Tech Marketing Words Getting Scrutiny
http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20050116/D87LB3KG0.html

Jan 16, 1:26 PM (ET)

By ALLISON LINN

SEATTLE (AP) - High-tech companies don't release products anymore, they
provide solutions. And those solutions don't simply run a program or play a
song. Instead, they enable experiences, optimize agility or make people's
passions come alive.

Say what?

Euphemism and allegory have always been common in business - where few get
fired, but plenty get "downsized" - but some say the tongue-twisting
technology industry has gone too far.

Alan Freedman, who has been writing technology encyclopedias for 25 years,
realized things were out of hand when people started asking him to decipher
technology companies' own marketing materials - the stuff they use to entice
regular people to buy their products.

"The marketing people are so bad at hyping their products that, with all my
experience, I'll have to read and reread and reread just to figure out what
this thing does," says Freedman, founder of The Computer Language Company
Inc. in Point Pleasant, Pa.

Anyone who's worked in the technology industry has their list of pet peeves,
and "solution" is commonly a headliner.

Before the mid-1990s, if you had a problem, you needed a solution.

Now, "It's used so much in the tech industry that it's lost its meaning,"
said Tim Schellhardt, director of editorial services for the PR firm Ketchum
in New York.

Other buzzwords that grate include "enterprise" and "scalable."

When Fredric Paul first started hearing the word "enterprise," he wondered
if all the people spouting it were "Star Trek" fans.

Years later, enterprise - high-tech speak for big company, not the big
spaceship commanded by Captain Kirk - shows no signs of going away.

Paul, editor-in-chief of the Internet site TechWeb, says he's dismayed that
words he lampooned back in 1999 remain pervasive today.

He longs to see the demise of "scalable," for instance, which is tech lingo
for something that can get bigger.

"My son is scalable, he's got built-in room to grow," he says.

Other overused buzzwords include "viral marketing" - meaning a marketing
campaign that spreads at lightning speed and "stickiness" - which refers to
something that keeps a person interested in a Web page. While these words
are intended to convey something positive, some think they conjure up an
unsightly plague.

Even blog, a fusing of "Web" and "log" that refers to online diaries, made
Lake Superior State University's annual list of words that should be
banished.

"Many who nominated it were unsure of the meaning," the list's authors
noted. "Sounds like something your mother would slap you for saying."

How did all this tongue-twisting start?

It began in the 1980s, when Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) and Apple Computer Inc.
(AAPL) were struggling to make their products sound appealing to a
tech-averse public, said Tim Bajarin, a principal analyst with Creative
Strategies

Instead of proclaiming that Microsoft's Office software would improve
workers' ability to crunch numbers, compile data and type up letters,
Microsoft sought to sell it as a "solution" to workaday problems, he says.

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs promoted the "experience" of using an Apple
computer way back in 1984 - before many people could see why they'd want one
of the pricey, clunky boxes in their homes.

Two decades later, the word "experience" endures.

"Today the PC is often still considered just a tool, but together we need to
make it a lot more than that. We need to make it a path to experiences," Jim
Allchin, Microsoft's top Windows executive, told hardware developers in an
"experience"-heavy speech last May.

Ryan Donovan, a Hewlett-Packard Co. public relations director, concedes that
terms like "data migration" and "optimizes agility" - both of which are
found in the company's press materials - might confuse average readers. But
the company uses those phrases in documents intended for technology experts
and executives, he says.

"This is the language that they're comfortable with, and it's our job to
make sure that we're speaking to them in a language that they understand,"
Donovan says.

Many doubt a return to less confusing words is coming.

"In some ways, it's almost becoming filler, like 'um' or 'ah,'" says Brett
Good, an executive with staffing firm Robert Half International, whose
Accountemps unit recently polled executives on their most-hated buzzwords.
"It's something that's just been built into the lexicon of American
business."

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On the Net:

Technology encyclopedia: http://www.computerlanguage.com/ 



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