The words and phrases journalists love to hate

Journalists hate jargon – and so do audiences for that matter.

It makes quotes and sound bites unusable and the terms often mean different things to different people, causing confusion and a lack of clarity. So, unsurprisingly, jargon is something we urge participants on our media training courses to avoid.

One of our journalist friends, who works on a national newspaper recently revealed that he keeps a record of, in his opinion, the most annoying phrases he’s heard PRs and interviewees say when talking to him.

And he has kindly agreed to let us share it in this blog.

So here, in no particular order, are the words and phrases to use at your peril:

 

Platform (other than in a railway or theatre)

Boutique (other than a clothing outlet – or just possible a small posh hotel)

Landscape (examples include ‘the giving landscape’)

Best practice approach (especially when practice is misspelt)

Root and branch (other than for tree surgeons)

Passion / passionate (other than for erotic fiction)

Urban (other than for town planning purposes – jargon phrases include ‘urban grazing’)

Reboot (other than for IT systems)

Pathway (Other than for pedestrian routes)

Lift the lid on (other than for opening Tupperware)

To nail something (other than in DIY)

Flagship (other than in a naval context)

Ethical (if used to refer to food, clothing and expensive holidays)

Connecting (when the word speak or talk would do)

Artisan (unless you are speaking French)

Action (as verb)

Landmark (other than for actual landmarks and, very occasionally, court cases)

Iconic

Rolling out

Gamechanging / gamechanger

Going forward

Outcomes

Cascading

Practitioners

Assets-based approach

Outside the box

Leveraging

Call time on

Award winning

Ground-breaking

Quirky

Real change / real improvement / real difference

Collaborative working

High end

Keynote

Step-change

Radical

Empowering

Facilitating

Robust

New ways of working

Reaching out

Circle back

Expedite your request

Raise awareness

Digital native

Future gazing

Very unique

Millenials

 

And here are a few sentences you may want to avoid if you want to maintain good relationships with journalists:

“Here is some exciting news to brighten up this rainy day.”

“Can you just put everything you have said to me in an email.”

“Just a quick chase.”

 

As ever, we would love to hear your views. Let us know in the comments box below what words and phrases you think should be added to this list.

 

Media First are media and communications training specialists with over 30 years of experience. We have a team of trainers, each with decades of experience working as journalists, presenters, communications coaches and media trainers.

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