Peg and Peggy is Margaret and a lot of people don’t get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
What? I work with *many* successful, director level people who use nicknames. Are you saying you can’t go by Mike, Tom, Steve, Becky, Katie at work?
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is much, much worse for people with foreign names. Somehow Americans can, maybe after several tries, recognize that Elizabeth and Beth are the same person. But they have soooo much trouble making a similar connection between [long and complicated Nigerian or Thai name] that decided to go by "Ollie".
Huh? No way. I totally got that Mo was the same as Mohammed. Or that my Chinese coworker is called Pearl (which is the actual translation of her name and she asked us to call her that). Both use their official names on their email address, but sign their names with the nickname.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:It is much, much worse for people with foreign names. Somehow Americans can, maybe after several tries, recognize that Elizabeth and Beth are the same person. But they have soooo much trouble making a similar connection between [long and complicated Nigerian or Thai name] that decided to go by "Ollie".
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this post to ask a generational question.
I am older and admit an aversion to nicknames. Deliberately gave my children names for which no nicknames could be created.
I have a new 20-something colleague who goes by a nickname although signature block has full name. Think Mandy versus Amanda. I want to tell her that she should use full name. I remember when I was her age and a colleague switched from Judy to Judith. I did not understand at the time but get it now.
To bolster my point, I have read that Jane Pauley was not taken seriously until she stopped using Janey and JLo has an album Jenny from the Block but is known professionally as Jennifer.
WDYT? Am I just a dinosaur? Only people over 30 notice or care?
Anonymous wrote:It is much, much worse for people with foreign names. Somehow Americans can, maybe after several tries, recognize that Elizabeth and Beth are the same person. But they have soooo much trouble making a similar connection between [long and complicated Nigerian or Thai name] that decided to go by "Ollie".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your nickname is a shortened version of of your name (e.g., Liz for Elizabeth or Rob for Robert), do you use your nickname professionally? In emails? In verbal conversation? I have always used my nickname to sign emails, in conversation, and in my LinkedIn profile. However, I use my full name for publication, contracts, and in my email signature block. How do others handle this issue without confusion?
Very common approach.