Buzzwords
come and go in the business world (is “buzzword” one of them, destined to be
supplanted, or already archaic?) But
they’re not just casual expressions. When you think about it, there’s real intent
behind them.
One
of the popular words currently is “drive.” If you’re marketing or blogging or
communicating in some form and your stuff isn’t driving something, you’d better
rethink you plan, because everyone else’s is.
It's the stylish new way, for now, of saying that something you're doing that used to cause an event to happen or motivate people to do something now drives those things. It's muscular.
It's also pretty much all-purpose. You can drive anything from web site readership to a whole marketing campaign.
The
most evocative use of the word, for me, is that of “driving people to a web
page.” It conjures those old Cecil B. DeMille movie epics -- “Cast Of Thousands!” -- where
dark-haired men in miniskirts and jeweled tunics coax groups of ragged people to build pyramids, usually with encouragement from whips.
“Curating” is another popular word (“curate” twisted into a verb. You can tell it didn’t start out in life that way when you go to a traditional dictionary. A “curator” is defined as one who has charge of or is a guardian for some one or thing. It ain’t “one who curates.”)
Then
there’s “pivot.” Where people used to change what they were doing to doing
something else, now they pivot. For large organizations, changing course can be like turning an aircraft carrier. “Pivot,” then, is meant to imply that the change is instant, a clean break with what went before. The
organization has turned on a dime.
“Curating” is another popular word (“curate” twisted into a verb. You can tell it didn’t start out in life that way when you go to a traditional dictionary. A “curator” is defined as one who has charge of or is a guardian for some one or thing. It ain’t “one who curates.”)
In the online world it's aggregating (another stylish word) stuff other people have written and using it for your own purposes. Think of it as an even more sincere form of flattery than imitation: poaching.
Full
disclosure/confession: I’ve done it. Years ago I worked in a small advertising agency,
and we published an external newsletter (it would be a “blog” today) for which
I swiped (“curated”) articles from more respected publications and reviewed
them. I wish I had known to call it curating back then; it sounds so
dignified.