Quote from: Syt on Today at 06:33:27 AM![]()
Reminds me of the interview with the CEO of Taco Bell (I think).
Paraphrasing:
Q: "How much does your experience as CEO of Nike translate to your tasks at Taco Bell?"
A: "Nike is a product. And Tacos are a product."
I mean, I guess, but seriously

Quote![]()
Reminds me of the interview with the CEO of Taco Bell (I think).
Paraphrasing:
Q: "How much does your experience as CEO of Nike translate to your tasks at Taco Bell?"
A: "Nike is a product. And Tacos are a product."
I mean, I guess, but seriously
Quotethis media interview wasn't our cup of tea (or coffee)
"Convenience-led coffee occasions".
How about that for a piece of industry jargon that sounds wildly weird in the real world?
It came during a recent radio interview that grabbed our attention for the wrong reasons.
Nick Ridley, Costa's director of property, appeared on Radio 4's You and Yours programme ahead of opening the coffee giant's 400th drive-thru store to discuss the company's performance.
You can listen to it here for as long as the broadcaster makes it available.
Having stressed that the company offers places for people to connect, he was asked why drive-thrus are such a key part of its approach.
"Look, I think drive-thrus have become so important because customer habits are changing," he said.
"Industry research from Allegra shows that 47 per cent of UK consumers used a coffee drive-thru in the past year, highlighting the shift towards convenience-led coffee occasions."
And at that point, he was interrupted by the journalist who joked: "Oh, I just feel like a convenience-led coffee occasion."
In the many years of writing the blog, this has to be one of my favourite examples of jargon.
Mr Ridley managed to take something that so many people do every day and find a way of describing it that no one outside a boardroom has ever used. It's a remarkable achievement – just not a good one.
As the journalist gently highlighted, people – Costa's customers – do not talk about "convenience-led coffee occasions".
I'm pretty sure they don't even talk about "coffee occasions", regardless of whether they are convenient.
Nor do they talk about "accessing coffee" – another phrase he used later in the interview. People drink it.
It is corporate language – something we always advise our delegates they need to avoid in media interviews to appear credible and relatable.
....
Quote from: Tonitrus on April 17, 2026, 10:28:50 PMOn the "unforgivable" and Starmer's regular statements that he's "furious" about things his government has done, Number 10 are literally briefing that the public will see "angry Starmer" today - a thrilling prospect.Quote from: Sheilbh on April 17, 2026, 08:50:06 PMHe said it was "unforgivable" he was not told about the vetting recommendation, which was revealed by the Guardian on Thursday.
Perhaps it is just that someone used the "Rhodesia Solution" on the PM?




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