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Die HR, die!

The Swedish academy is the governor of the Swedish language but when you search for the word agile in their online dictionaries you get no hits. I heard it takes twenty years for a new word to get added. Not so agile.

But if you search for the word resource you get hits explaining the meaning as opportunity or way out, often in the context of financial assets. This post is about the words that we can stop using and which to start use instead, so we understand each other better, for instance, the awful word resource.

If someone still call me a resource today in the 21th century I reply “-are you talking to me?”. I am a thinking human being not a pyramid construction worker or a cotton picker. I work here only because I like it and earn money from it, so count me out in your annual report on the same page as servers, licenses and other resources or assets. Yes, I understand it is a culture thing, but change starts with a discussion before the riot. So let’s bury the awful resource word in the context of people.

For a couple of years ago I worked for a company with a great culture and I certainly would have been working there still, if not the People and Culture team had changed name to Human Resources. After a merger with a big international company the new name was a consequence and overnight I transformed from a hard-working self-organized and thinking human being to a simple resource in a long list of other resources. Of course, I quit with this paradigm shift of culture. Was I overreacting of a word? No, It took me nearly a year to understand the values built in the word HR and the reason I quit was the new culture enrolling with the merger and the Human Resource was the logo of this culture.

Words are the bits and pieces in our communication and you should think twice before you shine with another three-letter buzzword as well as old school stuff with legacy values built in. What is the message you want everybody to understand? Think of the message you want to convey and use simple understandable language instead. Also make sure the words are aligned with your company culture. Human Resources is a great word for a group of people managing other people but when you want to grow and keep people instead of resources, it is not. So, die HR die - long live People and Culture and remember to onboard them first in your agile implementation. Or even better - let the head of People and Culture become the productowner in this effort and report directly to the board.

Here is my list of words to inspire from and adopt to your company culture. Maybe use them as a pairing game if you mix them and see if you understand each other better?

Die Live
Requirement Expectation
Resources People
Them We
Deadline Wishdate
Comittment Aligned with expectations
Estimate Guesstimate
Milestone Celebration day
Project Initiative
Agile [I need your help here]
Dependency to Collaboration with
Problem Challenge/Opportunity
Stretch goal Vision
Done Good enough
Should Can
Want Need
Prio Rank
Change request Improvement/Opportunity
Planning Experimenting
Yearly plan Daily release
MVP Riskiest Assumption Test
Silos Cross functional teams
Reporting Exploring
Definition Discovery

So, why did i write this blog post in english if the underlying message is understanding of each other? Swedish should be better, as the reader of this blog is 99% swedish speaking? Sorry, i don't have the answer on this one. It just came out natural as i work in an international environment. Also see my previuos blog post about understanding eachother...in swedish.