Navigating Business Culture: Italy vs Switzerland
Core PathWay
1 π€ The Reality Check
Marco, an Italian executive, arrives 15 minutes late for his first meeting in Zurich, greeting everyone warmly with typical Italian exuberance. His Swiss colleagues are visibly uncomfortable with both his timing and informal approach. When he suggests improvising the agenda to make up for lost time, the Swiss team becomes notably disengaged. Here’s what you need to know to succeed…
π¬ First Meeting Mishap
Initial business meeting in Zurich between Italian and Swiss colleagues
2 π Critical Differences That Matter
In Italy we typically:
– Arrive with some flexibility (5-15 minutes grace period)
– Use warm, personal greetings (‘Come stai?’)
– Mix business and personal conversation
In Switzerland they expect:
– Strict punctuality (arrive 5 minutes early)
– Formal, reserved greetings (‘GrΓΌezi’)
– Clear separation between personal and professional matters
3 π― The Language of Success
Phrases that work in Switzerland:
– Opening meetings: ‘Shall we proceed according to the agenda?’
– Making requests: ‘Would it be possible to review the timeline?’
– Expressing disagreement: ‘I see your point, however…’
– Showing respect: ‘I appreciate your thorough analysis’
– Closing: ‘Let’s confirm our next steps in writing’
Never say this:
– β ‘Let’s wing it’ β β ‘Let’s follow the established procedure’
– β ‘Trust me on this’ β β ‘The data shows that…’
– β ‘We can be flexible’ β β ‘We will adhere to the agreed timeline’
4 β Your Survival Toolkit
– Start with: Arrive early, bring printed materials
– Watch for: Subtle signs of disapproval (brief silences, tight smiles)
– Adjust by: Following structured processes
– Success looks like: Clear agreements, documented decisions
– Recovery phrase: ‘I understand the importance of precision and structure in our collaboration’