I wasn't 100% sure where to put this post. Do we need a "just for fun" group on top of all the other ones we already have?
I have a bit of fixation on business metaphors. I use far too many and it doesn't always help me communicate clearly, I know. But whilst some are just annoying ("singing from the same hymn sheet..." "Getting our ducks in a row...") others, whilst they may sometimes leave colleagues bemused, give me a personal delight that means they are often my go-to.
I thought I'd share three of my favourites and see if it's just me or if anyone else would like to share either good metaphors, silly metaphors or metaphors so bad that they become good.
The Peter Principle
Although it's technically a well-known idea I'm amazed how often even quite senior business leaders haven't heard of the idea of being "promoted to the point of incompetence". This is a useful metaphor whenever you're confronted with technical experts in leadership roles for which they aren't trained or equipped despite being brilliant in their technical field.
Directions to Dublin
From an old joke: an Englishman driving in Ireland and hopelessly lost in the back roads of County Wicklow stops to ask a local for directions to Dublin. After a long thought, the local replies "Well... I wouldn't start from here." This is a common feeling I have as an external consultant, asked to help see a complex or sensitive problem to a successful conclusion when the issue itself has been created by the business just repeatedly doing the wrong thing to make a simple problem harder to solve.
Underpants Gnomes
I love underpants gnomes. In an episode of South Park, gnomes are stealing the underpants of the people of South Park and the main characters go on a magical adventure to find out why. They discover that the underpants gnomes have a plan. The plan starts with (step 1) stealing underpants and ends with (step 3) PROFIT! but step 2 is just "???". This is a great metaphor in any situation in which a business has embarked upon a project with a clear goal in sight but where the actual connection between the work they are currently doing and their end goal is either nebulous or non-existent. For some reason, we see this a lot in HR, when senior leaders get excited about introducing some new faddy approach to appraisal or reward without ever articulating how this new approach is going to result in "PROFIT!"