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1、2023年公司英语演讲稿(7篇) 书目 第1篇奥巴马就通用汽车公司重组一事英语演讲稿 第2篇3分钟英语演讲稿:公司简报 第3篇3分钟英语演讲稿:公司介绍 第4篇奥巴马总统在加州闻名动画公司梦工厂的英语演讲稿 第5篇英语演讲短文公司简报 第6篇ted英语演讲:创业公司如何才能胜利 第7篇英语演讲短文公司俱乐部介绍 奥巴马就通用汽车公司重组一事英语演讲稿 remarks by the president on general motors restructuring grand foyer june 1, 2023 just over two months ago, i spoke with yo
2、u in this same spot about the challenges facing our auto industry, and i laid out what needed to be done to save two of americas most storied automakers general motors and chrysler. these companies were facing a crisis decades in the making, and having relied on loans from the previous administratio
3、n, were asking for more。 from the beginning, i made it clear that i would not put any more tax dollars on the line if it meant perpetuating the bad business decisions that had led these companies to seek help in the first place. i refused to let these companies become permanent wards of the state, k
4、ept afloat on an endless supply of taxpayer money. in other words, i refused to kick the can down the road。 but i also recognized the importance of a viable auto industry to the well-being of families and communities across our industrial midwest and across the united states. in the midst of a deep
5、recession and financial crisis, the collapse of these companies would have been devastating for countless americans, and done enormous damage to our economy beyond the auto industry. it was also clear that if gm and chrysler remade and retooled themselves for the 21st century, it would be good for a
6、merican workers, good for american manufacturing, and good for americas economy。 i decided, then, that if gm and chrysler and their stakeholders were willing to sacrifice for their companies survival and success; if they were willing to take the difficult, but necessary steps to restructure, and mak
7、e themselves stronger, leaner, and more competitive, then the united states government would stand behind them。 the original restructuring plans submitted by gm and chrysler earlier this year did not call for the sweeping changes these companies needed to survive and i couldnt in good conscience pro
8、ceed on that basis. so we gave them a chance to develop a stronger plan that would put them on a path toward long-term viability. the 60 days gm had to submit its revised plans have now elapsed, and i want to say a few words about where we are and what steps will be taken going forward. but before i
9、 do, i want to give you an update on where things stand with chrysler。 when my administration took office and began going over chryslers books, the future of this great american car company was uncertain. in fact, it was not clear whether it had any future at all. but after consulting with my auto t
10、ask force, industry experts, and financial advisors, and after asking many tough questions, i became convinced that if chrysler were willing to undergo a restructuring and if it were able to form a partnership with a viable global car company, then chrysler could get a new lease on life。 well, that
11、more promising scenario has now come to pass. today, after taking a number of painful steps, and moving through a quick, efficient, and fair bankruptcy process, a new, stronger chrysler is poised to complete its alliance with fiat. just 31 days after chryslers chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, a court h
12、as approved the chrysler-fiat alliance, paving the way for a new chrysler to emerge from bankruptcy in the next few days。 what happens next is in the hands of their executives, managers, and workers as it is for any private company. but what the completion of this alliance means is that tens of thou
13、sands of jobs that would have been lost if chrysler had liquidated will now be saved, and that consumers have no reason at all to worry about a restructuring even one as painful as what chrysler underwent。 and keep in mind many experts said that a quick, surgical bankruptcy was impossible. they were
14、 wrong. others predicted that chryslers decision to enter bankruptcy would lead to an immediate collapse in consumer confidence that would send car sales over a cliff. they were wrong, as well. in fact, chrysler sold more cars in may than it did in april, in part because consumers were comforted by
15、our extraordinary commitment to stand behind a quick bankruptcy process. all in all, its a dramatic an outcome dramatically better than what appeared likely when this process began。 美国总统就通用汽车公司重组一事发表演讲 大会堂前厅 2023年6月1日 就在两个多月前,就在此处,我与诸位探讨了美国汽车业所面临的挑战,我列出了挽救美国两大闻名汽车制造商通用汽车公司和克莱斯勒公司所应实行的措施。这两家公司面临着过去几十
16、年中孕育已久的危机,他们依靠往届政府的贷款,现在又要求政府供应更多帮助。 从一起先我就明确表示,我将不会投入更多的税收,否则就意味着将失败的经营决策接着下去,而这种经营决策已经导致上述两家公司首先提出救济要求。我不会任凭这些公司成为国家永久的负担,靠纳税人的源源不断供应血汗钱而生存。换言之,我不会再采纳权宜之计了。 但我也承认,在以工业为主的中西部地区乃至全美,一个能独立生存的汽车企业关乎家庭及社会的福祉。在经济严峻衰退和金融危机时期,这些公司的倒闭对多数美国人来说无疑是一种灾难,会对全国经济造成巨大影响且远不止是汽车工业。假如通用汽车公司和克莱斯勒公司能在21世纪自行重组再造,毫无疑问,这将
17、有益于美国的工人、制造业以及美国的整体经济。 因此,我确定,假如通用汽车公司和克莱斯勒公司及其利益相关者情愿为公司的生存和胜利作出牺牲,情愿直面困难,通过实行必要的重组措施使公司变得更为强大、精悍、更富竞争力,那么,美国政府就会支持它们。 今年年初,通用汽车公司和克莱斯勒公司最初提交的重组安排中并未提出企业生存必需的全面改革安排,因此我不能愧对良心在这种条件下赐予支持,我给了它们一个机会制定一项更强有力的安排,并走上长期保持生存实力的道路。然而,通用汽车公司提交修改安排的60天期限已经过去,我要对我们的现状和将来实行的措施发表看法。但是在这之前,我想讲一下克莱斯勒的最新进展。 本届政府执政后就
18、起先彻查克莱斯勒的账目,发觉这个美国汽车业的巨头前途未卜。事实上,它是否还有前途都不得而知。但是经过询问白宫汽车行动小组、行业专家和财政顾问,并就诸多难题进行探讨后,我起先信任假如克莱斯勒情愿重组,能与一家具备生存实力的全球化汽车企业建立伙伴关系,那么它将会重获新生。 更多充溢希望的剧情正在上演。今日,在经验了一系列苦痛的环节以及快速、高效和公允的破产程序后,一个全新且更具实力的克莱斯勒完成了与菲亚特的结盟。仅在克莱斯勒依据破产法第11章规定申请破产的31天后,法院批准了克莱斯勒-菲亚特的结盟,为克莱斯勒在将来几年中重塑自我并从破产中崛起铺平了道路。 接下来,公司的命运就掌控在公司的高层、经理
19、和员工的手中了,这和任何其他私营企业并无二致。但结盟的完成意味着因克莱斯勒公司清偿债务会失去的数万个工作岗位,将得以保留,消费者也无须对重组有丝毫担忧,即使这种重组和克莱斯勒所经验的一切同样令人苦痛。 值得关注的是,很多专家曾认为外科手术式的快速破产方式不行行,然而,他们错了。另一些人预料克莱斯勒公司的破产确定将会导致消费者信念会顷刻瓦解,使汽车销量一落千丈,他们也错了。事实上,克莱斯勒公司5月的销售业绩要好于4月,部分缘由是由于我们对快速破产程序做出了特殊承诺,安抚了消费者。总而言之,与程序启动时相比,效果极为明显。 3分钟英语演讲稿:公司简报 以下是我给大家整理的3分钟英语演讲稿:公司简报
20、,希望能帮到你! 3分钟英语演讲稿:公司简报 it is a great pleasure to have you visit us today. i am very happy to have an opportunity to introduce our company to you. our company was established in 1980 by mr. bruce huang the founder and first president of our company. we have been specializing in manufacturing electric
21、 appliances and exporting them to as many as twenty different countries around the world. as of 1999, our annual business gross comes up to about us$100 million, and our business is growing steadily. we have offices in shanghai, hongkong and beijing where about 1,100 hard-working employees are worki
22、ng diligently to serve the needs of our customers. in order to further develop our overseas market, we need reliable agents to effectively market our products. i hope you will seriously consider doing business with us. thank you. 3分钟英语演讲稿:公司介绍 下面我给大家共享3分钟英语演讲稿:公司介绍,欢迎阅读: 3分钟英语演讲稿:公司介绍 i believe the
23、employer should serve employees not only by giving salaries, but also by providing opportunities for them to enjoy their life. in that respect, our company has a great deal to offer. we have more than thirty activity groups organized by workers for athletic and recreational purposes. among these gro
24、ups are the tennis club, basketball club, popular music club, company orchestra, aerobics club, and so on. our tennis team is one of the best in the shanghai area, and currently maintains a winning streak in the east of china district tournament. also, our company orchestra was established two years
25、 ago, and the members practice twice a week under the instructions by one of shanghais best conductors. and for those of you who want to have a good sweat and slim down, we have an aerobics club. the club welcomes any body who wants to have a good work-out and slim down, male or female. 奥巴马总统在加州闻名动画
26、公司梦工厂的英语演讲稿 the president: hello, everybody! (applause.) oh, it is good to be in l.a.! (applause.)it is colder in d.c.at the moment, colder in chicago, and 70-degree weather is something tobethankful for. and it is great to be atdreamworks animation. i would like towork here. (laughter.) i haveasked
27、 jeffrey. the only concern i had was the lights werekind of dim in the offices and - (laughter) - i’m pretty sure i’d fallasleep. but there’s a natural connectionbetween me anddreamworks. i don’t knowif you know this, but my ears were one of the inspirations for shrek. (laugh
28、ter.) that’s true. true story. mellody was being very modestwhen she said she had a front-row seat. mellody was one ofmy earliest supporters back when nobody couldpronounce my name. and her and johnrogers atarial capital helped to co-chair some of my first fundraisers. andthey’d have to
29、drag somestraggly group in, kicking and screaming, and write acheck and listen to this young senatorwho had a lot of ideas but notnecessarily any realistic prospects to win. and she went througha lot of ups and downs with me and my career and isjust a great, great friend. so i wanttothank her public
30、ly for all the support that she’s given us. (applause.) we’ve got some folks here who arefighting for the people of southern california every singleday and i just wantto acknowledge them. we’ve got the mayorof glendale, dave weaver. (applause.) we’vegot three of your outstand
31、ing members of congress - brad sherman, adamschiff,karen bass. they are all doing a greatjob. (applause.) i want to thank all of you forbeing here. and i want to thank yourceo, jeffrey katzenberg,for inviting me. (applause.) jeffrey, like mellody, has been a friend and a supporterthroughthick and th
32、in. and i think hisplace in the entertainment industry is legendary - i don’t needto puff him uptoo much. (laughter.) he has a healthy sense of self. (laughter.) but he is agreat friend and somebody whose counsel and advice i value.and i’m incredibly grateful to behere at this wonderful
33、institution that hehelped to build and i’ve come here today becausethis is one of america’s economic engines. not justdreamworks, but this whole cluster of companies thatgenerations have grown up knowing -disney and warner and universal andothers. when you think about it, whatfinance is
34、to newyork, what the auto industry is to the midwest, what technologyis to northern california,entertainment is to this part of the country. and most of us have spent a lotof time thinking about our favorite movies or tv shows, butwe don’t oftenthink about the entire infrastructure and industr
35、y behind the scenes. hundreds ofthousands of middle-class jobs -they’re not always on the marquee - jobs for electricians, andcarpenters, andsound mixers, and makeup artists, and designers, and animators depend onthisincredible industry here in southern california. entertainment is one of amer
36、ica’sbiggest exports. and every day, you sella product that’smade in america to the rest of the world. every time somebody buys movie tickets, ordvds, ordistribution rights to a film, some of that money goes back to thelocal economy right here. and believe it or not,entertainment is part
37、 of our american diplomacy. it’s part of whatmakes us exceptional, partof what makes us such a world power. youcan go anywhere on theplanet and you’ll see a kid wearing a madagascart-shirt. (laughter.) you can say, maytheforce be with you - they know what you’re talking about. (lau
38、ghter.) hundreds of millions of peoplemay never set foot in the united states, but thanks to you,they’ve experienceda small part of what makes our country special. they’ve learned somethingabout our values. we have shaped a world culture through you. and the stories that we telltransmit
39、values and ideals about tolerance and diversity andovercomingadversity, and creativity that are part of our dna. and as a consequence of whatyou’ve done, youhelped shape the world’s culture in a way that has made the world better. they might not know thegettysburg address, but if they&rs
40、quo;re watching some old movie,maybe guess who’scoming to dinner, or the mary tyler moore show, or will and graceandmodern family, they’ve had a front-row seat to our march towards progress,even if theirown nations haven’t made that progress yet. and young people in countries all a
41、round theworldsuddenly make a connection and have an affinity to people who don’t looklike them and maybeoriginally they might have been fearful of, and nowsuddenly they say, oh, this person is likeme - which is one of the powers ofart, but that’s what you transmit. and that is a remarka
42、blelegacy. now, it’s also a bigresponsibility. when it comes toissueslike gun violence, we’ve got to make sure that we’re not glorifying it, becausethe storiesyou tell shape our children’s outlook and their lives. earlier this year, leaders from this townsatdown with vice pre
43、sident biden to talk about what hollywood could do to helpkeep our kidssafe. this was in the wakeof sandy hook. and those conversationsneed to continue. the storieswe tellmatter. and you tell stories morepowerfully than anybody else on the earth. but i want to make clear, even aswe think long and ha
44、rd about the messages we send, weshould never waver fromour commitment to the freedom that allows us to tell those storiessowell. protecting our first amendmentrights are vital to who we are. and it’salso goodbusiness, because in the global race for jobs and industries, thething we do better t
45、hananybody else is creativity. that’s something that can’t be copied. it’s one of the reasons whyeven with newmarkets and new technologies, there’s still no better place to make moviesandtelevision and music than right here in the united states. entertainment is one of thebri
46、ght spots of our economy. the gapbetween what we can doand what other countries can do is enormous. audience member: woo! the president: yes, that’s worth cheering for. (applause.) and that means that we’vegot todo what it takes to make sure that this industry, and every great americanin
47、dustry, keepsthat competitive edge so that more folks can find career pathslike many of you have, and getgood middle-class jobs that allow you to supporta family and get ahead. nothing is more important thanthat right now. and as mellodymentioned, when i came intooffice, we were going through a seve
48、re crisis. five years later, america has largely foughtourway back. we’ve made the toughchoices required not just to help the economy recover, but torebuild it on anew foundation for stronger, more durable economic growth. we refocused on manufacturing andexports, and today, our businesses sell more goods andservices made in thiscountry to the rest of the world than ever before. our manufacturers areadding jobs for thefirst time since the 1990s,