As Jargon Goes — So Goes Cred. Say What?

Jargon, buzzwords and meaningless expressions

Jargon, buzzwords and meaningless expressions (Photo credit: Gavin Llewellyn)

David Carr and AO Scott used to do a series of trenchant videos at the NY Times.  They called the series The Sweet Spot. Back on July 19, 2013 the subject was jargon. In the video Scott reads from a Carr tech article: ” “You can’t scale your way out of a paradym shift.”  Come again?

David doesn’t try to wiggle out of it.  He explains: “In the tech world writers become prisoners of their source base. We want them to think we’re smart.”  If you can’t use the jargon of your field of interest, you have no credibility in that field. Jargon can also flip over into the use of euphemisms. As an example a Sweet Spot guest cites Google.  When Google decided to send a product called Google Reader down the tubes, they softened the message by saying they were “sunsetting” the product. The term caught on, and is now definitely in the jarg0n of the business world.

In the US Army of today, if you want to talk about anti-personnel mines and artillery shells buried in roads in Afghanistan and Iraq you shorten it down and pretty it up a little by referring to these deadly weapons as IED (Improvised Explosive Devices).  In fact military lingo is littered with acronyms that only the “natives” understand. Carr and Scott talk about outsiders using jargon as “going native”.  It can be bewildering to the uninitiated.  But it’s not all bad. Jargon can be a valuable shortcut to very specific references to the veterans of a field of endeavor.

In the blogging world, you quickly learn to talk in terms of “landing pages”, “posts”, “widgets”, “plugins”, and “Sharing”.  It’s part of earning your chops.

What do you think about jargon? Should we do away with it?

Thanks for stopping by. Please comment below or post this entry on your favorite social media website.

Sign-up via the email or RSS option in the sidebar to receive MaineLarryCrane’s latest posts. You can also follow MaineLarryCrane via the various social media platforms listed on this website. 

Updated: June 26, 2014 — 5:47 pm

1 Comment

  1. I don’t think we could get rid of jargon even if we wanted to. It’s a part of language, and the very act of suppressing it would encourage it to grow all the more so. Plus it weeds out those that know what they are talking about and those that either don’t or are trying really hard.

    I’d love to syndicate this on The Masquerade Crew. If interested, please see the following link.

    http://masqueradecrew.blogspot.com/2013/11/would-you-like-us-to-syndicate-post-of.html

Comments are closed.