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war room

noun

  1. a room at a military headquarters in which strategy is planned and current battle situations are monitored.
  2. any room of similar function, as in a civilian or business organization.


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Example Sentences

On any given Super Bowl Sunday, social media teams, account leads and clients can be found in crowded war rooms, hovering over television screens and computers, waiting for their spot to air.

From Digiday

Gold serves as executive director of social media at Grey Group, where the social media team has been experimenting with virtual war rooms since the pandemic started this time last year.

From Digiday

Virtual war rooms are a concept that has accelerated with the coronavirus crisis, according to Kenny Gold.

From Digiday

The larger map or war room, however, had special appeal to mid-20th-century corporate culture, which took up the more benign name of “dashboard” for annual reports that were imagined as enabling industry “pilots” to fly in capitalist battle.

On Election Day in 2016, the agency managed a smaller-scale war room but was hampered by its lack of relationships with state and local officials.

It was Hillary Clinton, after all, who invented the modern-day campaign war room back in 1992, Begala said.

To him it was as nuts as inviting the other side into your campaign war room.

The original ending that was filmed, however, had everyone in the War Room engaged in a huge pie fight.

A War Room for the 2008 election season, By the People had its world premiere in Los Angeles this week.

What the war room represented was centralized control, broad sharing of information.

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