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by reichstein
518 days ago
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So you're saying that "an ask" is "an order" or "a demand", rather than "a request".
Why not use those words? I don't understand what "an ask" means.
I don't know what the speaker intended with it, and I wouldn't know how a receiver would understand it. It's just communicating badly, using words with no fixed shared meaning.
Or somebody too afraid to be confrontational to phrase a demand as actually demanded. And "learnings" is just somebody too lazy to say "lessons learned". |
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That said, I've never considered "an ask" to have any stronger meaning than a request. If I hear "an ask", I'm assuming I can push back the same amount I would to any other request.