Living in today's globalised world feels challenging, even confusing at times, with distance no longer a reliable indicator of our involvements in the world. Some of our closest business ties may be stretched out over thousands of miles, and remain connected courtesy of a vast network that spans the entire globe. The massive business sector is so competitive that the fear of being left behind by the rapidly-changing faces of commerce leads many multinational organizations to expand and outsource. A prime example is the world's largest software firm, Microsoft. Under the committed leadership of Bill Gates, the world's wealthiest living person, the company successfully transformed itself from a corporation with only 11 employees to an international computer technology corporation that boasts over sixty-thousand employees and global annual sales of approximately forty-billion US dollars. The competitive nature of today's economy make it imperative for everybody to be on their toes, ready to market the next Mickey Mouse doll or the latest Windows operating system. Business and trade prospects are mushrooming throughout the world with every passing second; every man has to be greedy and selfish if it is fame and
Living in today's globalised world feels challenging, even confusing at times, with distance no longer a reliable indicator of our involvements in the world. Some of our closest business ties may be stretched out over thousands of miles, and remain connected courtesy of a vast network that spans the entire globe. The massive business sector is so competitive that the fear of being left behind by the rapidly-changing faces of commerce leads many multinational organizations to expand and outsource. A prime example is the world's largest software firm, Microsoft. Under the committed leadership of Bill Gates, the world's wealthiest living person, the company successfully transformed itself from a corporation with only 11 employees to an international computer technology corporation that boasts over sixty-thousand employees and global annual sales of approximately forty-billion US dollars. The competitive nature of today's economy make it imperative for everybody to be on their toes, ready to market the next Mickey Mouse doll or the latest Windows operating system. Business and trade prospects are mushrooming throughout the world with every passing second; every man has to be greedy and selfish if it is fame and