Thursday, November 26, 2015

Top Trending Business Buzzwords for Global English in 2015



The World of Business as Reflected in English Language Buzzwords, Second Edition
Austin, Texas, June 17, 2015– The Global Language Monitor has announced the Top Business Buzzwords of the Year, for Global English, the world’s pre-eminent language of commerce.
“It is often noted that the world of business includes its own specialized vocabularly, and this can certainly be found in the English language, the business language of the planet,” said Paul JJ Payack, President and Chief Word Analyst of the Global Language Monitor.  “The Top Trending Business Buzzwords of 2015 represent some six continents, which continues to confirm the ever-expanding nature of the English language. This is the second annual ranking,”
​GLM’s Word of the Year and Business Buzzwords of the Year rankings are based upon actual word usage throughout the English-speaking world, which now numbers more than 1.83 billion people. To qualify for these lists, the words, names, and phrases must be found globally, have a minimum of 25,000 citations. and the requisite ‘depth’ and ‘breadth’ of usage. Depth is here defined as appearing in various forms of media; breadth that they must appear world-over, not limited to a particular profession or social group or geography.
Girl-with-Big-Eyes-Reading
Top 50 Business Buzzwords
Rank, Previous Rank, Change, Business Buzzword, Comment
2015       2013       Change Business Buzzword           Comment
1              1              0              Content  — Far and away the No. 1 Business Buzzword leader
2              37           35           Net-Net – Consider a sportswriter for the Brooklyn Nets basketball team: “The net-net for the Nets was the netting of the final shot.”
3              10           7              Big Data — Soon Human Knowledge will be doubling every second. ’Big’ does not begin to describe what’s coming at us.
4              19           15           At-the-end-of-the-day — More likely the end of the quarter or fiscal year
5              2              -3            Social Media — Reality: Social media impacts less than 15% of the Web
6              15           9              Offline — ‘I’ll be offline’. The statement is meaningless unless one includes cell phones, tablets, smarty TVs, not to mention all atomic clocks.
7              41           34           Face time– Before it was a product, it was a meeting with a C-Level executive.
8              9              1              Ping — High tech lingo seeping into the mainstream; now it means ‘get back to you’. Originally, a tool to send message packets to a network address to measure the time & quality of the response.
9              44           35           Rock-and-a-hard-place — A supposedly intractable situation though it usually gets back on track (Our ‘between Iraq and a hard place’ is being replaced because of the on-going political situation}
10           20           10           Win-Win Much — more positive than tie-tie or lose-lose
11           35           24           As if it was — Used some four times more than the correct, ‘as if it were’. You know, conditional voice.
12           7              -5            Utilize (rather than use) — Please deflate the diction and utilize the word ‘use’
13           5              -8            Literally  — Principally used in non-literal situation, e.g., “Literally, an explosion of laughter”.
14           11           -3            Any noun used as a verb — To concept. To ballpark, and the like ….
15           6              -9            Guru — Someone moderately skilled in a subject or particular field (cf. ‘rocket scientist’ or ‘brain surgeon’).
16           42           26           Re-purpose — Finding a new use for an old ‘solution. Unfortunately anything thing can be re-purposed, including your job (or yourself).
17           8              -9            Robust — Applies to oh-so-many products: software, tablets (computer and otherwise), coffee, perfume, mileage, and hundreds of others
18           38           20           Value-add — P+E+VA, where Product (is P) + Enhancement (is Ε ), and Value add (is VA)
19           4              -15          Transparency — Remains a goal far from corporate reality; perhaps a handy scale would be 1} Opaque, 2} Translucent, 3) Transparent.
20           12           -8            Seamless — Seldom actually seamless (Cf. Obamacare website), often merely ‘seemless’ or meaningless
21           3              -18          Sustainability — No. 1 Word in 2007; have been rising in BizBuzz every year
22           51           29           Hashtag — The number-sign and pound- sign grows more powerful every day.
23           16           -7            Bandwidth — Measurement of electronic communications devices to send and receive information with upper and lower limits
24           40           16           Glass is half-full — Used nine times more that glass is half empty …
25           22           -3            Pro-active — Evidently better than amateur-active
26           46           20           Quick-and-dirty — Cited tens of thousands of times; we prefer ‘quick-and-clean’
27           18           -9            Synergy — The interaction of two efforts that result in a greater return than the sum of the two
28           14           -14          The Cloud — Everything (and every one) now apparently ‘lives in the cloud’ though networking clouds pre-date the web by a decade or two
29           36           7              In the Cloud — Yes, dwelling within the Cloud merits a special mention.
30           21           -9            Game changer — A step way below a paradigm-shift but still usually an exaggeration nonetheless.
31           48           17           Touch base — Another baseball allusion: if you don’t actually touch the base you are ‘called out’. Cf Cricket allusions, such as using ‘sticky wicket ‘ for a quandary.
32           13           -19          Moving Forward — From the results of those countless ‘moving forwards’, moving sideways might be more appropriate
33           23           -10          Rock Star — What’s the hierarchy among Guru, Rocket Scientist, Brain Surgeon, and Rock Star?
34           39           5              Future proof — In reality an impossible feat because it assumes you are cognizant of future events; in Marketing, just another day of concepting.
35           47           12           Push the envelope — A phrase few actually understand; Originally a descriptor of breaking through the sound barrier by X-Series Test Pilots (e.g., X-15).
36           33           -3            Ballpark — Another name for a ‘guesstimate’ (another baseball allusion).
37           31           -6            Multi-task — Swapping in and out of tasks quickly is the key to multi-tasking not doing many things as once which actually decreases productivity (as imagined by Dave Nelson and other tech industries leaders in the 1970s).
38           30           -8            110% — We believe it’s time to synchronize the exertion scale. As a hiring manager, how do you compare 110% from an Ivy school with an exertion level of 130% from the Big Ten?
39           26           -13          Resonate — Produce or be filled with a deep, full, reverberating sound, belief or emotion
40           29           -11          Deliverable — An output, product, result, or outcome; a term of great flexibility.
41           27           -14          Monetize — The attempt to transmute Internet lead into gold.
42           34           -8            Flounder                — A ship might ‘founder’ along New England’s rocky coastline. Over time the act of foundering became collated with flounder the fish. Your grasp of the language is telegraphed by this confusion.
43           32           -11          Rocket science –One step up (or down) from a guru; equivalent to a Brain surgeon).
44           17           -27          New paradigm == Revolutionary new ideas that change the then-existing worldview; think Copernicus, think Newton, think Einstein, most definitely not your next product.
45           28           -17          Double Down — To double an investment in an already risky proposition.
46           43           -3            Brain surgery — One step up (or down) from a guru; equivalent to a Rocket Scientist.
47           45           -2            Bleeding edge — Leading edge of the leading edge (top ten per cent).
48           50           2              Low-hanging fruit — Easy pickin’s for the sales force; unfortunately, obsolete since 2008
49           24           -25          30,000 foot level — Let’s decide if we are viewing the topic from the 30,000-, 40,000-, or 100,000 foot level. Airlines typically fly at a 35,000 foot cruise level
50           49           -1            Herding cats — Used in high tech circles for several decades regarding controlling headstrong engineers, a seemingly impossible task.
51           25           -26          Out-of-the-Box (experience) — OOBE is evermore important to the marketing of consumer electronic devices.
This study is updated from earlier in the year.

Global Language Monitor
http://www.languagemonitor.com/category/business-buzzwords/

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Hedy Lamarr: Woman Inventor

Hedy Lamarr

Invention of Spread Spectrum Technology

Hedy Lamarr
Although better known for her Silver Screen exploits, Austrian actress Hedy Lamarr (born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler) also became a pioneer in the field of wireless communications following her emigration to the United States. The international beauty icon, along with co-inventor George Anthiel, developed a "Secret Communications System" to help combat the Nazis in World War II. By manipulating radio frequencies at irregular intervals between transmission and reception, the invention formed an unbreakable code to prevent classified messages from being intercepted by enemy personnel.
Lamarr and Anthiel received a patent in 1941, but the enormous significance of their invention was not realized until decades later. It was first implemented on naval ships during the Cuban Missile Crisis and subsequently emerged in numerous military applications. But most importantly, the "spread spectrum" technology that Lamarr helped to invent would galvanize the digital communications boom, forming the technical backbone that makes cellular phones, fax machines and other wireless operations possible.
As is the case with many of the famous women inventors, Lamarr received very little recognition of her innovative talent at the time, but recently she has been showered with praise for her groundbreaking invention. In 1997, she and George Anthiel were honored with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) Pioneer Award. And later in the same year, Lamarr became the first female recipient of the BULBIE™ Gnass Spirit of Achievement Award, a prestigious lifetime accomplishment prize for inventors that is dubbed "The Oscar™ of Inventing."
Proving she was much more than just another pretty face, Lamarr shattered stereotypes and earned a place among the 20th century's most important women inventors. She truly was a visionary whose technological acumen was far ahead of its time.
For more information on inventor Hedy Lamarr, refer to:

http://www.women-inventors.com/Hedy-Lammar.asp