The Opposite of DelegationWhat is the antonym of “delegation”?What is the opposite of 'wall of text'?The antonym of 'simplicity' is not exactly what I'm looking forWhat is the opposite of “dumb down”?Can somebody ask this way: What's the story called?Is there an antonym(…) for “append”?Can I say that “excludes” is an antonym of “includes”?What is the antonym of “delegation”?The amount added to a student's actual score on paper for no reasonWhat's the opposite of jam?
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The Opposite of Delegation
What is the antonym of “delegation”?What is the opposite of 'wall of text'?The antonym of 'simplicity' is not exactly what I'm looking forWhat is the opposite of “dumb down”?Can somebody ask this way: What's the story called?Is there an antonym(…) for “append”?Can I say that “excludes” is an antonym of “includes”?What is the antonym of “delegation”?The amount added to a student's actual score on paper for no reasonWhat's the opposite of jam?
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As opposed to this question What is the antonym of "delegation"?, if one is not delegating to a subordinate, but rather asking a superior to take on a task, what would that be called? (other than begging for mercy:)
word-request antonyms
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As opposed to this question What is the antonym of "delegation"?, if one is not delegating to a subordinate, but rather asking a superior to take on a task, what would that be called? (other than begging for mercy:)
word-request antonyms
New contributor
Hrothgar Skraekelig is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment
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As opposed to this question What is the antonym of "delegation"?, if one is not delegating to a subordinate, but rather asking a superior to take on a task, what would that be called? (other than begging for mercy:)
word-request antonyms
New contributor
Hrothgar Skraekelig is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
As opposed to this question What is the antonym of "delegation"?, if one is not delegating to a subordinate, but rather asking a superior to take on a task, what would that be called? (other than begging for mercy:)
word-request antonyms
word-request antonyms
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Hrothgar Skraekelig is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
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edited 9 hours ago
Eddie Kal
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9,4738 gold badges37 silver badges85 bronze badges
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asked 9 hours ago
Hrothgar SkraekeligHrothgar Skraekelig
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"Escalation" is the commonly used word in business for passing work to a senior.
From the website Business Pundit:
Escalation as a General Business Term
In business in general, escalation refers to sending a project to a higher level of the organization for resolution. For example, imagine that an organization’s computers are slow. Helpdesk finds the problem, but can’t figure out what’s causing it. So they escalate to the IT department, which looks into the problem. IT realizes the issue has to do with the company’s systems being hacked. While working to fix the problem, IT also escalates it to Operations, which deals with security breaches. The issue may then be escalated to the company’s executives if it proves serious enough.
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"Escalation" is the commonly used word in business for passing work to a senior.
From the website Business Pundit:
Escalation as a General Business Term
In business in general, escalation refers to sending a project to a higher level of the organization for resolution. For example, imagine that an organization’s computers are slow. Helpdesk finds the problem, but can’t figure out what’s causing it. So they escalate to the IT department, which looks into the problem. IT realizes the issue has to do with the company’s systems being hacked. While working to fix the problem, IT also escalates it to Operations, which deals with security breaches. The issue may then be escalated to the company’s executives if it proves serious enough.
add a comment
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"Escalation" is the commonly used word in business for passing work to a senior.
From the website Business Pundit:
Escalation as a General Business Term
In business in general, escalation refers to sending a project to a higher level of the organization for resolution. For example, imagine that an organization’s computers are slow. Helpdesk finds the problem, but can’t figure out what’s causing it. So they escalate to the IT department, which looks into the problem. IT realizes the issue has to do with the company’s systems being hacked. While working to fix the problem, IT also escalates it to Operations, which deals with security breaches. The issue may then be escalated to the company’s executives if it proves serious enough.
add a comment
|
"Escalation" is the commonly used word in business for passing work to a senior.
From the website Business Pundit:
Escalation as a General Business Term
In business in general, escalation refers to sending a project to a higher level of the organization for resolution. For example, imagine that an organization’s computers are slow. Helpdesk finds the problem, but can’t figure out what’s causing it. So they escalate to the IT department, which looks into the problem. IT realizes the issue has to do with the company’s systems being hacked. While working to fix the problem, IT also escalates it to Operations, which deals with security breaches. The issue may then be escalated to the company’s executives if it proves serious enough.
"Escalation" is the commonly used word in business for passing work to a senior.
From the website Business Pundit:
Escalation as a General Business Term
In business in general, escalation refers to sending a project to a higher level of the organization for resolution. For example, imagine that an organization’s computers are slow. Helpdesk finds the problem, but can’t figure out what’s causing it. So they escalate to the IT department, which looks into the problem. IT realizes the issue has to do with the company’s systems being hacked. While working to fix the problem, IT also escalates it to Operations, which deals with security breaches. The issue may then be escalated to the company’s executives if it proves serious enough.
answered 9 hours ago
AstralbeeAstralbee
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Hrothgar Skraekelig is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Hrothgar Skraekelig is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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