What are the ten most irritating office buzzwords in the UK?
Jobs site Glassdoor surveyed 2,000 employees about their most hated examples of office jargon for a summertime PR push.
Some terms were coined by strategists and psychologists who wanted to develop a strong company ethic, encourage employees to believe in their work or improve productivity and efficiency.
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Hide AdMost are metaphors that have lost their figurative punch and turned into cliches as they have been chronically overused.
Here is the list -
Touch base - 24%
To meet in person and talk about a specific issue
Blue Sky Thinking - 21%
Creative thinking that breaks away from confined, ordinary ideas
We're On a Journey - 13%
Suggesting a team has not reached its mission but is on its way
Game Changer - 13%
Something that dramatically changes assumptions about how things are done
No-brainer - 13%
Something immediately obvious or irrefutably a good idea
Thought Shower - 11%
A meeting to freely discuss new ideas in their early stages
Run It Up The Flagpole - 11%
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If You Don't Like It Get Off The Bus - 10%
Suggestion that someone should just leave a company if they're not happy
Mission Statement - 10%
An assertion of values an motivations with regard to a company and its work
Pick It Up And Run With It - 10%
Continuing with a project that was started by someone else
Punch A Puppy - 9%
To do something horrible for the long-term good of the company
Let's Get Our Ducks In A Row - 9%
To fix different interests, parties and priorities in preparation for an event