Didn't they have a guy busted for embezzlement several years back?AJ wrote:Anyone ever been "strongly advised" to contribute to the United Way by their company?
The last one I worked for advertised it a lot, and my boss once showed me a letter to him from the company saying what percentage of his paycheck they thought he should have direct deposited to the UW. It was strongly worded to, a " you sure don't have to, but you better"
Corporate Speak
- ghostrunner
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Re: Corporate Speak
- Radbird
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Re: Corporate Speak
Actually, my company is pretty good about that. All they track are responses, which include those who check the "do not wish to contribute" box. Individual decisions are not visible to the employee's management chain.
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Spider John
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Re: Corporate Speak
The word "problem" is a negative word which is not to be used. "Opportunity" is the corporate speak word for " Hey, I screwed up (again) and dropped the ball, so I need you to jump through hoops to cover for me" (again).
I had customer who uses this word on a regular basis to have a flat tire on his car the other day and was late for work. It was all I could do not to ask him about the "opportunity" he had on his left front that morning.
I had customer who uses this word on a regular basis to have a flat tire on his car the other day and was late for work. It was all I could do not to ask him about the "opportunity" he had on his left front that morning.
- clevername
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Re: Corporate Speak
it was an opportunity to work on his lugnut skills while cursing wildly.
Not all opportunities are rainbows and lollipops.
Not all opportunities are rainbows and lollipops.
- lukethedrifter
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Re: Corporate Speak
My pops, as a corporate HR/Personnel guy, was the company man who strongarmed employees into contributing to United Way so they would have 100% contributions. In my job, guys laugh when they talk about charitable contributions. I bet we don't get 20%.AJ wrote:Anyone ever been "strongly advised" to contribute to the United Way by their company?
The last one I worked for advertised it a lot, and my boss once showed me a letter to him from the company saying what percentage of his paycheck they thought he should have direct deposited to the UW. It was strongly worded to, a " you sure don't have to, but you better"
Online
- Popeye_Card
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Re: Corporate Speak
Even worse than being asked to donate to United Way is being asked to contribute to political action committees. Especially when your company's general politics do not align with your personal politics.
- G. Keenan
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Re: Corporate Speak
This speak happens everywhere. Last year I worked for a graduate program at a university and during the prep for the big visit weekend, when all the prospective students come, we were instructed that if a student asked a question to which the answer was "no," we were to respond with, "actually....." and then proceed to tell them why they couldn't get what they wanted from this program.
A prominent philosophy professor gave me these instructions.
A prominent philosophy professor gave me these instructions.
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Re: Corporate Speak
We're sort of hedging on semantics, but I view that as falling under good social skills more than anything else.G. Keenan wrote:This speak happens everywhere. Last year I worked for a graduate program at a university and during the prep for the big visit weekend, when all the prospective students come, we were instructed that if a student asked a question to which the answer was "no," we were to respond with, "actually....." and then proceed to tell them why they couldn't get what they wanted from this program.
A prominent philosophy professor gave me these instructions.
Nobody likes to hear "no".
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Arthur Dent
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Re: Corporate Speak
Yeah, that's not really corporate speak. It's more like marketing speak. And, of course, there's also academic speak...JL21 wrote:We're sort of hedging on semantics, but I view that as falling under good social skills more than anything else.G. Keenan wrote:This speak happens everywhere. Last year I worked for a graduate program at a university and during the prep for the big visit weekend, when all the prospective students come, we were instructed that if a student asked a question to which the answer was "no," we were to respond with, "actually....." and then proceed to tell them why they couldn't get what they wanted from this program.
A prominent philosophy professor gave me these instructions.
Nobody likes to hear "no".
Going forward, I suggest you take an action item to recast your priorities so as to ensure that your GRB deliverables meet the quality metrics set forth in our mission statement.
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TimeForGuinness
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Re: Corporate Speak
...all of the sudden this board is starting to stress me out a bit...Arthur Dent wrote:Going forward, I suggest you take an action item to recast your priorities so as to ensure that your GRB deliverables meet the quality metrics set forth in our mission statement.


