Meaning
Register
Correct the mistake
Pronunciation
100

This describes the gradual increase in stress or demands from stakeholders that becomes harder to ignore over time. (m _ _ _ _ _ _ g   p _ _ _ _ _ _ e)

mounting pressure

100

Rewrite this in senior professional register:

"I can't deal with this right now — it's too big for me."

e.g. This sits outside what I'm able to resolve at my level.

100

This requires an immediately attention.

Correction: "This requires immediate attention."

100

credibility

/ˌkredəˈbɪlɪti/ 

Example: Publishing inaccurate data seriously damaged the consultant's credibility with the board.

200

This is the quality of being trusted and believed by others; something a leader can damage by underdelivering. (c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ y)

credibility

200

Rewrite this in senior professional register:

"There are some issues with the project and I think we should tell someone."

e.g. I'm escalating this due to the impact on [project delivery / the client relationship].

200

I wanted to bring this on your radar.

Correction: "I wanted to bring this to your radar."

200

threat

/θret/

Example: AI-related vulnerabilities are now the fastest-growing threat category in cybersecurity.

300

This is the psychological tendency to fear losses more strongly than equivalent gains are valued. It's why people keep funding failing projects. (l _ _ s   a _ _ _ _ _ _ n

loss aversion

300

Rewrite this in senior professional register:

"We should probably think about this before we say yes, because it might cause problems."

e.g. Before committing, we need to surface the trade-offs and confirm execution feasibility.

OR 

I want to flag this early to avoid [downstream risk / delivery failure].

300

If we will take this on, we won't be able to meet the deadline.

Correction: "If we take this on, we won't be able to meet the deadline."

300

consequences

/ˈkɒn.sɪ.kwən.sɪz/

Example: Failing to address the resourcing gap early had serious consequences for the project timeline.

400

This phrase describes the exhaustion and disengagement that results from too many organisational changes in a short period of time. (c _ _ _ _ e   f _ _ _ _ _ e)

change fatigue

400

There are TWO problems: register and structure.

"AI is a very big deal for cybersecurity and also there are geopolitical things and fraud is a problem too."

e.g. Organisations must treat AI governance, geopolitical exposure, and fraud prevention not as separate workstreams, but as a single coordinated response strategy.

400

The recommended next step would be to escalating this to the board.

Correction: "The recommended next step would be to escalate this to the board."

400

cyber

/ˈsaɪ.bər/

Example: Cyber-enabled fraud has overtaken ransomware as the top concern for CEOs globally.

500

This refers to the widening gap between organisations that can access effective cyber protection and those that cannot, often along economic lines. (c _ _ _ r   i _ _ _ _ _ _ y)

cyber inequity

500

Improve it: "I was wondering if maybe you could possibly find some time to look at this when you get a chance?"

e.g. Could you review this by [date]? I'd appreciate your guidance on how to proceed.

500

Were the project to proceeded without approval, there would be a serious implication for delivery.

Correction: "Were the project to proceed without approval, there would be serious implications for delivery."

500

inadvertently

/ɪnədˈvɜːtəntli/ 

Example: He inadvertently sent the unfinished report to the entire department.

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