The department that turned firing into a growth opportunity.
A professional relationship where a senior employee gives career advice to a junior employee, usually by telling them to do the exact opposite of what made the senior employee successful. The mentor gets to feel wise and the mentee gets anecdotes from 2003.
The art of making an employee's job so unpleasant they quit voluntarily, avoiding the legal and financial costs of termination. It's constructive dismissal with a euphemistic name and plausible deniability.
The corporate-speak way of acknowledging that certain groups have been systematically pushed to the sidelines, excluded from decision-making, and generally treated like the rejected toppings on society's pizza. In business contexts, it refers to employees or communities who lack power, representation, or access to opportunities despite diversity statements claiming otherwise. It's what happens when your company's 'everyone is welcome here' sign is just decorative.
An increasingly outdated term for 'workforce' or 'human resources' that makes HR professionals cringe because it ignores half the population and sounds like something from a 1950s management manual. It refers to the total number of available workers or the collective labor capacity of an organization, measured in human effort rather than horsepower. Modern companies are rapidly replacing this with gender-neutral alternatives like 'workforce' or 'staffing levels' before someone reports them to the diversity committee.
The corporate euphemism for 'bad stuff we can't ignore anymore' that covers everything from expense fraud to harassment to using the company printer for your side hustle. It's what HR calls your behavior when they're building a paper trail for your termination. Comes in various flavors: professional, sexual, and the ever-popular 'gross misconduct' which means you're definitely getting fired.
A neutral third party who gets paid to listen to two sides argue, nod sympathetically, and suggest compromises that neither side particularly likes but can live with. In workplace contexts, they're the professional peacemakers called in when HR realizes that another 'team building exercise' isn't going to fix the fact that Karen and Susan genuinely cannot stand each other. The mediator's superpower is getting people to agree without technically forcing anyone to do anything.
A salary raise based on individual performance rather than cost-of-living adjustments or tenure. It's the carrot companies dangle to make you work harder, usually sized more like a baby carrot than a normal one.
The act of stepping into the middle of a conflict to resolve differences, ideally before lawyers get involved or someone updates their LinkedIn status to "It's complicated." Professional mediators facilitate settlements by getting both sides to actually listen to each other—a skill apparently so rare it requires certification. It's diplomacy with a process, and yes, someone's getting paid for it.
The systematic observation and tracking of employees' activities, performance, or communications, ostensibly for productivity and security purposes. Modern monitoring ranges from benign time-tracking to dystopian keystroke logging and AI-powered webcam analysis. It's either "accountability" or "Big Brother" depending on which side of the surveillance you're on.
The corporate practice of pairing a clueless newcomer with someone who has survived long enough to accumulate wisdom, war stories, and a healthy dose of cynicism. Think of it as knowledge transfer meets therapy session, where the mentor shares everything from technical skills to which meetings are safe to skip. It's networking disguised as personal development.
To play referee between feuding parties without the whistle, attempting to negotiate peace through diplomacy rather than letting them duke it out in court or the parking lot. Mediators are the Switzerland of conflict resolution—neutral, patient, and hoping both sides can adult their way to a settlement. It's counseling meets diplomacy meets "can we all just get along?"