Globelink acquisition of older, bigger language center called “Fantastique!”
 

For information call: Fadia Zaki-Gnoske at
719/532-0300

When Fadia Zaki-Gnoske founded Globelink Language and Cultural Services in her Colorado
Springs home in 1999, she didn’t know she would replace her larger and older
competitor.</p>

Globelink’s acquisition of The Foreign Language Center was completed in August. Now Fadia
says the new and improved Globelink Foreign Language Center’s enhanced range of
products and services is simply “Fantastique!”</p>

For Fadia, running Globelink is the culmination of a globe-spanning, multicultural life.

“I was born in Egypt and lived in Italy and Scotland before coming to Colorado
Springs 13 years ago,” says Fadia, who speaks five languages. “My parents
worked for the United Nations, so for me conversations in three languages were
normal.”

Today, more and more Colorado Springs businesses and government agencies conduct
business here and abroad in multiple languages. These local clients have propelled
Globelink’s growth, and today the company works with more than 200
trained contract linguists who help hundreds of clients translate documents,
study foreign cultures, or speak any one of 45 foreign languages, from Arabic
to Zulu

“Colorado Springs is becoming more of an international city,” says Fadia. “We’ve helped
that trend by providing cultural awareness training to Ft. Carson soldiers who
were shipping out to Iraq, translations of business documents for local
companies working in other countries, simultaneous interpretation of courses
for international cyclists at the U. S. Olympic Training Center, and language
classes for workers at Ingersoll Rand and Compassion International.”

The Springs is also home to a growing number of people for whom English is not
their first language. Globelink helps local agencies that serve these
residents, providing language skills testing for El Paso County Department of
Human Services employees, whose pay is tied to their language abilities.

The company also helps growing numbers of families and individuals who want to
understand other countries and languages before traveling overseas for
education, personal enrichment or short-term service.

“It’s like Thomas Friedman points out in his book <i style='mso-bidi-font-style:normal'>The
World is Flat</i>,” says Fadia. “Our shrinking world is flattening out as more
people conduct more activities around the globe. Our goal is to help them do so
more successfully.”

Fadia knows how simple language missteps or more complex cultural blunders can create
problems for businesses, government agencies and travelers.

“So when employees of the Office of Public Affairs at NorthCOM were getting ready
to visit Mexico, we briefed them on the country, its people, its history, and
its customs,” says Fadia. “It’s more than language, it’s the many subtle do’s
and don’ts that can determine if a cross-cultural relationship flourishes or flounders.”

For Fadia, the work of Globelink Foreign Language Center is more than a profession;
it’s a passion.

“Since I was a child I have loved languages and been surrounded by languages,” she
says. “And thanks to my parents I grew up with a wide spectrum of family and
friends all over the globe. This made it natural for me to accept a wide
variety of languages and cultures into my life.”

Today Fadia and her team at Globelink help others experience the same kinds of
cross-cultural moments.

“It’s a thrill for us to help people break down walls,” she says. “That’s really what
Globelink is all about.”


For more information about Globelink
Foreign Language Center or an interview with Fadia, please contact her at
719/532-0300.