guess how many immigrants we have...
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Previous companies worked for (each working internationally) and number of foreigners in office....
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Whole office speaks finnish, and when foreign customer comes people dealing with them switch to english.