Crap 'Buzzwords'

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  • "one pager"

    (Often guilty myself, but the phrase just grates...)

  • I was briefed to design a one pager recently. It was 4 pages long…

  • My colleague consistently produces a ‘one slider’ slide that is 6 slides long.

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  • Out of curiosity what would you prefer?

    Summary?

  • Perfect, a single traditional word free of any bullshit.

  • Plus I guess we've established that one-pagers often aren't one page long.

  • But that drops the length constraint, which is critical. It's a one-page summary.

  • Brief….. It’s brief

  • Have we done “gifted” instead of gave/given yet?

    That’s a scrape down the blackboard in my brain

  • Solutionize.

    I get that it's one word instead of two for problem solve. But it's definitely a fuck load more syllables. I've never heard anyone say it naturaly or effortlessly. It always comes across as clunky and forced.

    I've never seen it written in an comms either.

  • Although my business analyst colleagues and I used it a negative sense, to mean roughly:

    'trying to (or being asked/forced to) design the solution when your job is only to research the problem and articulate the requirements'.

    Edit: similarly, https://www.iltanet.org/blogs/michael-ertel1/2021/07/26/whats-your-problem-dont-solutionize

    Solutionizing is when you create a solution, but the problem your solution is trying to solve has not been defined or, even worse, might not even exist. This happens when you make presumptions about what a problem may (or may not) be, and then you create a solution without considering the actual problem—or even ignoring that no actual problem exists.

  • If I had to guess the meaning of that word outside the context of this thread I would 100% have gone with your version

  • OK. I possibly stand corrected. As I yesterday I over heard it in the context of someone telling their audience that they weren't being asked to solutionize.

    Interesting article.

  • My partner just now while trying to decide whether to upgrade to another iPhone or go android.

    “I’d rather upskill myself on a platform I’m familiar with at this point”

  • Ooof
    Grounds for dismissal right there

  • SME - turns out people aren't talking about small-medium enterprises but subject matter experts.

    Fuck knows why people have tried to co-opt such a well-established acronym. Also, it just seems to get used when expert would be perfectly sufficient, no-one is thinking that the expert being brought in has an expertise in a totally different area.

  • "DNA" when commentators talk about the way a football team plays. Also "identity".

  • Are they Ex-Army they tend to use the TLA SME to mean Subject Matter Experts

  • I think 'Subject Matter Expert' escaped from PRINCE2 project management terminology (or similar), where it has a specific meaning: 'a project stakeholder due to knowledge, not seniority or responsibility'.

    I agree though. 'Domain expert' is another one...

  • Hot from the Teams inbox.

    just wanted to socialize an idea with you

  • The z is the cherry on top..

    One could memorialize and socialize

    Aka send out the bloody minutes

  • The guy then asked how pronounce my name, so should've asked him to translate his message first.

  • 'Teamship' is creeping in at work. Had to attend a 'building teamship' event yesterday.

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Crap 'Buzzwords'

Posted by Avatar for StandardPractice @StandardPractice

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