Corporate buzzwords

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Revision as of 18:16, 24 August 2022 by Fire Eider (talk | contribs)

Remember that a lot of work culture is highly dependent by country. Try to reflect that somehow, maybe by adding different sections for countries or something?

Or at least including what country/ies use the phrase for that meaning --Fire Eider (talk) 18:16, 24 August 2022 (UTC)

All hands on deck

Professional way of growling: "You should have paid attention, I said this already!"

And it's one reason why people sometimes email instead of talking...they want a "paper trail" of what they actually said. For example, they don't want to be accused of not having anticipated what some may consider obvious questions.

As per my last e-mail

Bandwidth

Bottom line

Circle back

Core competency

Deep dive

Do more with less

Do you need me to re-forward the e-mail?

Drill down

Friendly reminder

If they have to say it's "friendly"... it's not. It's a reminder with a strong hint of consequences if it's not followed.

Sometimes management sends something like this to a whole group when only one person is doing something management doesn't want, instead of just talking to that one person. They're hoping the one person will take a hint, realize it's him/her, and change. It often doesn't work, but management does this because they just don't feel like confronting the problem.

Follow up

Lean in

Let's take this offline

Let's unpack

Low-hanging fruit

Paradigm shift

Synergy

Team player

[Employee] is a "real team player" may be code for they are very agreeable or a people-pleaser, and this may or may not indicate that this person tends to support the perspectives of others rather than advocating for their own stances. This phrase may also be used SARCASTICALLY to imply that the individual is perceived as being the opposite of a "team player," as in they might be viewed as argumentative, contrarian, selfish, or unsupportive of colleagues (just because someone perceives this to be the case about someone does not mean that it is true). (Is there a page on sarcasm?) When a job application states that they are looking for a "team player," this may mean that they are looking for someone who will "stick to the status quo."


Think out of the box

Touching base

We are family

Welcome thoughts