Thursday, March 21, 2013

A Bizspeak Blacklist


It's mission-critical to be plain-spoken, whether you're trying to be best-of-breed at outside-the-box thinking or simply incentivizing colleagues to achieve a paradigm shift in core-performance value-adds. Leading-edge leveraging of your plain-English skill set will ensure that your actionable items synergize future-proof assets with your global-knowledge repository.


Just kidding.


Seriously, though, it's important to write plainly. You want to sound like a person, not an institution. But it's hard to do, especially if you work with people who are addicted to buzzwords. It takes a lot of practice.


Back when journalists were somewhat more fastidious with the language than they are today, newspaper editors often kept an "index expurgatorius": a roster of words and phrases that under no circumstances (except perhaps in a damning quote) would find their way into print.


Here's such a list for the business writer. (Thanks to my Twitter followers for their contributions.) Of course, it's just a starting point — add to it as you come across other examples of bizspeak that hinder communication by substituting clichés for actual thought.


Bizspeak Blacklist

actionable (apart from legal action)

agreeance

as per

at the end of the day

back of the envelope

bandwidth (outside electronics)

bring our A game

client-centered

come-to-Jesus

core competency

CYA

drill down

ducks in a row

forward initiative

going forward

go rogue

guesstimate

harvesting efficiencies

hit the ground running

impact, vb.

incent

incentivize

impactful

kick the can down the road

let's do lunch

let's take this offline

level the playing field

leverage, vb.

liaise

mission-critical

monetize

net-net

on the same page

operationalize

optimize

out of pocket (except in reference to expenses)

paradigm shift

parameters

per

planful

push the envelope

pursuant to

putting lipstick on a pig

recontextualize

repurpose

rightsized

sacred cow

scalable

seamless integration

seismic shift (outside earthquake references)

smartsized

strategic alliance

strategic dynamism

synergize

synergy

think outside the box

throw it against the wall and see if it sticks

throw under the bus

turnkey

under the radar

utilization, utilize

value-added

verbage (the correct term is verbiage — in reference only to verbose phrasings)

where the rubber meets the road

win-win



Many of these phrases have become voguish in business — abstain if you can. Sometimes people use them to enhance their own sense of belonging or to sound "in the know." Or they've been taught that good writing is hyperformal, so they stiffen up and pile on the clichés.


Hunt for offending phrases: Start looking for bizspeak in all kinds of documents, from memos to marketing plans, and you'll find it everywhere. You'll eventually learn to spot it — and avoid it — in your own writing. You'll omit canned language such as Attached please find and other phrases that only clutter your message.


translateyourbizspeak.gif


Writing plainly means expressing ideas as straightforwardly as you can — without sacrificing meaning or tone. Think of it as bringing your written voice into line with your spoken voice.



Bizspeak may seem like a convenient shorthand, but it suggests to readers that you're on autopilot, thoughtlessly using boilerplate phrases that they've heard over and over. Brief, readable documents, by contrast, show care and thought — and earn people's attention.


This is the fifth post in Bryan A. Garner's blog series on business writing. The series draws on advice in Garner's new HBR Guide to Better Business Writing.


Post 1: Don't Anesthetize Your Colleagues with Bad Writing


Post 2: A Well-Crafted Letter Still Gets the Job Done


Post 3: Write E-Mails That People Won't Ignore


Post 4: Those Grammar Gaffes Will Get You







via HBR.org http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/03/a_bizspeak_blacklist.html

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