Risk Assessment Matrix

A grid ranking risks by likelihood and impact to prioritize response efforts. The risk assessment matrix is the ultimate tool for managing threats efficiently.

ScaleUp

A company that’s past the startup jitters and now on a fast track to bigger markets, more funding, and (hopefully) solid profits. A scaleup has proved it can play the game—now it’s just upping the stakes.

Shareholder Value

The worth a company creates for its shareholders, often the holy grail of corporate goals. Shareholder value measures how well a company’s doing in the eyes of those who invested, connecting growth, profit, and stock price to a bottom line everyone’s watching.

Social Proof

The psychological phenomenon where people follow others’ actions to decide what’s “good.” Social proof is why we trust reviews, follow trends, and buy products with loads of likes. It’s the herd mentality, packaged as marketing gold.

Risk Breakdown Structure

A hierarchy listing all possible risks in a project, so nothing’s left to chance. The risk breakdown structure digs deep, identifying every potential issue before it can mess things up.

Scenario Planning

Prepping for every “what if” situation imaginable so you’re not caught off guard when things go sideways. Scenario planning is business strategy on its toes, building plans for best, worst, and all the weird in-between cases.

Shark

A relentless dealmaker, investor, or exec who circles opportunities with one goal: winning big. Sharks are the folks you want on your side (or want to avoid altogether) because they know what they want and exactly how to get it. Proceed with caution—they’re not here for small talk.

Software Artifacts

The compiled version of your code, turning raw code into an executable program. A software build is the ready-to-use result of all that coding, testing, and tweaking, finally packaged and prepared to run. If code is the recipe, the build is the cake.

Risk Management

The ongoing process of identifying, assessing, and addressing risks in a project or organization. Risk management is your pre-emptive strike against disasters, making sure you’re ready for anything.

Scope Creep

When the scope of a project expands beyond its original objectives, usually without a corresponding increase in resources or timeline. Scope creep is like your project getting a little too ambitious without anyone asking for permission. It’s dangerous and often leads to missed deadlines.