I've been invited to a 'webinar'. This is the term being used because 'web seminar' is far too understandable. Jargon is of ultimate importance in business so a clear and concise phrase like 'web seminar' cannot be permitted to survive. No, a grotesque substitute must be crafted. Something that executives and PR people can say with pride alongside such trite and overused staples as 'paradigm', 'leverage', and 'out of the box'. Proper use of these craptacular phrases causes an executive to achieve a mental woody so great they can actually mentally ejaculate.
"Today's webinar will explore the paradigm shift resulting from our leveraging of out of the box thinking."
SPLURT!!! <--- mental ejaculate
Can I just say no? Can I refuse to use the word 'webinar'? Why can't I just use 'web seminar'?
If I do refuse to use this bullshit word will my coworkers look at me funny? Will they joke about my archaic word choice during project planning sessions? If I send out invitations to my own 'web seminar' will there be no attendees because they don't understand what such a thing is?
Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn. I refuse to use 'webinar'. I am officially adding it to my list of prohibited phrases. I will not add it to my spell checker dictionary so every time I see it it will have the red underlined squiggly of rejection. Call me antiquated, call me conservative, call me Al. Just don't call me a sycophant.
I must go now. I have to engineer visionary metrics in order to deliver seamless convergence with my incentivized best-of-breed partnerships.
Pulls hair, hits head on wall, runs around in circles. I can't take it any more. No new stupid jargon. Please! Or at least make it interesting.
But you're quite prepared to use the word blog ...
*ceases sh#t stiring*
I'm with Rob. You can't call it a blog if you can't webinar. You've gotta move with the times if you want to leverage your core competencies into a new paradigm.
But, but, but...
"Blog" is slang, not jargon. It was also in common parlance before I started doing it so I can't be deeply offended by it.