“Ownership” is what you are asked to take of something you did not design and cannot change.

The ask is emotional, not operational. Nobody is offering equity. Nobody is offering decision rights. What is being offered is accountability, reframed as an opportunity. Take ownership of this project, this workstream, this deliverable. Feel invested in it. The investment is one-directional, which is not mentioned, because the point of the ask is motivation, not accuracy.

In practice, ownership in a large organisation has a ceiling most employees locate quickly. It extends to execution and stops well before anything that would constitute actual control. The scope is handed down, the parameters are fixed, and the timeline was decided before the conversation happened. Within those constraints, ownership is yours entirely. So is the outcome if it goes wrong.

The word survives because it sounds like respect. Telling someone they own a piece of work implies their judgment matters, that they were chosen, that they are trusted. None of this requires being true. It only requires not being examined too closely, which, in a well-run meeting, it generally is not.

Written by

Maximilian ROI has spent thirty years inside organizations large enough to have a Vision Statement and self-aware enough to ignore it. He has run the offsites. He has said synergy in front of a board, with a straight face and a waterfall chart, and meant it.

Today, Max is the Dean of Steerania’s School of Bullshit. He describes this as his pro bono contribution to society. He takes the role completely seriously, which is itself the joke.

The dictionary exists because the language of business is a craft, and like most crafts it is easier to participate in than to explain. Max has decided, at this point in his career, that explanation is the more interesting option. He is not here to expose the system. He helped build it.