Buzzword

A buzzword is a word or phrase that becomes very popular for a period of time. Buzzwords often derive from technical terms yet often have much of the original technical meaning removed, being simply used to impress others, although such "buzzwords" may still have the full meaning when used in certain technical contexts.[1][2] Buzzwords often originate in jargon, acronyms, or neologisms.[3] Business speech is particularly vulnerable to buzzwords. Examples of overworked business buzzwords include synergy, vertical, dynamic, cyber and strategy; a common buzzword phrase is "think outside the box".[4]

It has been stated that businesses could not operate without buzzwords as they are shorthands or internal shortcuts that make perfect sense to people informed of the context.[5] However, a useful buzzword can become co-opted into general popular speech and lose its usefulness. According to management professor Robert Kreitner, "Buzzwords are the literary equivalent of Gresham's Law. They will drive out good ideas."[6] Buzzwords can also be seen in business as a way to make people feel like they are all on the same plain. As most workplaces use a specialised jargon, which could be argued are another form of “buzzwords”, it allows quicker communication. Indeed, many new hires feel more like “part of the team” the quicker they learn the buzzwords of their new workplace. Buzzwords permeate so much in our working lives that many of us don’t even realise that we are using them. The vice president of CSC Index, Rich DeVane, notes that buzzwords describe not only a trend, but also what can be considered a “ticket of entry” with regards to being considered as a successful organisation – “What people find tiresome is each consulting firms attempt to put a different spin on it. That’s what gives bad information”.[7]

Buzzwords also feature prominently in politics, where they can result in a process which "privileges rhetoric over reality, producing policies that are 'operationalized' first and only 'conceptualized' at a later date". The resulting political speech is known for "eschewing reasoned debate (as characterized by the use of evidence and structured argument), instead employing language exclusively for the purposes of control and manipulation".[8]

The term buzz word was first used in 1946 as student slang.[9]

Definition

“The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines a buzzword (choosing to hyphenate the term as a buzz-word) as a slogan; or as a fashionable piece of jargon”. (page 10, google book) Buzzwords do not just appear, they are created by a group of people working within a business as a means to generate hype. (Collins, 2000). Buzzwords are most closely associated with manager and have become the vocabulary of what is known as “management speak”. What this can mean is that when a manager uses said buzzword, most other people don’t hear the meaning, and instead just see it as a buzzword. However it has been said that buzzwords are almost a “necessary evil” of management, as a means of a ways to inspire their team, but also stroke their own egos (Cluley, 2013). With that being said, a buzzword is also not necessarily a bad thing, as many disciplines use quite often and quite well with new terms which can be called buzzwords. These can also cross over into pop culture and indeed even into everyday life (Collins, 2000). With media channels now operating through many mediums, such as television, radio, print and increasingly digital (especially with the rise of social media), a “buzzword” can catch on and rapidly be adapted through the world.

Origin

The origin of buzzwords can be seen in Hallgren & Weiss (1946) as coming from business students studying at Harvard University as a way to help them gain better results from their studies. Such language terms were collated and then became what we know today as “buzzwords”. During the early years of buzzwords, buzzwords were used by students as a means to enable them to quickly recall items of importance. As an example, “If his analysis does not highlight the most important problems he has ‘poor focus’, and if he fails to emphasize important recommendations he will be accused of ‘tinkering’. If the sequence for the ‘implementation’ of the recommendations is not good it is a matter if ‘poor timing’. To succeed, the student must ‘get on top of the problem’. He must ‘hit the problem’ and not ‘shadow box’. If he cannot do these things he might just as well ‘turn in his suit’” (Hallgren & Weiss, 1946, pg 263). In this one quote alone we can see how the student has used many different buzzwords to describe the situation that they are in, and how this might effect a moment in their everyday life. From studying these business students, Hallgren & Weiss (1946) noticed that business students could speak with apparent authority. It also seemed as if using the right buzzword was more important than what the student came up with as an answer. Here we can see how buzzwords have such a strong impact on business culture and why they are so commonly used in business speak.

In popular culture

Jon Keegan of the Wall Street Journal has published a Business Buzzwords Generator, which allows readers to use a randomizer to assemble "meaningless business phrases using overused business buzzwords" - for example, "This product will incentivize Big Data and demonstrate innovative performance in the playing field.”[10]

Forbes hosts an annual "Jargon Madness" game, in which 32 of "corporate America’s most insufferable expressions" are played off against each other in a bracketed, bastketball-style tournament to determine the buzzword of the year.[11]

LinkedIn publishes an annual list of buzzwords to avoid in creating résumés - "trite, empty words that may sound good to your ear but say almost nothing". The 2014 list: motivated, passionate, creative, driven, extensive experience, responsible, strategic, track record, organizational, and expert.[12]

Sometimes when people are approaching a meeting where they expect the presenters to use many buzzwords, they will prepare a game of Buzzword bingo, where players score points each time a particular buzzword is used.[13]

Patch Products has published a board game called Buzz Word.[14]

The "Weird Al" Yankovic album Mandatory Fun contains the song "Mission Statement," which is a long list of essentially meaningless buzzwords. [15]

See also

Footnotes

  1. "Buzzword". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  2. Compare: "buzzword n. orig. and chiefly U.S. a keyword; a catchword or expression currently fashionable; a term used more to impress than to inform, esp. a technical or jargon term." "buzz". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2005. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. Grammar.About.com - definition of buzzword
  4. Compare: Kirwan, Khelan (January 6, 2015). "Small Business Show - The Language of Business". The Irish Examiner. Retrieved 2015-09-06. So when you’re pitching new ideas to your business team here are some things to avoid: [...] Think Outside the Box and other annoying phrases[.] Oh my word how this phrase finds itself everywhere, so much so that it has lost its glow and become more of an irritancy than a motivational call for new thinking.
  5. Ettorre, Barbara (September 1997). "What's the Next Business Buzzword?". Management Review 86 (8). Retrieved 2015-09-06. How can corporate America operate without buzzwords? They will be with us always because business organizations are a ready market for them. [...] These are internal short-cuts. To outsiders, they might be little understood, but to everyone in the organization, they make perfect sense.
  6. Ettorre, Barbara (September 1997). "What's the Next Business Buzzword?". Management Review 86 (8). Retrieved 2015-09-06. Robert Kreitner, senior lecturer and professor of management at Arizona State University, equates buzzwords with the economic theory holding that bad money drives out good money. 'Buzzwords are the literary equivalent of Gresham's Law,' Kreitner says. 'They will drive out good ideas[...].'
  7. • Ettore, B. (1997, September). What’s the next business buzzword? Management Review, 33-35. Retrieved from: http://search.proquest.com/docview/206683339?pq-origsite=gscholar
  8. Loughlin, Michael (May 2002). "On the buzzword approach to policy formation". Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 8 (2): 229–242. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2753.2002.00361.x.
  9. Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper, Historian.
  10. "Business Buzzwords Generator". Wall Street Journal:Projects. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  11. Nelson, Brett (February 5, 2013). "Business Jargon Bracketology: Which Annoying Corporate Buzzword, Cliché Or Euphemism Will Win Forbes' NCAA-Style Tourney? Vote Now!". Forbes. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  12. Adams, Susan (January 21, 2015). "Ten Buzzwords To Cut From Your LinkedIn Profile In 2015". Forbes. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  13. Belling, Larry (2000). "Buzzword Bingo". Retrieved 5 November 2009.
  14. "Buzz Word". Patch Products, Inc. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  15. "'Weird Al' Yankovic Announces His 'Mission Statement' in Final Video". billboard.com. Retrieved 2015-05-30.

Further reading

External links

Look up buzzword or buzz-phrase in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.


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