Business jargon, business clichés, corporate speak….these terms refer to phrases we all hear in the office every day that are overused and annoying, and one recent survey has finally confirmed what many of us already know.
New research, conducted by OnePoll in conjunction with Jive Communications, has pinpointed the top 40 phrases used in the workplace that are totally irritating. The findings, according to reports, were compiled after the examination of communication behaviors of 2,000 American workers. If you’ve constantly been told to “think outside the box,” or have ever been accused of “throwing [someone] under the bus,” your secret bathroom complaint sessions have now been validated by research.
Several of the phrases are quite old-school and
might remind you of things a nagging grandmother or baby boomer from the typewriter-filled offices of yesteryear might say, so it’s quite interesting to see that these are still communication mainstays wreaking havoc on professionals’ nerves. “Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched” made it to No. 6, “barking up the wrong tree” landed at No. 16, and “best thing since sliced bread,” got No. 27 on the list.Other often-used, seemingly relevant and fitting phrases like “Give it 110 percent” (at the top spot) and “win-win situation” (at No. 10) might leave you wondering, “Well, what else am I supposed to say?”
Experts recommend expanding your vocabulary and tailoring your communications to be more personable in the workplace. The Johnson O’Connor Research Foundation offers suggestions for expansion of vocabulary including reading more books and using a dictionary and vocabulary workbook to get in the habit of using different words and phrases correctly.
Also, take a few cues from writers, who are often tasked with being super-conscious of overusing common words and clichés. UNC’s The Writing Center offers writing tips that can surely be used by professionals in their verbal on-the-job conversations, including: “Stop and think about what you’re trying to say. What do you really mean? Say your answer out loud and then write it down. List the main ideas that you want to convey in each sentence, and then list synonyms of each idea underneath. Pull out a thesaurus if necessary. This method leaves you with a list of many words, and you can pick the most fitting combination.”
40 Examples of The Most Annoying Business Jargon
Give 110 percent
%CODE15%
Think outside the box
%CODE16%
Hammer it out
%CODE17%
Heavy lifting
%CODE18%
Throw them under the bus
%CODE19%
Don’t count your chickens before they’ve hatched
%CODE20%
Pushing the envelope
%CODE21%
Let the cat out of the bag
%CODE22%
Let’s circle back
%CODE23%
Win-win situation
%CODE24%
Blue-sky thinking
%CODE25%
Boil the ocean
%CODE26%
Synergy
%CODE27%
Low-hanging fruit
%CODE28%
Take it to the next level
%CODE29%
Barking up the wrong tree
%CODE30%
Going forward
%CODE31%
Let’s ballpark this
%CODE32%
Run this up the flagpole
%CODE33%
Back to square one
%CODE34%
There’s no I in team
%CODE35%
Here are even more business clichés that you may want to avoid in order to come across as a truly original thinker and speaker:
Back to the drawing board
Paradigm shift
Elephant in the room
Raise the bar
Drill down
Best thing since sliced bread
Deep dive
Skin in the game
Reach out
Touch base
Play hardball
Don’t reinvent the wheel
Kept in the loop
The bottom line
Down the road
I’ll loop you in
Hit the nail on the head
ASAP
Team player