Resumen

Every speaker featured throughout this course built their career in the startup ecosystem without being a native English speaker. They all learned the language to thrive professionally, and that same path is open to anyone willing to put in the work. This final recap brings together the essential building blocks covered across every lesson.

What startup vocabulary and expressions did you practice?

Throughout the course, you worked with key vocabulary and expressions for a startup [0:24]. These are the words and phrases that professionals in the startup world use daily — from pitch and funding to scalability and market fit. Mastering this specialized language allows you to communicate clearly with investors, co-founders, and potential clients in English.

How do you prepare a mission, vision, and set goals?

A strong startup begins with a clear mission and vision [0:33]. The mission defines what your company does right now and why it matters, while the vision paints a picture of the future you want to create. Setting goals ties both together by giving your team concrete milestones to work toward. Practicing how to articulate these elements in English builds confidence for real-world conversations with stakeholders.

Why is company structure and a startup pitch so important?

Understanding company structure [0:40] means knowing how roles, departments, and responsibilities are organized. Being able to describe this clearly in English shows professionalism and preparedness.

The course also focused on creating a company pitch [0:44]. A pitch is a brief, persuasive presentation designed to:

  • Explain your product or service in simple terms.
  • Highlight the problem you solve.
  • Show why your solution stands out.
  • Convince your audience to take action.

The final project ties everything together: record a video of yourself pitching your startup idea [0:48]. This exercise puts all the vocabulary, structure, and presentation skills into practice.

If you have completed your pitch video, share it with the community so others can learn from your approach and give you feedback. Every attempt strengthens your fluency and your ability to present ideas with clarity.