Chair a Meeting in English Useful English Phrases for Meetings Business English

Hi, I’m Gina.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

Tomorrow, you have an important meeting, and
you’re the chair.

It’s the first time you’re chairing a
meeting in English!

Think about this situation.

Would you know what to say to start the meeting,
present your main ideas, or summarise your

meeting agenda?

In this lesson, you’ll learn how to chair
a meeting in English.

You can learn useful English words and phrases
which you can use in your next meeting.

Now imagine: you’re in the meeting room.

You need to start the meeting.

What will you say?

Part one: welcoming attendees and starting
the meeting.

Before the meeting starts, you have to make
sure that everyone is paying attention.

Do you know how to do this?

You could say:

If I could have your attention, please.

Could I have your attention, please?

Good afternoon, everyone.

You can also put two of these phrases together.

For example:

Good morning everyone, could I have your attention
please?

Remember, you’re the chair.

You need to take charge and lead the meeting.

Make a strong start to your meeting by using
emphasis in your voice.

For example, in the first phrase, we have
the word please after the pause at the end.

Emphasise the word please to sound firmer
and show people that you expect them to listen

to you.

Do it like this:

If I could have your attention, please.

You could also do this for the phrase:

Could I have your attention, please.

Listen to the phrase again.

When I say it, does it sound like a question?

Could I have your attention, please.

The form is a question, but you can read it
like a statement.

This makes it sound firmer and shows people
that you need them to pay attention to you

now.

After you have everyone’s attention, it’s
time to welcome the attendees and get things

started.

Here are some good general phrases to use:

I’d like to welcome you all here today,
now let’s get down to business.

In this phrase, ‘get down to business’
means ‘begin discussing the important information.’

Thank you all for coming.

Perhaps we can make a start.

Thanks everyone and welcome to today’s meeting.

Let’s begin.

If this is your first time meeting these people,
you could also introduce yourself.

If there are other presenters in the meeting,
this is also the time to introduce them.

For example:

I’d like to welcome you all here today,
my name is Gina Mares and I’m the Marketing

Manager, and this is Jon and he’s the head
of the design department.

Now let’s get down to business.

Thank you all for coming.

My name’s Gina and I’m the Marketing Manager.

I’m sure you all know Dasha, who’s in
charge of web content.

Perhaps we can make a start.

Thanks everyone and welcome to today’s meeting.

I’m Gina Mares, the Marketing Manager.

This is Jess, from the accounts department,
and she’ll also be presenting today.

Let’s begin.

Next, we have to introduce the topic and talk
about the items on the agenda.

Part two: introducing the topic and outlining
the agenda.

After you’ve welcomed everyone to the meeting,
you want to make sure they have a clear idea

of what you’ll be discussing.

This can also help you to stay organized throughout
the meeting.

First, you want to introduce the overall topic
of the meeting.

Then, introduce the agenda of the meeting:
all the key points you will be discussing.

Today’s meeting is about … We’ll talk
about …

The aim of this meeting is to … We’ll
go over …

When you go over something, what do you think
that means?

It means to analyze or look at something carefully.

You can also use cover.

For example:

In today’s meeting, we’ll go over …
Or: In today’s meeting, we’ll cover …

These are both useful when discussing an agenda.

Now, it’s your turn to practice beginning
a meeting.

Start with getting the attendees’ attention,
then welcome the attendees and get the meeting

started.

Finally, you can introduce the topic of the
meeting and outline your agenda.

I’ll give you an example, and then you can
create your own.

Good morning everyone, if I could have your
attention please.

I’d like to welcome you all to the meeting
today.

Let’s begin.

The aim of this meeting is to talk about the
marketing strategies for the next few months.

We’ll go over our budget, goals, and welcome
the new hires.

OK?

Now, it’s your turn.

Create an introduction for a meeting you’ve
recently had, or you can just use some general

topics from your job.

You can pause the video and think about it.

How did you do?

OK, now let’s move on to the main part of
the meeting.

Part three: getting through the agenda.

Now, you will get into the most important
part of the meeting: presenting your main

ideas.

How you do this depends on what you are talking
about, but there are some general rules that

you can always use.

You want to begin with the first item on your
agenda.

To do this, use phrases like:

So, let’s start with …
The first item on the agenda is …

After a phrase like this, you will present
and discuss the agenda item.

For example:

So, let’s start with some new business:
marketing strategies.

The first item on the agenda is how we can
make our online advertising more effective.

After you’ve discussed this first topic,
you need to let the attendees know that you’ve

finished and that the discussion should move
forward.

How can you do this?

A simple closing statement will be good, such
as:

I think that covers the first, or second,
or third item.

If nobody has anything else to add, we can
continue on to the next item.

Now, you can move on to the next point.

Here are some useful phrases for this:

Let’s move on to the next item: …
Now we come to the…

The final item on the agenda is…

Using words like next or final can be very
helpful.

It helps everybody understand where you are
and what you’re doing.

Let’s see how to use these in some full
sentences:

Let’s move onto the next item: the marketing
budget for these new strategies.

Now we come to the main challenge: how to
get 100,000 new contacts in the next few months.

The final item on the agenda is to welcome
our new hires: James in Finance and Debra

in HR.

You can repeat these steps until you’ve
covered all of the items on your agenda.

Now it’s your turn.

Imagine you’re chairing a meeting at your
company.

Write down three agenda items.

Practice using different English phrases to
introduce each item.

Again, you can pause the video and think about
the points we’ve just gone over, and also

practice making your own examples.

Next, we’re going to look at attendee participation
in the meeting.

Part four: inviting attendees to participate.

As chair, one of your responsibilities is
making sure attendees get a chance to express

their ideas and take part in discussions.

What can you say to bring others into the
discussion?

You could ask a question like:

…, what’s your opinion on this?

Would you like to share your thoughts on this
question?

Could you add anything to our ideas here?

These are good phrases to make sure all attendees
have a chance to participate.

Also, as a chair, you may have other attendees
who need to present ideas or lead the discussion

for part of the meeting.

When you want to hand over to another attendee,
you can use phrases like:

…, would you like to introduce this item?

I’d like to turn it over to … who is going
to lead in the next point.

Alright, now … will have the floor.

Just add the person’s name to use these
phrases.

For example:

Amit, would you like to introduce this item?

However, there could be a problem here.

What if some of the attendees talk too long,
or start going off-topic?

Part five: dealing with distractions and staying
on topic

Nobody likes meetings which go on too long,
right?

To be a good chair, you need to keep people
focused on the agenda and avoid distractions.

When someone is speaking for too long, there
are good, professional phrases that you can

use:

Let’s not get too far off-topic here.

We can discuss that at the end if you feel
it’s important.

I don’t think that’s relevant to today’s
discussion.

If someone talks about a topic that would
be good to discuss at a later time, you can

use the phrase shelve it or table it.

This means you want to talk about it, but
in the future:

I think we should shelve that until next time.

Good point, but let’s table it until the
next meeting.

At this point, you’ve got through your agenda,
made sure that everyone has a chance to speak,

and stayed on topic.

Great!

But, you have one more job:

Part six: summarizing and concluding the meeting.

Once you’ve finished discussing everything,
you need to summarize your key points.

This will provide a conclusion to your meeting
and help people remember the most important

points from the agenda.

Here, you can say things like:

Before we close, let me just summarize the
main points.

To sum up…

In brief, …
Shall I go over the main points?

Then, use verbs like discussed, went over,
and talked about to list the items from the

meeting.

For example:

To sum up, we discussed using the new internet
marketing strategies and cutting the budget

by $1,000 next month.

We also talked about our new sales goals and
increasing our traffic.

Finally, we welcomed James and Debra to the
company.

Now, it’s time to finish up.

Here, you should show that you’re finished
and ask for any final questions.

To finish, simple phrases like these are effective:

OK, it looks like we’ve covered the main
items for the meeting today.

Right, that’s all for today’s meeting.

Don’t forget to ask if there are any final
questions from the attendees.

This will help them to clarify anything they
didn’t understand and make any final points.

Is there any other business?

Are there any questions before we finish?

Now, I’d like you to practice concluding
a meeting.

First, I’ll give you an example and then
you can create your own:

To sum up, we discussed using the new internet
marketing strategies and cutting the budget

by $1,000 each month.

We also talked about our sales goals and increasing
our site traffic.

Finally, we welcomed James and Debra to the
company.

Right, that’s all for today’s meeting.

Are there any questions before we finish?

No?

Great, I’d like to thank Bob, our CEO, for
coming here all the way from Beijing.

Thank you all for attending.

That’s all for today.

OK, your turn.

Summarize your meeting, thank everyone for
coming, and conclude.

Now you know how to chair a meeting from beginning
to end.

Are you chairing a meeting in English in the
near future?

I hope you can use some of the words and phrases
from the lesson to make it easier for you!

Each section has a lot of useful language
to learn and practice, so you might want to

go through some sections again to really get
comfortable with the language you need.

That’s all for this lesson.

Good luck, and thank you for watching!

Please visit Oxford Online English dot com
for more free lessons like this.

See you next time!

你好,我是吉娜。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

明天,你有一个重要的会议,
你是主席。

这是您第一次
用英语主持会议!

想想这种情况。

您知道要说什么来开始会议、
展示您的主要想法或总结您的

会议议程吗?

在本课中,您将学习如何
用英语主持会议。

您可以学习有用的英语单词和短语
,以便在下次会议中使用。

现在想象一下:你在会议室里。

您需要开始会议。

你会说些什么?

第一部分:欢迎与会者并
开始会议。

在会议开始之前,您必须
确保每个人都在关注。

你知道怎么做吗?

你可以说:

如果我能引起你的注意,请。

请问我能引起你的注意吗?

大家下午好。

您也可以将其中两个短语放在一起。

例如:

大家早上好,我可以请你注意
一下吗?

记住,你是椅子。

你需要负责并领导会议。

通过强调你的声音为你的会议打下一个良好的开端

例如,在第一个短语中,我们
在结尾的停顿之后有单词 please。

强调请这个词听起来更坚定,
并向人们表明你希望他们

听你的。

这样做:

如果我能引起你的注意,请。

您也可以对以下短语执行此操作

:请注意。

再听一遍这句话。

当我这么说的时候,这听起来像是一个问题吗?

请您注意一下。

该表格是一个问题,但您可以
像阅读陈述一样阅读它。

这使它听起来更坚定,并向人们
表明您现在需要他们注意您

在引起大家的注意之后
,就该欢迎与会者并

开始工作了。

这里有一些很好的通用短语:

今天我想在这里欢迎大家,
现在让我们开始谈正事。

在这句话中,“开始做生意”的
意思是“开始讨论重要信息。”

谢谢大家的到来。

也许我们可以开始。

谢谢大家,欢迎参加今天的会议。

让我们开始。

如果这是你第一次见到这些人,
你也可以自我介绍一下。

如果会议中还有其他演示者,
这也是介绍他们的时候。

例如:

今天在这里欢迎大家,
我的名字是 Gina Mares,我是营销

经理,我是 Jon,他
是设计部门的负责人。

现在让我们开始谈正事。

谢谢大家的到来。

我叫 Gina,是营销经理。

相信大家都知道
负责网页内容的大沙。

也许我们可以开始。

谢谢大家,欢迎参加今天的会议。

我是营销经理 Gina Mares。

我是 Jess,来自会计部门
,她今天也将出席。

让我们开始。

接下来,我们要介绍一下议题,
谈谈议程上的项目。

第二部分:介绍主题并
概述议程。

在您欢迎所有人参加会议后,
您要确保他们清楚地

了解您将要讨论的内容。

这也可以帮助您在整个会议期间保持井井有条

首先,您要介绍会议的总体
主题。

然后,介绍会议议程:
您将讨论的所有关键点。

今天的会议是关于……我们将
讨论……

这次会议的目的是……我们
会回顾……

当你回顾某件事时,你认为
这意味着什么?

意思是仔细分析或观察某事。

您也可以使用封面。

例如:

在今天的会议中,我们将讨论……
或者:在今天的会议中,我们将

讨论……这些在讨论议程时都很有用。

现在,轮到你练习
开始会议了。

首先要引起与会者的注意,
然后欢迎与会者并开始会议

最后,您可以介绍
会议主题并概述您的议程。

我会给你一个例子,然后你可以
创建自己的。

大家早上好,如果我能引起你们的
注意。

我想欢迎大家参加今天的会议

让我们开始。

这次会议的目的是讨论
未来几个月的营销策略。

我们将超越我们的预算和目标,并
欢迎新员工。

好的?

现在轮到你了。

为您最近召开的会议创建一个介绍
,或者您可以只

使用您工作中的一些一般性主题。

您可以暂停视频并考虑一下。

你是怎么做的?

好的,现在让我们进入会议的主要
部分。

第三部分:通过议程。

现在,您将进入会议最重要的
部分:提出您的主要

想法。

你如何做到这一点取决于你在说
什么,但有一些

你可以随时使用的一般规则。

您想从议程上的第一个项目开始

要做到这一点,请使用以下短语:

所以,让我们从
…开始议程上的第一个项目是…

在这样的短语之后,您将介绍
并讨论议程项目。

例如:

那么,让我们从一些新业务开始:
营销策略。

议程上的第一项是我们如何
使我们的在线广告更有效。

讨论完第一个主题后,
您需要让与会者知道您已经

完成并且讨论应该继续进行

你怎么能做到这一点?

一个简单的结束语会很好,
例如:

我认为涵盖了第一项、第二
项或第三项。

如果没有人要补充什么,我们可以
继续下一项。

现在,您可以继续进行下一点。

这里有一些有用的短语:

让我们继续下一个项目:……
现在我们来看看……

议程上的最后一个项目是……

使用像 next 或 final 这样的词会
很有帮助。

它可以帮助每个人了解您在哪里
以及您在做什么。

让我们看看如何在一些完整的句子中使用这些

让我们进入下一个项目:
这些新策略的营销预算。

现在我们面临主要挑战:如何
在未来几个月内获得 100,000 个新联系人。

议程上的最后一项是欢迎
我们的新员工:财务部门的詹姆斯和

人力资源部门的黛布拉。

您可以重复这些步骤,直到
您涵盖了议程上的所有项目。

现在轮到你了。

想象一下,您正在公司主持一个会议

写下三个议程项目。

练习使用不同的英语短语来
介绍每个项目。

同样,您可以暂停视频并思考
我们刚刚讨论过的要点,还可以

练习制作自己的示例。

接下来,我们将查看与会者
对会议的参与情况。

第四部分:邀请与会者参加。

作为主席,您的职责之一是
确保与会者有机会表达

他们的想法并参与讨论。

你能说些什么来让其他人参与
讨论?

你可以问这样的问题:

……,你对此有何看法?

你愿意分享你对这个问题的看法
吗?

您能在这里为我们的想法添加任何内容吗?

这些短语可以确保所有与会者
都有机会参与。

此外,作为主席,您可能有其他
与会者需要在会议的一部分中提出想法或领导讨论

当您想移交给其他与会者时,
您可以使用以下短语:

…,您要介绍这个项目吗?

我想把它交给……谁将
在下一点领先。

好的,现在……请发言。

只需添加此人的姓名即可使用这些
短语。

例如:

Amit,您要介绍这个项目吗?

但是,这里可能存在问题。

如果一些与会者谈得太久,
或者开始跑题怎么办?

第五部分:处理分心并
保持话题

没有人喜欢开得太久的会议,对
吧?

要成为一名好主席,您需要让人们
专注于议程并避免分心。

当某人说话时间过长时
,您可以使用一些好的专业短语

让我们在这里不要离题太远。

如果你觉得这很重要,我们可以在最后讨论

我认为这与今天的
讨论无关。

如果有人谈论的话题
很适合以后讨论,您可以

使用短语“搁置它”或“搁置它”。

这意味着你想谈论它,但
在未来:

我认为我们应该把它搁置到下一次。

好点子,但让我们把它放在
下次会议之前。

在这一点上,你已经完成了你的议程
,确保每个人都有机会发言,

并保持话题。

伟大的!

但是,您还有一项工作:

第六部分:总结和结束会议。

一旦你完成了所有的讨论,
你需要总结你的关键点。

这将为您的会议提供一个结论,
并帮助人们记住议程中最重要的

要点。

在这里,你可以这样说:

在我们结束之前,让我简单总结一下
要点。

总结一下……

简而言之,……
我应该回顾一下要点吗?

然后,使用动词,如讨论、过去
和讨论来列出会议中的项目

例如:

综上所述,我们讨论了使用新的网络
营销策略并在下个月将预算

削减 1,000 美元。

我们还谈到了我们的新销售目标和
增加流量。

最后,我们欢迎 James 和 Debra 来到
公司。

现在,是时候完成了。

在这里,你应该表明你已经完成
并询问任何最后的问题。

最后,像这样的简单短语是有效的:

好的,看起来我们已经涵盖了
今天会议的主要项目。

好了,今天的会议就到此为止。

不要忘记询问与会者是否有任何最终
问题。

这将帮助他们澄清他们
不理解的任何事情并提出任何最终观点。

有没有其他业务?

在我们结束之前有什么问题吗?

现在,我想让你练习
结束会议。

首先,我会给你一个例子,然后
你可以创建自己的:

总而言之,我们讨论了使用新的网络
营销策略并

每月削减 1,000 美元的预算。

我们还谈到了我们的销售目标和增加
我们的网站流量。

最后,我们欢迎 James 和 Debra 来到
公司。

好了,今天的会议就到此为止。

在我们结束之前有什么问题吗?

不?

太好了,我要感谢我们的 CEO Bob
从北京远道而来。

谢谢大家的出席。

这就是今天的全部内容。

好,轮到你了。

总结你的会议,感谢大家的
到来,然后结束。

现在您知道如何从头到尾主持会议了

您近期会用英语主持会议
吗?

我希望您可以使用本课中的一些单词和短语
,以使您更轻松!

每个部分都有很多有用的语言
可供学习和练习,因此您可能需要

再次阅读一些部分才能真正
熟悉所需的语言。

这就是本课的全部内容。

祝你好运,感谢您的收看!

请访问 Oxford Online English dot com
了解更多此类免费课程。

下次见!