situation
You recently took a job as a tourist guide at a local branch. You’ve been doing great and more often than not you get outstanding reviews from customers.
Your employers decide it is high time for a promotion and they propose you for a position at the company headquarters. You will be the new associated editor of their internationally acclaimed magazine. Congratulations! That’s impressive AF.
The thing is that this month’s issue will deal with less known destinations. Paris is alluring and London is terribly exciting but readers are always looking for new experiences your team is to provide.
The deadline is coming but you worry not, you have everything under control. Your hometown is full of appealing monuments, charming corners and so many fascinating things to do it can only get better when you think of its thrilling festivals and nightlife. And, of course, the food. So mouthwatering you feel hungry just by the bare thought of it.
The team meeting to discuss which destination should be on the cover is on the point of starting but you have prepared nothing. You usually plan this kind of things way ahead of time, you are a type A person after all, but daydreaming about your crush is all that you can do of late.
OK, no worries. You are brilliant and you know it —self-confidence brought you here after all. You still have five more minutes before getting into the conference room, plenty of time to boil up your ideas to an amazing presentation.
task
You have to make your colleagues and the chief editor buy your proposal for the cover. Be persuasive and praise the wonders of your hometown so they bite.
Don’t forget to talk about:
Landmarks, monuments and places of interest
Festivals & nightlife
Food, restaurants and bars
People & local customs
One-day trips around your hometown
Sports & outdoor activities
Accommodation & how to get there