this post was submitted on 06 Mar 2026
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Okay just for fun, I wanted to take a stab at trying to understand some of the examples mentioned in the article.
We're gonna do a really good job of making passwords (or degrees?) that last a lifecycle.
By convincing people we can do our jobs well, we're gonna prove we're really good at listening.
uhhh okay this is tough. how about:
Pepsi is known for waves (maybe lmao? i genuinely don't know what perimeter oscillations is trying to say). We want to make people feel like buying Pepsi isn't just buying something but is an invitation.
oh this actually isn't that hard: "Corporate cut our budget."
LOL that one's a mess.
"Perimeter oscillations" sounds to me like a way to describe shifts in consumer opinions and preferences. A really dumb way. But who knows? Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of marketing execs?
I get the same feeling from corpo-speak as I get from bad poetry. Like the author runs all their ideas through a few rounds of mutations, out of fear of being seen as simple. The goal is not to be understood, but to make yourself harder to criticize.