For quite some months, I have been gravely concerned with the content of a number of articles. To be frank, they seemed to be borderline spam. They were written in the vague and highly abstract, buzzword-laden style associated with business consultants. This, in my mind, is categorized by:
This sort of thing falls between the cracks. One problem is that there is some market for literature in this vein, and even some academic teaching of this sort of thing. It does teach business managers to speak evasively about plans to increase their employee's work burdens, and to dress up downsizing and more intrusive management with vaguely luminous descriptions. Given this literature, this sort of writing can be "referenced" and "verified", even if the sort of prose it comes wrapped in strikes me as a form of obscurantism. Frankly, I am concerned that the articles themselves may be part of a campaign by people who trade in this sort of ware to lend the appearance of legitimacy or importance to what they are selling.
I've become increasingly concerned about this stuff for several months now. My comment at Wikipedia:Centralized discussion/Method Engineering Encyclopedia made back in April is here. I will not hide my own POV here. This kind of writing strikes me as an ethical problem as well as a spam problem.
I created this template to call attention to this sort of thing, initially as a cleanup issue. I would also eventually hope to test the waters to see if a consensus can be mustered that this sort of thing does not belong in an encyclopedia. - Smerdis of Tlön 15:00, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Seems to me the problem is not that the article on "business process engineering," or "knowledge management," etc. exists. A user might very well want to look up "knowledge management." Shouldn't they be able to? It seems to me that a valid Wikipedia article would explain what knowledge management is: where and when did this discipline originate? What are its claims? Who made them? How has the field evolved? What are the criticisms? The real problem is that many of these articles about management theories do not really describe the theories -- instead, they make claims about how businesses operate (or how they ought to operate), from the standpoint of their adherents. YeahIKnow 23:50, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
Is there any justification for adding an inline version of this? Maybe
{{Buzz}}
which would just add a Citation Needed-style "buzzword?" span of superscript text.
I've looked at a few articles marked with Buzzword and it's hard to work out exactly what it is that caused the original editor to tag with the buzzword template originally. The two articles I looked at were CD-RW and XML appliance. CD-RW didn't seem to have many buzzwords, but just had frankly terrible writing. As for XML appliance, it had all the usual SOA crap. But I'm not sure if that's what caused the buzzword tag to be applied originally.
Opinions? — Tom Morris 06:19, 4 January 2011 (UTC)
{{
Buzzword inline}}
, which is our standard naming for inline tags. All the best:
Rich
Farmbrough, 19:57, 3 August 2019 (UTC).I propose changing this to read "Specific concerns MAY be found on the talk page" - as in many cases it is obvious where the problems lie and it is not necessary to detail on the talk page. . . Mean as custard ( talk) 07:52, 22 July 2013 (UTC)
For quite some months, I have been gravely concerned with the content of a number of articles. To be frank, they seemed to be borderline spam. They were written in the vague and highly abstract, buzzword-laden style associated with business consultants. This, in my mind, is categorized by:
This sort of thing falls between the cracks. One problem is that there is some market for literature in this vein, and even some academic teaching of this sort of thing. It does teach business managers to speak evasively about plans to increase their employee's work burdens, and to dress up downsizing and more intrusive management with vaguely luminous descriptions. Given this literature, this sort of writing can be "referenced" and "verified", even if the sort of prose it comes wrapped in strikes me as a form of obscurantism. Frankly, I am concerned that the articles themselves may be part of a campaign by people who trade in this sort of ware to lend the appearance of legitimacy or importance to what they are selling.
I've become increasingly concerned about this stuff for several months now. My comment at Wikipedia:Centralized discussion/Method Engineering Encyclopedia made back in April is here. I will not hide my own POV here. This kind of writing strikes me as an ethical problem as well as a spam problem.
I created this template to call attention to this sort of thing, initially as a cleanup issue. I would also eventually hope to test the waters to see if a consensus can be mustered that this sort of thing does not belong in an encyclopedia. - Smerdis of Tlön 15:00, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Seems to me the problem is not that the article on "business process engineering," or "knowledge management," etc. exists. A user might very well want to look up "knowledge management." Shouldn't they be able to? It seems to me that a valid Wikipedia article would explain what knowledge management is: where and when did this discipline originate? What are its claims? Who made them? How has the field evolved? What are the criticisms? The real problem is that many of these articles about management theories do not really describe the theories -- instead, they make claims about how businesses operate (or how they ought to operate), from the standpoint of their adherents. YeahIKnow 23:50, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
Is there any justification for adding an inline version of this? Maybe
{{Buzz}}
which would just add a Citation Needed-style "buzzword?" span of superscript text.
I've looked at a few articles marked with Buzzword and it's hard to work out exactly what it is that caused the original editor to tag with the buzzword template originally. The two articles I looked at were CD-RW and XML appliance. CD-RW didn't seem to have many buzzwords, but just had frankly terrible writing. As for XML appliance, it had all the usual SOA crap. But I'm not sure if that's what caused the buzzword tag to be applied originally.
Opinions? — Tom Morris 06:19, 4 January 2011 (UTC)
{{
Buzzword inline}}
, which is our standard naming for inline tags. All the best:
Rich
Farmbrough, 19:57, 3 August 2019 (UTC).I propose changing this to read "Specific concerns MAY be found on the talk page" - as in many cases it is obvious where the problems lie and it is not necessary to detail on the talk page. . . Mean as custard ( talk) 07:52, 22 July 2013 (UTC)