Period of joinder: Difference between revisions

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{{anat|confcall}}
{{anat|confcall}}
On an [[industry call]], the [[period of joinder]] is the twenty minutes the chairperson allows at the start, right after saying “let’s give it a couple of minutes for folks to join”, in the desperate hope that ''someone'' will join a dreary call with the sainted subject of collating industry feedback to a half-baked regulatory proposal no-one understands, believes will ever happen, or cares about, in which you just know the dude from [[Goldman]] is going to drone on for 40 minutes pursuing his own particular, tangential, agenda.
On an [[industry call]], the [[period of joinder]] is the twenty minutes the chairperson allows at the start, right after saying “let’s give it a couple of minutes for folks to join”, in the desperate hope that ''someone'' will join a dreary call with the sainted subject of collating industry feedback to a half-baked regulatory proposal no-one understands, believes will ever happen, or cares about, except for one dude from [[Goldman]], who is guaranteed to drone on for 40 minutes, pursuing his own particular, tangential, agenda.


Followed immediately by the [[roll call]] in which the chairperson's darkest fears — that ''no-one'' (except the dude from [[Goldman]]) will show — can be laid bare before the world.
Followed immediately by the [[roll call]] in which the chairperson's darkest fears — that ''no-one'' (except the dude from [[Goldman]]) will show — can be laid bare before the world.

Revision as of 16:50, 30 October 2018

Conference Call Anatomy™

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On an industry call, the period of joinder is the twenty minutes the chairperson allows at the start, right after saying “let’s give it a couple of minutes for folks to join”, in the desperate hope that someone will join a dreary call with the sainted subject of collating industry feedback to a half-baked regulatory proposal no-one understands, believes will ever happen, or cares about, except for one dude from Goldman, who is guaranteed to drone on for 40 minutes, pursuing his own particular, tangential, agenda.

Followed immediately by the roll call in which the chairperson's darkest fears — that no-one (except the dude from Goldman) will show — can be laid bare before the world.