Ten All New Management Terms for 2012

Ten All New Management Terms for 2012

First, it was good to see the Belgian CB data supporting our views on the Dexia unwind being the cause of the spike in the ECB MLF in mid December. Though we remain on the bullish side of the fence in general, we continue to struggle with 2012 non-predictions (it's worse than homework) so we will be taking another day off from commenting on markets that are in general (apart from eur/sek) going where we want them too.

Following our critical view of what we saw as the worst management terms of 2011, we were delighted by the general response and to find such common concern over the diabolical increase in management jargon. But why, if we know it is so dreadful, do we let it persist? We have decided that it's most definately a power game - an arms race. The holders of the newest and most convoluted terms deemed to be the more superior.

As programs to eradicate plague pests, such as the Tetse fly, involve introducing sterile bred alternatives into the system to compete, so TMM are releasing their own batch of genetically modified 2012 Management Terms into the vocabulary. Hopefully, if adopted widely enough , they will help to show how silly most existing terms are, leading to their demise. We give you -


1) "Omegal" - from the Greek letter Omega, the last letter in their alphabet. Can be used negatively "Jeff, ok, nice idea - but pretty omegal" as in "the last thing we would do". Or positively , "Ok folks, lets omegalise this thing" - Finalise or close the matter.

2) "Charge the trees" - Eco-reference together with moving forward rapidly. Bound to work. Suggested uses - "Hey we aren't going to charge the trees on that one" - "Are you suggesting we charge the trees?" - "He's the type of guy who'd charge the trees" Do feel free to make up any conotation you like whether it is references to Rhino's charging against trees to shake down ideas or to billing folks who really deserve a free service due to the morality of their work.

3) "Diodal" - Once you head off in a direction there is no turning back. "You realise that this is diodal ? You with me?" "Market research has suggested that diodal uptake is presumptuous upon addiction".

4) "Deep Sea Ten" - "I want you all to go Deep Sea Ten on this" or "Scott, 11th floor said "deep sea ten" this by Friday". Basically an idea or thought process that only the "Deep Sea Ten" global rescue vehicle from a 1960s puppet show could pull off. Of course there never really was a "Deep Sea Ten" but as proven by people who use the malapropism "no holes barred" few people challenge the origin of phrases anyway.

5) "Superstring" - Knowing the liking for misappropriating complex science into management sound bites, this one is off to a head start. It evokes joining more things together than anyone else has with normal strings. Very de-rigour in sales, management , system analysis, social networking, the lot. This one should easily catch on. "We are superstringing the network to optimise conjacent synergies". "This will superstring all your strengths and client needs". "Multidimensionalising superstrings is only one of the many applications that we can run on Data-Yuanque CRMs. "

6) "Euronation" - To have your top idea go so wrong even the ECB, IMF and world superpowers are incapable of rescuing it. "The sales budgets for 2012 are looking subject to euronation in the current time frame". Also see "euronate" - To cause cataclysmic failure . "Guys we need to euronate on XYZ's competitive offering".

7) "Lolhor" - Low on Left, High on Right. Every presentation always has to have as many of these graphs as possible. What is the use of a graph showing achievement, targets or dreams if it doesn't start "low on the left" and go "high on the right" ? "Jess, I've got some investors coming in in 30 mins could you run me off some Lolhor charts for them please?" ( Tip - If you are struggling, use cumulative returns). Of course costs should be Hollor, but psychologically no one likes a graph that goes to zero as once there, where's your job?

8) "Three Buck Whistle" - Many management terms are derived from sporting, military, parliamentary , or transport terms where the original meaning has been lost in time. "The whole nine yards" is a classic example where there is no agreed source. We suggest that "three buck whistle" could be launched on similar lines. It will never be agreed as to whether it is derived from the length of steamboat's hoot, a referee's whistle, a musician's tin whistle, or the volume of a workman's wolf-whistle (none, of course, as we just made it up) but we suggest it could easily slip into management parlance. "The Board gave that idea the three buck whistle" - "It wasn't worth a three buck whistle" - "this deal is THE three buck whistle .. {pause for effect}"

9) "Weidmann" - The opposite of reaching out. Not giving a damn and doing what you wanted to all along. "We have weidmanned the stakeholder community and pressed ahead with our original intentions". "Hi Greg, I'd just like to weidmann you on the proposal you sent over". "You wanted it in green? Can we remind you of the weidmann clause (page 87)? You are getting it in red". {Any references to current leaders of the Bundesbank are entirely intentional}

10) "Yaldistic" - Insert it as an adjective in front of a noun of importance and see if anyone ever challenges it. If they do, explain that it is a reference to a school of thought developed by Marshall and Petigrew in 1955 which has recently been further developed by the Yalding School of Management to describe a product of bandwidth ideation through out-reach. However as the latter terms have recently been discredited with the arrival of the YSM Grand Unification of Management Phraseology hypothesis. "Yaldism, yaldistic, yaldistically" are now preferred.


Please feel free to start using any of the above, see how many you can use without challenge (we would guess most) and report back as soon as you spot any of them roaming free in the wild. As ever the comments column is there for your own suggestions. Remember- "Make it up, make it work" (there's another one).
Previous
Next Post »

12 comments

Click here for comments
Amplitudeinthehouse
admin
January 10, 2012 at 6:44 PM ×

Yennish: Tell your colleagues when you and the team are in dire straits-the situation is totally beyond solutions to go "Yennish"..to keep working through the prior protocols fully knowledgeable that the laws of determinism is against you ,but put up a "show of force" in numbers into the continuing endeavor so in the hope of fractals you don't become the snowflake that dissolves into the abyss...

Central bankers are an anthropologists dream come true.

Reply
avatar
Aussie Bonds
admin
January 11, 2012 at 4:55 AM ×

A great list guys. Think superstring will take off - as should "euronate" - spat out my coffee :-)

Reply
avatar
Anonymous
admin
January 11, 2012 at 12:22 PM ×

Alas, the source of the inspired euronation is the prevalence of lolhor graphs of bond yields in Southern Europe...

Reply
avatar
January 11, 2012 at 6:35 PM ×

It's quiet around here...too quiet.

Reply
avatar
Polemic
admin
January 11, 2012 at 9:22 PM ×

Marshall.. yes. Anybody got amything to say? anyone trying to play? Mkts were positively christmasesque in their silence. Are the daytraders still trading? Have to say when news is slow folks concentrate on techs.. and the twilight models have run of the roost. Intraday price action timings today appeared to have "model" written all over them. Any humans out there?. Hellooooo. Or has everyone gone off to get proper jobs... ?

Reply
avatar
Leftback
admin
January 12, 2012 at 1:22 AM ×

When it's quiet, don't be the third guy to light a cigarette...

Reply
avatar
Anonymous
admin
January 12, 2012 at 2:26 AM ×

Bangalore'd: ..as in "Our entire middle office got Bangalore'd last Tuesday..."
the meaning, I presume, is obvious..

Reply
avatar
Anonymous
admin
January 12, 2012 at 1:58 PM ×

"Piece"

"The investment piece"

"Across the piece"

piece off!

Reply
avatar
Corey
admin
January 12, 2012 at 2:17 PM ×

I think everyone is just waiting for the non-predictions so that they can finally begin investing, yup that's definitely what it is.

Almost everything I've read so far this year tells a tale of two halves. A rough H1 as Europe gets pushed to the brink and finally responds and then clearer sailing in H2. A fine narrative, nonetheless but if it's consensus, it's unlikely. So bored of the same song already and the year hasn't even started.

Reply
avatar
January 12, 2012 at 3:16 PM ×

Mike Ashton has an interesting article about a retail method for getting exposure to inflation breakevens. What does TMM think?

http://mikeashton.wordpress.com/2012/01/11/how-to-exceed-expectations-or-at-least-keep-up/

BTW, love the blog. I read it every day. The comments are also very useful to laypeople like me. Thanks so much for the time everyone puts into this.

Reply
avatar
abee crombie
admin
January 12, 2012 at 8:21 PM ×

there are humans still day trading?? The grind up model of the equity markets kills them (me) in this environment.. very true polemic of the timing of the turns (Buy Europe am, sell the US open, grind back up)

10 year notes are building a good base for a decent move. Something doesnt fit.. 1300 S&P and <2% 10-year

internals of the stock market still pretty rotten IMHO.. waiting to short at 1350

Reply
avatar
Duncan
admin
January 12, 2012 at 9:15 PM ×

Hey 'abee crombie', sounds like you're "trying to find the corner on a bowler hat".

I can't quite recall where I came across that term, but it goes over well in conf calls across the Atlantic!

Reply
avatar