noun / verb
to "hijack" or "hack" and repurposing power authority to align with objectives
-jack: According to The Writer, the world's largest language consultancy firm, "'-jack' is the '-hack'of 2015 and has now become a respectable business metaphor," says The Writer's Neil
Taylor, who's the managing partner there, adding, "We think the suffix '-jack'
will make the same leap into the mainstream in 2015." He
said has already noticed the suffix, used like the word "hijack",
creep into business lingo (newsjacking, trendjacking, clickjacking).