| The
MKW Engineering Group employs close to 200 across four subsidiaries on sites at
Stargate Industrial Estate at Ryton, Gateshead. Founded in 1976, MKW Engineering
Ltd provides specialist engineering solutions in the defence, offshore, sub-sea,
chemicals, medical equipment, renewable energy and general engineering sectors. While
no more than five per cent of the group's business is directly export-related,
Group Managing Director Michael Wright explains that when all business relationships
are taken into account, that figure rockets to about 60 per cent - and on-site
language competence has proved invaluable. As Rahmon Nassor, Commercial
Director, says, having French speakers on the team levels the playing field when
MKW is involved in contracts in France. "If we had more French speakers we'd
certainly be even better off."
But, compared with your average Tyneside
engineering works, MKW has adopted a pretty enterprising approach on the language
front. Michael Wright explains: "We have to go abroad for specialist items
and it helps a lot to have people who speak the language. We've got people who
are fluent in Italian and Turkish, which is an increasingly important market for
us."
Besides four young French apprentices at
Ryton, MKW is currently also hosting two mechanical engineering degree students
on work experience, all of which contributes to a climate at MKW in which the
importance of foreign languages is recognised. For the last two years, the company
has run French lessons and, with about eight staff signing up each year, that
has helped raise the number of English employees now able to speak basic French
to about a dozen. That overall level of competence recently enabled MKW
to help overcome a major language barrier encountered at a South Shields company
recently acquired by a French concern. And MKW also sent its French speakers to
a prospective contract in France, prompting the comment that it was the only English
company to have done so. Recently, the group has been taking a close look
at its opportunities and identified the need for a Turkish speaker to help support
a joint venture in wind turbines in Turkey, while significant interest from Italy
in the same technology suggested the group would also benefit from in-house competence
in Italian. Subject to its success in pursuing other ventures, the future
could also see speakers of Mandarin and other languages on the payroll at MKW,
as the group proves that while it may be an increasingly small world, it remains
a multilingual and multicultural one. - back Source:
RLN North East |