Expatriate Cultural Awareness Training

Work Abroad! is a powerful and easy to use intercultural training program designed to introduce people working on the international stage to the role of culture in interpersonal interaction. The documentary/dramatisation is an ideal complimentary tool to any intercultural awareness session that aims to introduce the main areas of cross cultural differences.

The program goes through six realistic scenarios, each concentrating on particular key cross cultural differences experienced when working in a foreign country. These are time, relationships, communication, teams, hierarchy and reasoning.

Viewers under the guidance of a trainer can come to understand and appreciate the dynamics of each of these key cultural dimensions, assess their own working styles and spot potential areas of difficulties they may have when working in intercultural environments. Through group discussion solutions to cross cultural problems can be sought.

The training program is ideal for managers, expatriates and business travellers.

If you wish to purchase or preview this title please contact us quoting the DVD title and code WAX-TC.

Return to Intercultural, Cross Cultural and Diversity Training DVDs.

Other Titles

General Titles

Cross-Cultural Understanding

Cultural Sensitivity - Respecting Values and Beliefs

Intercultural Communication

Managing Across Cultures - Avoiding Misunderstanding and Stereotypes

The Multicultural Meeting - Working With Diverse Cultures

Work Abroad!


Global Etiquette

Doing Business in Chile

Doing Business in Mexico

Globally Speaking: Communicating Across Technology

International Negotiation


Intercultural Team Building

Building Teams in the Global Marketplace

Building the Transnational Team: A Meeting of European Cultures

Globally Speaking: Intercultural Team Formation

Globally Speaking: Intercultural Team Meetings

Globally Speaking: Intercultural Team Systems

The Virtual Team - Managing Culture and Technology


Cross Cultural Recruitment

Do We Speak the Same Language? Language and Culture in Performance Evaluations

Making a Good Impression: Cross-Cultural Conflicts in Global Interviews and Recruitment