In modern work environments, knowing how to analyze data is not enough.
The real value comes from the ability to explain results clearly.

Numbers do not speak for themselves.
People do.

At Levitin Language School, Business English for data and communication focuses on helping learners turn analysis into clear, structured explanations.


Why Communication Matters More Than Data

Many professionals can:

  • build reports
  • calculate results
  • create charts

But they struggle to:

  • explain what the data means
  • present conclusions clearly
  • communicate decisions confidently

This creates a gap:

👉 data exists
👉 insight exists
👉 but communication is weak

And that is where language becomes critical.


The Language of Data Explanation

In professional environments, explanations follow a structure.

For example:

  • “The data shows a steady increase over time.”
  • “There is a clear correlation between the variables.”
  • “The results indicate a change in behavior.”
  • “Based on the data, we can conclude that…”

This is not casual English.
It is structured, precise, and goal-oriented.


From Data to Meaning

Working with data involves three steps:

1. Observation

What do we see?

2. Interpretation

What does it mean?

3. Explanation

How do we communicate it?

Most learners stop at step two.

We focus on step three.


Common Communication Situations

Professionals must explain data in different contexts:

Reports

  • written summaries
  • structured conclusions

Meetings

  • presenting results
  • answering questions

Emails

  • explaining decisions
  • clarifying changes

Presentations

  • visual + verbal explanation
  • structured storytelling with data

Each situation requires clear language.


How We Teach Business English for Data

Our approach is based on real communication tasks.

Students learn to:

  • describe trends
  • explain cause and effect
  • present conclusions logically
  • justify decisions using data

Examples:

  • “The increase is driven by higher demand.”
  • “The decrease is linked to external factors.”
  • “The data supports this conclusion.”

Language becomes a tool for decision-making.


Who This Course Is For

  • professionals working with data
  • students in business and analytics
  • specialists using Excel or reports
  • learners preparing for international work environments

Communication as a Professional Skill

Data analysis creates information.
Communication creates understanding.

Without clear explanation, even strong analysis loses value.

When learners develop Business English for data communication, they gain:

  • clarity
  • confidence
  • professional impact

They do not just understand results.
They can explain them — and that changes everything.


Author: Tymur Levitin
Founder & Director, Levitin Language School
© Tymur Levitin