Buzzwords that make boardrooms spin and PowerPoints sing.
A word used to describe everything from groundbreaking innovation to a slightly updated app icon. In its purest form, it means "we made a thing and we want venture capital money for it."
An unnecessarily dramatic term for actually reading the document you were supposed to read before the meeting. Suggests scuba gear and ocean exploration when all you're doing is opening a spreadsheet.
Something you promised to deliver but that shapeshifts in scope every time a stakeholder breathes near it. Started as a simple report, ends as a full-blown interactive dashboard with AI-powered insights and a mission statement.
To examine something in greater detail, as if data were an oil well and you just need to bore deep enough to strike insight. In practice, drilling down usually means someone didn't understand the summary and needs the same information explained slower.
To buy into company culture with the unquestioning enthusiasm of someone who just discovered the snack bar is free. Often uttered by people who have consumed entire swimming pools of the stuff.
To assign tasks or authority to someone else, typically because you're either empowering your team or drowning in work (usually the latter). Also refers to a representative sent to conferences or legislative bodies to vote on behalf of others. The corporate skill that separates good managers from control freaks.
The act of drawing boundaries or limits around something, whether it's a research scope, territorial borders, or the precise extent of your responsibilities before they become someone else's problem. In academia and business, it's how you politely tell stakeholders 'this is what we're doing, and everything else is out of scope.' Think of it as the corporate version of building a fence, but with more documentation and fewer property disputes.
To examine something in greater detail, as if you're opening a folder on your desktop. Usually said right before someone asks you questions you can't answer.
The corporate euphemism for shrinking operations, cutting staff, or reducing production—basically making things smaller because 'rightsizing' wasn't depressing enough. It's what happens when companies realize their ambitious growth plans were perhaps overly optimistic. Like downsizing's slightly more technical cousin, equally capable of ruining someone's quarterly earnings.
To shift a transmission into a lower gear, slow down your life, or make something less controversial—because sometimes you need to pump the brakes on drama and RPMs alike. In corporate speak, it means toning down a risky proposal before someone in legal loses their mind. Outside the office, it's how you avoid burning out your clutch or your career.
A cascading revenge scenario where one betrayal triggers another in retaliation, creating a chain reaction of grievances. Named after the Baltimore Colts saga, it's essentially the Murphy's Law of vindictiveness—when screwing someone over inevitably leads to getting screwed yourself, which leads to someone else getting screwed, ad infinitum.
The official act of slapping a label, title, or purpose onto something or someone, because nothing is real until it has proper paperwork. This formal appointment process turns regular employees into "Senior Vice Presidents" and empty land into "Protected Wildlife Habitats." It's essentially bureaucracy's way of making everything official through the sacred ritual of naming things.
The molecular instruction manual that makes you uniquely you, now hijacked by corporate types to describe a company's "core values" or "fundamental identity." When a CEO says "innovation is in our DNA," they're either talking about their commitment to disruption or desperately need a biology refresher. Unlike actual DNA, corporate DNA can apparently be changed with a rebrand and a consultant's PowerPoint.
A fancy French word for a file folder that makes your collection of documents sound way more mysterious and important than 'Dave's Performance Reviews.' It's a comprehensive collection of papers and information about a person or subject, typically used when someone needs to build a case, conduct due diligence, or dramatically slam papers on a desk. The business equivalent of receipts.
A product development approach where discovery and delivery work happen simultaneously on parallel tracks. A noble attempt to do research and execution at the same time that usually results in doing both poorly.
A secondary reporting relationship where you're accountable to someone who isn't technically your boss, creating a delightful matrix of conflicting priorities and unclear authority. Confusion by organizational design.
A reporting relationship indicating informal authority or secondary accountability, as opposed to a solid-line direct report. It's organizational ambiguity formalized, where you have responsibility without power.
Making trivial changes or improvements to something that's fundamentally doomed to fail. Rearranging superficial elements while ignoring the iceberg-sized problems.
The art of making something someone else's problem while still taking credit if it succeeds. It's a group of representatives sent to negotiate or discuss issues, or the management technique of assigning tasks to subordinates because you're 'too strategic' for actual work. The corporate skill that separates executives from employees.
The deteriorating quality of decisions after making too many of them, explaining why CEOs wear the same outfit daily while mid-level managers suffer in silence.
A PowerPoint presentation, usually containing 47 slides when only 5 were necessary. The corporate equivalent of a bedtime story, except everyone stays awake out of fear rather than interest.
A flowchart-like diagram mapping out possible decision paths and their consequences, beloved by analysts who believe organizational chaos can be tamed with rectangles and arrows.
The corporate canyon that opens up when departments stop talking to each other. In organizational dynamics, it's the invisible wall between sales and engineering, marketing and product, or literally any two groups that decided they're enemies for life.
The strategic or forceful process of taking apart a system, organization, or infrastructure piece by piece—because sometimes you have to burn it down to rebuild it better (or at least that's what the consultants tell you).