
New research has revealed that overuse of office jargon is in the top three of our biggest irritations at work. A recent survey by Opinium Research has revealed that, after ill-tempered colleagues and computer problems, management speak is what miffs us most. (It’s followed closely by people speaking too loudly on the phone and not tidying up in the kitchen – especially at the same time, presumably.)
Almost two-thirds of those interviewed blamed such office irritations for rising stress levels; one in ten people had at some point even quit their job over them. One can only imagine the effect of finally fixing a problem with your computer only to discover an email from your grumpy boss asking you to ‘touch base’.
The top ten most annoying jargon words and phrases are:
- Thinking outside the box
- Let’s touch base
- Blue sky thinking
- Blamestorming (getting together to decide whose fault something is)
- Drill down to a more granular level (examining in more detail)
- Let’s not throw pies in the dark (we need a plan rather than a slapdash approach)
- I’ve got that on my radar
- Push the envelope
- Bring your A-game
- Get all of your ducks in a row.
It’s one thing when these are said in the office and then forgotten; quite another when they turn up in the much more permanent form of the written word.
Stuffing your documents full of management-speak can seriously harm your personal ‘brand’. A YouGov survey (in 2006) found that four in ten workers felt jargon caused misunderstandings, alienation and betrayed a lack of confidence, while one in five thought those who used it were untrustworthy or trying to cover something up. Almost two-thirds of employees (60 per cent) would prefer no jargon at work.
Sometimes though, you want the sentiment without the colleague-alienating bells and whistles. While the list above may be best avoided altogether, here are some simple alternatives to other potentially irritating phrasings:
- add value to – improve
- adjacent – next
- as to – about, on, of (often redundant)
- at an early date – soon
- at this moment in time – now (often redundant)
- bottom line – most important thing, main point
- engage with – talk to, contact
- in the case of – with
- in the field of – in
- is able to – can
- leverage (verb, other than in a financial or engineering context) – make the most of
- on an ongoing basis – regularly, periodically, continually
- prior to – before
- with respect to – about
As reasonable human beings, we know there are occasional exceptions to rules. But in these still troubled times, let’s encourage a more harmonious workplace: crack a smile, put the milk back in the fridge and call a spade a spade.
As ever, we are offering a copy of our very own style guide, The Write Stuff, to anyone who sends in any item of baffling business-speak for us to pull apart.
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