Joseph: Tell me about the business lunch with the British client.
Sana: It was a disaster. First, I said "I take the fish" and the waiter looked confused.
Joseph: "I'll have the fish." In English, you don't "take" food at a restaurant. It's "I'll have." Simple fix.
Sana: Then I immediately started talking about the contract.
Joseph: How did the client react?
Sana: He seemed uncomfortable. He kept changing the subject to football and the weather.
Joseph: That's because in British business culture, you don't discuss business before the food arrives. Small talk first, business with the main course. It's the unwritten rule.
Sana: In France we sometimes discuss business from the start.
Joseph: Different cultures. With British clients, let them lead the transition. If they bring up work, you follow. If they don't, wait until the food is on the table. A good opener is "Speaking of which..." β it connects the small talk to a business topic naturally.
Sana: And then at the end, I said "Shall we split the addition?"
Joseph: Two problems. First β "the addition" is "the bill" in English. "Addition" is maths. Second β you invited them. The host always pays. No splitting, no discussion.
Sana: But he offered to contribute!
Joseph: That's politeness. The correct response is "No, please β this is on us." If they insist, say "You can get the next one." That's the polite refusal. It works every time.
Sana: "You can get the next one." I like that β it also implies there will be a next time.
Joseph: Exactly. It's closing a sale and being generous at the same time.
In British business culture, you don't discuss business before the food arrives. Small talk comes first, business with the main course. Starting with the contract felt too aggressive and skipped the relationship-building phase.
"No, please β this is on us." If they insist: "You can get the next one." The host always pays, no exceptions. The guest's offer to pay is politeness, not a genuine expectation.
It politely declines the offer to split AND implies there will be another meeting β strengthening the business relationship. It's generous and strategic at the same time.