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I used to work for an American boss, here in Cardiff, and we often discussed the importance of the Welsh language in our marketing. In his Louisiana drawl he’d ask: “Hey, Alan, how important is this Welsh stuff to us?” or “Will doing it in Welsh make a difference?”
My answer was always pretty much the same: “it’s totally irrelevant, but absolutely essential” and I stick to my guns on that.
It’s irrelevant because all the audience who can understand the message in Welsh will also be able to understand the message in English
It was essential however, because we needed to engage with everyone, no excuses, in their preferred language. It had nothing to do with politics; it was a matter of respecting what people wanted and believed in.
As a result of that advice we undertook our consumer marketing campaigns bilingually and as then raised our response rates by 50%. Read that again: FIRTY PERCENT.
I would not be telling the whole truth if I did not say that almost all of the results came back in English, but the benefit to us as a company was clear.
Why then is it so difficult for the National Assembly to understand that bilingual accounts of proceedings are also totally irrelevant, but absolutely essential?
The people of Wales, and those who love the uniqueness of their language, need to be respected.

Comments

 

2 Responses to Why Welsh is totally irrelevant but absolutely essential

  1. Dan Din says:

    yes, but what about people like me who can speak English as a second languagbe, but find it difficult to read aloud, let alone all nuances of the language. I need it in Welsh. Not politics, not or fanatics, justg needed.

  2. nm2002uk says:

    Welsh is hugely important if you live in mid-Wales and want to work for better than the minimum wage.

    The WAG should make a firm commitment to both a Welsh Language Act and provision for FREE Welsh language lessons for all adult residents of Wales who want it.

    My local college offers free ESOL courses (English for Speakers of Other Languages) which I could live with if it was in England, but this is Wales, these should be WSOL courses.

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