Together with its close relative "moving forward", it's a boardroom and husting escapee that has made it big time in the workplace, and even outside.
It is loathed by all except those who are too busy moving goalposts and hitting the ground running to notice this expression does something to the neck hairs of most other speakers.
To go forward - "advance" - has been widely attested in the English language (both in the literal and figurative sense) since the early 1400s.
In its early appearances, it signalled some sense of progressing or looking ahead. One quotation in the Oxford English Dictionary from the early 1900s reads: "Humanity everywhere is thinking and talking about going forward."
With purpose, action and direction at its heart, it's hardly surprising the morale booster became the buzzword of business and management. And now this unstoppable slogan has spread unchecked, even into the nooks and crannies of our conversational lives.
What will it take to eradicate this weedy cliche? Well, there's the rub (to use another well-worn expression) - cliche is in the eye of the beholder. Put simply, it's an expression you hate. My cherished phrase can be your loathed cliche.
In the case of "going forward", there are probably quite a few reasons why it appears at the top of so many hate lists.
For one, it's part of managerial jargon - so a social password that identifies that gang. And if you're not singing from that particular hymn sheet, if it's not your lingo and you don't talk the talk, there's a good chance it will raise gooseflesh.
There are times when going forward is clearly redundant, too - "Going forward, it will be increasingly important"; "that's our strategy going forward" - and this sort of linguistic overkill is an irritation to many.
But it's at its most irksome when it tries to sweeten up some sort of inconvenient or unpleasant reality. Usually it's tacked on to the end of the sentence, a bit like the teaspoon of sugar following the tablespoon of cod liver oil.
"This ongoing restructuring of the business is a necessary step in creating a leaner organisation going forward," said Ferrier Hodgson partner James Stewart on the collapse of electronics business Dick Smith.
Here, "going forward" is doing its best to put a positive spin on job losses and restructure - not that anyone is fooled. Most of us grow impatient with language that tries to lead us by the nose, and weary of the pretence that somehow sweeter words will produce a sweeter world.
"Trumpery" comes to mind - an old but useful expression that describes empty insincere talk, weeds and rubbish of any kind. This is a word that really has come back from the dead - and is going forward in giant strides.
Yes, guard against trumpery and humbuggery. But it's not possible, or even desirable, to eliminate cliches.
As academic Walter Redfern once put it, they are "bad, indispensable, sometimes good".