In an unprecedented
move, a consortium of Business Analysts recently joined together and
agreed on the exact meaning of a newly invented word.
"It was just a matter
of time," Business Analyst Merton Brown enthused. "Until recently
we've all been bursting at the seams with new ideas, new concepts -
basically new versions of reality, that the English language has been
simply incapable of expressing. All this time, doctors and scientists
have had Latin, and philosophers have had Greek - whereas Business Analysts
have been really hard done by."
Often
derided for talking utter crap and simply making things up as they go
along, and for somehow earning megabucks in the process, having convinced
their employers that they are essential to the success of any project
(even the ones that are obviously going to fail), Business Analysts
do of course like to hit back on occassion, demonstrating that they
actually have a pretty high opinion of themselves.
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"Express
Train... to Hell!!"
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"You must have seen
it time and again," Merton continued, "in hastilly erected
company websites, corporate mission statements, analysis reports etc.,
we have struggled to express what is really on our mind. We have simply
had to make do with such contrivances as saying 'Methodology' instead
of 'Method', or using existing words in their wrong context. Let me
give you an example: 'Our new system leverages content magma to reduce
autonomy overburn-centricity.' Now, quite simply there is no way
in the English language to explain that sentence's real meaning. Of
course most people won't understand it, but then they're obviously not
Business Analysts. In fact, even bona fide Business Analysts may have
a hard crack understanding that, as it's all too easy to misinterpret
borrowed words."
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"No
one Else Thinks Like a Business Analyst"
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When challenged as to whether
the job of a Business Analyst was surely to communicate their analyses
clearly and succinctly to the rest of us "lay people", he
smiled kindly and responded: "That's exactly where lexical overburn
taxes our understanding, hence the need for furtherment of requirements
tracing."
Sensing that this did not
quite lay the matter to rest, he added: "No one else in the Human
Race thinks like a Business Analyst, and finally we are gaining recognition
for our ground-breaking evolution into a higher life form that is simply
beyond what mere mortals can possibly comprehend. Oh and by the way,
that new word is: lexigarf. It's an amazing word. It means, quite
simply, everything and its dog. And it has variations, of course: lexigarical,
lexigarfed, and its closely related sibling lexibarf. Lexibarf means
'similar to lexigarf but slightly juxtaposed'."
Thank goodness for Business
Analysts!
Industry Feedback:
Lana Newbury,
Business Analyst, LargeCo Inc, NJ:
"What I want to know is, why wasn't I involved? If all these
BA's clubbed together to agree on the meaning of this new word, I for
one would have quite liked to have been consulted. In fact I'm sure
I've used the word lexigarf before. It means 'small white pigeon', the
sort that hovers menacingly above you in the street. And I should know,
I used to be one in a previous life."
Shaggy, Unemployed
Business Role-Playing Actor, Reading, UK:
"Well,
my biggest ambition in life is to open up my own sandwich shop. I'll
certainly be selling lexigarfs, if someone will show me how to pluck
them."
Back to The Rumour Mill
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