To declare precise ownership of corporate assets, you must use Possessive Adjectives. These terms always serve as descriptors and must sit directly in front of the target asset.
📊 The Ownership Asset Matrix
| Singular Possessor | Adjective Form | Plural Possessor | Adjective Form | Real-World Workplace Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | my | We | our | This is my desk; that is our office. |
| You | your | You (All) | your | Please verify your password credentials. |
| He / She | his / her | They | their | Alex checked his code; they verified their logs. |
| It (System) | its | – | – | The server automatically updated its database. |
📝 Real-World Examples Explained
1. Direct Operational Order
“Please submit your weekly progress report before Friday evening.”
Modifies report directly to declare responsibility boundaries for the receiver.
2. Machine System Automation
“The operating system automatically saved its backup log files.”
Strictly neutral and singular. Shows an internal asset of the system without adding punctuation.
3. Vendor Asset Scope
“The external consultants delivered their final security audit.”
Links a plural group of outside actors to their corporate project output document.
🚫 Common Mistakes: Correct vs. Incorrect
1. Confusing “Its” (Possessive) with “It’s” (It is)
❌ Incorrect: “The application changed it’s internal configuration settings.”
✅ Correct: “The application changed its internal configuration settings.”
Why it’s wrong: It’s with an apostrophe is a verb contraction meaning “it is”. If you want to declare that an asset belongs to a system framework, use the clean possessive adjective form its with zero punctuation.