Manager Lingo

Oh and another load. Outsource language. Sigh.

"Revert to me for clarifications" and "Please do the needful" make me want to get on a plane to Bangalore and start teaching English.
 
Not manager lingo as such, but I just had a good one...people that say 'my mistake', when we know damn well it was your mistake thanks very much!

Me:

'Hi Rebecca

Please check your payables balance. If differs to the one you signed.'

Her:

'Robert,
This was my mistake. Attached is our updated spreadsheet. Thank you.'
 
My favourite is "you failed to meet expectations" instead of just saying "you ****ed up"

"you ****ed up" doesn't really help when you come round to doing an annual appraisement. Confrontation is not the name of the game.
 
I'm gonna need you to go ahead...

bill-lumbergh-office-space1.jpg


... mmmkay

This is what I thought of when I read the title! :cool:


Mmmmmmmkay!
 
Another one that riles me is the use of the term "the business". I purposely use "the company" when people use that term and it catches people off guard.

People here use it as if "the business" was a person, as if this nebulous entity lives and breathes. "Does the business understand?" "Have we gone back to the business about this?"

I've questioned several people on who "the business" actually is, and it's normally resulted in several action items for people to go away and find out exactly who they're talking about. I wonder if left unchallenged how many areas of the company miss out on vital information because some ball jostler in a meeting used "the business" get out clause?

Sorry if I'm being slow but how does using "the company" improve on using "the business"? Both terms seem almost interchangeable or to put it another way as open to abuse - where people might refer to "the business" as if it were a person they can equally do so with using "the company".

Not manager lingo as such, but I just had a good one...people that say 'my mistake', when we know damn well it was your mistake thanks very much!'

Isn't it better that they're taking responsibility for the mistake rather than trying to blame it on someone else?
 
I'm amazed nobody has mentioned the boss from the TV show Drop the Dead Donkey. Stupid manager speak was practically all he existed for.

Gus Hedges: We've got to downsize our sloppiness overload.
Gus Hedges: Could we interlock brain spaces in my work area?
Gus Hedges: Morning talent base. Are the afterburners on full thrust? You bet.
Gus Hedges: Morning, mountaineers. Climbing the north face of newsmaking again are we? Terrific.
Gus Hedges: George, can we pool our brainspaces in a center of excellence?
Gus Hedges: Quality stress dissipation opportunities here.

To name but a few!
 
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