Job Posting Buzzwords, Decoded
of sampled US tech job descriptions say “fast-paced” — the reigning cliché
1.7%
say “self-starter”
0%
say “rockstar” (dead)
n=81,445
sampled descriptions (25%)
“Fast-paced” appears in 9.4% of 81,445 sampled US tech job descriptions — the reigning champion. “Self-starter” is 1.7%, “wear many hats” 0.1%, and “rockstar” is dead at 0%. Paste your own posting below to decode it.
A field guide to the words employers reach for when they don't want to say the quiet part — with a decoder you can run on any posting.
Key findings
- “Fast-paced” is the most common buzzword at 9.4% of postings — far ahead of the rest.
- “Rockstar” is effectively extinct at 0%; the 2010s startup vocabulary has aged out.
- 9.4% say “fast-paced” while 20.9% of postings are recycled reposts.
The buzzword leaderboard
9.4%
say 'fast-paced'
n=81,445 sampled
1.7%
say 'self-starter'
n=81,445 sampled
0.1%
say 'wear many hats'
n=81,445 sampled
0%
say 'rockstar' (basically dead)
n=81,445 sampled
- 1“fast-paced”9.4%
- 2$ figure in description9%
- 3“self-starter”1.7%
- 4“wear many hats”0.1%
- 5“rockstar”0%
Lower bounds from a 25% description sample (n=81,445); text is truncated, so each share is a floor, not a ceiling.
The story the bars tell is a generational one. “Rockstar”, “ninja” and “guru” were the 2010s startup uniform — and they have very nearly died out (0%). What survived is the blandest, most deniable phrase of the bunch: “fast-paced”, the one buzzword that has quietly outlasted every trend.
The honest contradiction: “fast-paced” meets the repost pile
Here is the stat that pops: 9.4% of postings advertise a “fast-paced” environment, yet 20.9% of all postings are recycled reposts — the same role, re-listed again and again. A lot of the urgency in job copy is performance. If the role were truly moving that fast, it probably would not still be open weeks later under the same words.
Decode any posting
Paste a real job description below. The decoder counts the buzzwords, flags a missing salary figure and bloated requirement lists, and hands you a verdict. It is playful, but the checks are real — and the whole thing runs in your browser, so nothing you paste is ever sent anywhere.
Buzzword-to-English translation table
Not a verdict on any one employer — just the pattern these phrases tend to hide, and the question that cuts through them.
| The buzzword | What it often means | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| Fast-paced | Understaffed; priorities change without warning. | What does a normal week look like, and what broke last quarter? |
| Self-starter | Little onboarding or management support. | Who will I go to in week one when I'm stuck? |
| Wear many hats | One role, several jobs' worth of scope. | Which of these responsibilities is the real priority? |
| Rockstar / ninja / guru | Wants senior output, may not pay senior rates. | What's the level and the band for this role? |
| We're a family | Boundaries may blur; overtime may be 'cultural'. | How does the team handle after-hours work and time off? |
| Work hard, play hard | Long hours, framed as culture. | What are typical and peak weekly hours? |
Buzzwords are not proof of a bad job. They are a prompt to ask better questions — and to stop reading vague copy as a referendum on you.
How this was measured (n=81,445)
Sample: 81,445 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09
Method
- Buzzword frequencies counted in a 25% TABLESAMPLE of posting description text (n=81,445).
- Each share = the percentage of sampled descriptions containing the phrase at least once.
- Repost share is the share of postings re-listed at least once (from the repost analysis).
Limitations
- Description text is truncated (~2K chars median), so every buzzword share is a lower bound.
- Phrase matching is literal; clever rewordings are not counted.
- Corpus is tech & professional roles, not all US jobs; the decoder is a heuristic, not a verdict on any employer.
Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges (posted or estimated), not employer disclosure. Corpus is tech & professional roles.