back at work, you are not alone. a new survey finds 63% of professionals find office lingo like that off-putting. some terms are worse than others, but researchers say these are the top ten to avoid. synergy, outside the box, take ownership, value added, reach out, going forward, proactive, take away, and kennedy, make it happen. oh, let s make it happen right now. it s funny, i m looking at the words and think a lot of the people who hate the words are the ones quiet quitting, and just don t like work. because you know, some of them are annoying, like synergy, let s get some synergy, and think outside the box. and circle back, i think about jen psaki, at msnbc, zip it, zip it. i find sometimes i get annoyed with industry lingo, copy, but used case to me some tech term, oh, so annoying.
a touch down zone. but here, you had a situation where that pilot probably realized when he hit the ground he was not in the right airport and had a short amount of time. he probably went to max brakes right away. i am surprised they didn t blow a tire. they were shifted forward in the seat and seems like he came in hot i guess to use the industry lingo. and you say he was using visual flight rules. is that what most pilots use? if they have clear weather absolutely. you could probably see the airline or fa a saying you need to use all technology you have available. i talked to a former southwest pilot and he told me they are instructed to use navigation devices when they make the
i wouldn t say nobody. that s not fair. but less than we expected. radio is in good shape. in the last several years, notwithstanding iphone and pandora and all the other things we can listen to, actual a.m./f.m. listening is up. some 242 million people listen to radio each other. a.m./f.m. radio is still good. what seems to be flat lining is this i m right, you re right, i talk you listen radio. and i think it will always be a reliable five share act to use the industry lingo. but what that means is that 95% of listeners are interested in something else. look what we ve seen in recent years with the surging popularity of public radio. whose listeners, many of them baby boomers, disenchanted with a lock on commercial radio have