Let’s take it offline: Difference between revisions

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1. A sure sign, in an [[all-hands conference call]] , that some ingénue has made the fatal mistake of dropping through the cloudbase of cliché and into the inconvenient world of substance and detail, a grim place of intractable ugliness that is immune to resolution by crystalline management theory. You have as much chance of persuading a management consultant to embrace the actual workings of daily life as you have persuading someone who quite likes steak to help slaughter a cow.
{{anat|confcall|}}{{d|Let’s take it offline|/lɛts teɪk ɪt ˌɒfˈlaɪn/|phr|}}


Fortunately, there’s a ready made defence. Expect a hasty plea to “[[take it offline]]” which, by tonal inflection, you might read as:
1. A sure sign, in an [[all-hands conference call]], that some ''ingénue'' has made the fatal mistake of dropping through the cloud-base of [[cliché]] into that inconvenient morass of [[Subject matter expert|substance and detail]].  
*“let’s set aside some time to [[drill down]] into detail just the two of us, sort it out, and [[circle back]] with a bit more [[granularity]] later in the day” (''benign''); or
*“ugh — let's [[kick the can down the road]] and maybe something else will intervene to mean we never have to figure out the answer to that” (''neutral''); or
*“how about you just shut your cake-hole and let the [[change management]] [[workstream]] lead run the project, counselor?” (hostile).


2. Lawyer slang for “''You'' are a total moron”.
2. (''Informal''): Business slang for “''You'' are a total moron”.


3. Lawyer slang for “''I'' am a total moron”;
3. (''Informal''): Business slang for “''I'' am a total moron”.
 
The world of substance and subject matter expertise is, for those who perpetrate conference calls on their colleages, a grim place of intractable ugliness, inhabited by dark and violent [[Morlock|morlocks]]. IT is immune to resolution by crystalline [[Management consultancy|management theory]], and therefore should not, in any circumstances, be broached on a conference call. You have as much chance of persuading a [[management consultant]] to embrace the actual workings of daily life in the organisation as you do of persuading someone who quite likes steak to help you slaughter a cow.
 
Fortunately, there’s a ready-made defence should someone make this tactical mistake. Expect a hasty plea to “[[take it offline]]” which, by tonal inflection, you might read as:
*(''benign'') “Let’s set aside some time to [[drill down]] into detail just the two of us, sort it out, and [[circle back]] with a bit more [[granularity]] later in the day”; or
*(''neutral'') “Ugh — let’s [[kick the can down the road]] and maybe something else will intervene<ref>“Such as, ooh, I don’t know, the redundancy of the clot who asked that idiotic question?”</ref> to mean we never have to figure out the answer to that”; or
*(''hostile'') “How about you just shut your cake-hole and let the [[change management]] [[workstream]] lead run the project, [[Counsel|counselor]]?”


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Latest revision as of 13:54, 8 April 2022

Conference Call Anatomy™
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Let’s take it offline
/lɛts teɪk ɪt ˌɒfˈlaɪn/ (phr.)

1. A sure sign, in an all-hands conference call, that some ingénue has made the fatal mistake of dropping through the cloud-base of cliché into that inconvenient morass of substance and detail.

2. (Informal): Business slang for “You are a total moron”.

3. (Informal): Business slang for “I am a total moron”.

The world of substance and subject matter expertise is, for those who perpetrate conference calls on their colleages, a grim place of intractable ugliness, inhabited by dark and violent morlocks. IT is immune to resolution by crystalline management theory, and therefore should not, in any circumstances, be broached on a conference call. You have as much chance of persuading a management consultant to embrace the actual workings of daily life in the organisation as you do of persuading someone who quite likes steak to help you slaughter a cow.

Fortunately, there’s a ready-made defence should someone make this tactical mistake. Expect a hasty plea to “take it offline” which, by tonal inflection, you might read as:

References

  1. “Such as, ooh, I don’t know, the redundancy of the clot who asked that idiotic question?”