Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Salon
Salon
Lifestyle
Jake Rossen

The 10 most hated business buzzwords

Business people have a meeting in a tech start-up office Getty Images/Compassionate Eye Foundation/Gary Burchell

If you've ever tried to give "110 percent" to a task, chances are you've worked in an office. In the workplace, employees and supervisors tend to speak a distinctive kind of corporate jargon that can sound like a lot while meaning very little. These buzzwords can appear in emails, in meetings, and in conversations.

Recently, language learning site Preply.com surveyed more than 1,500 Americans who worked in an office setting either in-person or remotely to find out which words and phrases most rankled them. See if you agree.

1. New Normal

The phrase, which typically tasks the listener with coming to grips with an unpleasant new reality, topped the list. 43% of respondents declared it their least-liked term in a business setting.

2. Culture

Specifically, company culture, which usually denotes a company M.O. or motto employees are expected to adhere to.

3. Circle Back

Revisiting a topic you probably didn't want to address in the first place makes this phrase unwelcome in the workspace.

4. Boots on the Ground

Military lingo for putting people on a task is an eye-roller for many.

5. Give 110 Percent

It's mathematically impossible. Everyone knows it. People use it anyway.

6. Low-Hanging Fruit

Aspire to achieve an easy objective? You're reaching far below your capabilities.

7. Win-Win

When something has no obvious downside, it's a win all the way around.

8. Move the Needle

When you want to make progress or create enthusiasm, you probably don't need to be using this tired phrase in the process.

9. Growth Hacking

Setting new goals doesn't necessarily need to involve invoking any kind of "hacking" reference.

10. Think Outside the Box

Thinking outside the box would require you not to use the phrase "think outside the box."

Preply.com found that respondents didn't particularly mind "at the end of the day," "table this," or "game changer" when it came to tired clichés. Be assured the website gave 110% in tabulating these results. For more buzzword intel, circle back to Preply's site.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.