BLUE OVALING: when you meet work deadlines but the end results have subpar quality.
it was burried here: w@b4+1k2yjzm8y
BLUE OVALING: when you meet work deadlines but the end results have subpar quality.
it was burried here: w@b4+1k2yjzm8y
“Blue ovaling” conjures the thought of circling a toilet drain full of Ty-D-Bol.
@c5 Using that I asked for examples:
A corporate version of blue-balling is when leadership dangles a desirable outcome in front of employees but never actually delivers on it. It creates buy-in and hope, but ends in frustration when the promised benefit doesn’t materialize. At Ford (or similar big companies), this could look like:
• Career opportunities: Telling someone they’re “on track” for a promotion, stretch role, or international assignment — then stringing them along through calibration cycles only to quietly give it to someone else or freeze the role.
• Compensation & rewards: Teasing “record profit-sharing checks” or a big bonus pool, but after endless announcements, employees get only a fraction of what was hinted.
• Product launches: Hyping up a new vehicle program as “revolutionary” (the “Model T moment”), then scaling it back into a mediocre refresh while employees feel let down.
• Culture promises: Advertising a culture of “psychological safety” or “One Ford” teamwork, but in reality, leaving employees exposed, excluded, or unsupported when they raise issues.
• Workplace perks: Announcing new flexible work policies or amenities, only to walk them back with return-to-office mandates or budget cuts.
So, in short: corporate blue-balling = setting expectations high with words, but underdelivering in action. It’s the organizational version of teasing without payoff — leaving employees feeling played.
“Blue-balling” means leading someone on with the promise of something desirable—often s-xual—but not following through, leaving them frustrated or disappointed. “Blue Oval” is a nickname for Ford Motor Company or its vehicles, taken from the iconic blue oval logo. “Blue ovaling” itself isn’t a widely recognized slang term and is most likely a mix-up or playful blend of those two ideas.
@c2 I asked ChatGPT "what is blue ovaling" and it said this:
"Blue Ovaling" is a term often used informally within the automotive industry—especially when talking about Ford Motor Company. It refers to when a supplier, contractor, or employee is asked to modify a product, report, or process to better align with Ford’s expectations or standards, sometimes even if it means bending the truth or dressing things up.
The name comes from:
Examples:
This is highly inappropriate - Blue Ovaling is a s-x term for when you put blue ba--s into an a and then flip the d down the p. Back in my day it was called clowning, but the kids come up with all kinds of weird sh-t nowadays.