Cui bono: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{tag|Latin}} for “who benefits?”. When you’re not sure about a negotiation position, ask yourself this — and remember that whoever it is, it isn’t you. {{c|egg}}")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{tag|Latin}} for “who benefits?”. When you’re not sure about a negotiation position, ask yourself this — and remember that whoever it is, it isn’t you.
{{tag|Latin}} for “who benefits?”. When you’re not sure about a negotiation position, ask yourself this — but remember that whoever it is, it isn’t you.
 
And when you come to send that [[email]], to-all, perhaps where you say thanks — or, God forfend, [[thx]] — for a colleague’s reply to the most arcane topic, and as your finger hovers over the “send” button, take a moment to scan the distribution list and ask yourself, [[cui bono]]? Does the cc line stretch to the horizon? Will these people care? Do they need to know? Will their professional day be, somehow, enriched?
 
If not — even if you’re not quite sure — strike them from the list and smile, for the answer to your question now — ''[[cui bono]]?'' — is ''we all will''.
 


{{c|egg}}
{{c|egg}}

Revision as of 15:56, 7 October 2016

Latin for “who benefits?”. When you’re not sure about a negotiation position, ask yourself this — but remember that whoever it is, it isn’t you.

And when you come to send that email, to-all, perhaps where you say thanks — or, God forfend, thx — for a colleague’s reply to the most arcane topic, and as your finger hovers over the “send” button, take a moment to scan the distribution list and ask yourself, cui bono? Does the cc line stretch to the horizon? Will these people care? Do they need to know? Will their professional day be, somehow, enriched?

If not — even if you’re not quite sure — strike them from the list and smile, for the answer to your question now — cui bono? — is we all will.