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Gen Z And Millennials Are Hung Up On Answering the Phone (bbc.com) 265

A quarter of young adults aged 18-34 never answer phone calls, according to a recent Uswitch survey. The study reveals a generational shift in communication preferences, with 70% of respondents in this age group favoring text messages over voice calls. Experts attribute this trend to the rise of mobile technology and social media. While avoiding calls, younger generations maintain constant contact through group chats and social media platforms. Voice notes have emerged as a compromise, with 37% of 18-34 year-olds preferring them to traditional calls. This communication shift extends to the workplace, causing challenges for some employers.
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Gen Z And Millennials Are Hung Up On Answering the Phone

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  • Makes sense (Score:5, Informative)

    by mukundajohnson ( 10427278 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:18PM (#64741352)

    I only pick up only if it's a number or ID that I know. Otherwise I'm committing an unknown amount of time randomly.

    • Re:Makes sense (Score:5, Informative)

      by quall ( 1441799 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @07:03PM (#64741538)

      100% agree. They didn't even address spam. It's so obvious and such a big reason that people prefer voice messages rather than answering, that it's difficult to take this article seriously. I'm a millennial and prefer voice messages for this reason alone.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Mirddes ( 798147 )

        i'm 34 and i fucking loath voice messages. either message me or call me. i FUCKING HATE voice messages and WILL NEVER check my voice mail.

        Calls from private numbers or international numbers get answered just so i can verbally abuse scammers and other unsolicited callers. I say it's a healthy outlet.

        • I think theres a difference between voicemail and "voice messages". Voicemail is something that happens when you failed to pick up a call I was trying to make to you. A "Voice message" is when you record a short voice recording and send it in what is an otherwise text messaging venue. IMO This is stupid as fuck, Just fucking type the message and if you can't be bothered to type then use voice to text translation. If you send me a recording on an otherwise text platform your recording may get listened to sig
        • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
          Well I'm shore your telco has an option to turn off voicemail, why don't you use that if you intend never to check it, no reason to have a voicemail for people to leave messages that will never be heard. Sorry I cant give you instructrions on how to do it as it varies from telco to telco
    • But some people don't even want to phone out. Which could be a serious problem. If your employer doesn't read texts, how do you tell them you'll be late? What if you need to call a plumber?

      It just feels utterly bizarre to treat the "phone" part of a smart phone like it was infected. What I think is that they don't totally avoid the phone, but just avoid it for day to day stuff. They will use it for emergencies even though they tell others that they "never" use the phone. At least that's what I hope ot

      • Re:Makes sense (Score:4, Interesting)

        by grim4593 ( 947789 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @07:53PM (#64741668)
        All but one person on my team texts me when they are calling off or are coming in late. The only person that calls and/or leaves a voicemail is 65.

        Although you need to call trades such as plumbers, once you make initial contact most use text to communicate and receive photos as well.

        I know you are being snarky but text to 911 is a thing and is widely supported in most cities. You can check support at the FCC website.

        • Yes, I'm sure there's a way to text to 911. But in an emergency, do you remember what it is? Whereas the phone call is just holding down the 9 for a few seconds (thus accidentally purse dialing it as happened to my mom :-).

      • ("help, how do I text to 911?").

        Text-to-911 is the ability to send a text message to reach 911 emergency call takers from your mobile phone or device. However, because voice calls to 911 provide more information to 911 call centers, you should always make a voice call to 911 during an emergency whenever possible.

        https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/... [fcc.gov]

        • Re:Makes sense (Score:4, Informative)

          by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <bertNO@SPAMslashdot.firenzee.com> on Wednesday August 28, 2024 @03:19AM (#64742416) Homepage

          If you're calling a 911 call center, then the call center staff are literally employed to sit there and wait for calls, so you're not interrupting them. If you call random people you are telling them that your call is more important than whatever else they might already be doing and that they should immediately stop their activity to speak to you, which is extremely rude really.

          There are also many cases where you absolutely need to send a text, for instance if you are trying to secretly contact 911 because there is someone dangerous nearby who would hear you speaking.

        • As a person who has responded to many 911 calls in all 3 major areas of PD, FD, and EMS, PLEASE folks, call 911. And PLEASE give adequate information if you can! It's so hard to get a call saying "Go To X address there's a person in distress!" and you're an EMT; Is it an active shooter? A bleeding injury? Domestic violence? Something else? This will help get help to a person having the worst day of his or her life. If an ambulance responds and you need a cop AND an ambulance, the person in distress ma
      • by ChoGGi ( 522069 ) <slashdot@@@choggi...org> on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @11:50PM (#64742140) Homepage

        Fire - exclamation mark - fire - exclamation mark - help me - exclamation mark. 123 Cavendon Road. Looking forward to hearing from you. Yours truly, Maurice Moss.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        I would rather have a plumber who completes his plumbing work and then reads/responds to his messages afterwards, than one who keeps stopping in the middle of the job to answer phonecalls.

        The problem is that a phonecall requires you to immediately stop what your doing to take the call, which is absolutely not conducive to getting work done. Asynchronous communication is massively better.

    • I answer all calls. I haven't even had a spam call in like 2 years.

    • Otherwise I'm committing an unknown amount of time randomly.

      You can always just hang up, unless it's something important, in which case you really should talk to them. This phone stuff is not hard unless you make it hard.

      • If you pick up at all you are tagged as someone who picks up, and will receive 10x the amount of spam calls. At one point I was getting 4 to 5 spam calls per day, and 0 legitimate ones.

        • If you pick up at all you are tagged as someone who picks up, and will receive 10x the amount of spam calls.

          Sounds like a superstition. Hasn't happened to me yet.

    • Re: Makes sense (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ljw1004 ( 764174 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @09:06PM (#64741848)

      For me that changed when I became a dad eight years ago. Who knows what number their caregiver or school nurse or front desk or teacher might be calling from? Or camp counselor, first aid person at theme park?

      (The only spam calls I receive are realtors asking if I want to sell).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Google has a good feature for this. Their AI thing answers the phone for you, and asks what the call is about. What the person is saying appears on your screen transcribed in real-time. Great for screening unknown numbers.

        Most of the spammers hang up when they hear it anyway.

    • I stopped answering my phone in 1996 due to excessive telemarketer calls and I never looked back.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      I only pick up only if it's a number or ID that I know. Otherwise I'm committing an unknown amount of time randomly.

      Yep, only exception is if I'm expecting a call.

      Very few people I need to speak to call me randomly. This is done for security reasons because there are so many spam and scam calls. My doctor will schedule appointments (or rather, ask me to schedule them online these days) via post or text, banks and officialdom (I.E. DVLA, taxation, et al) will contact me via post. Businesses I have business with will either use email, text or post and ask me to contact them if there's an issue (airlines... I haven't had

  • It's all spam. If it's important they'll leave a message or text.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by Mononymous ( 6156676 )

      The point of me calling you is I need a response now.
      If it weren't time sensitive, I would text.
      And leave a message? Please. When was the last time someone actually called you back?

      • If you need me NOW then I probably have your name/number in my phone and will answer.

        Also, a mutual understanding would have been reached regarding preferred communication methods as they related to a given emergent situation. Honestly though, most everyone has their device sitting on the table in front of them most of the day. If you want your message in my brain straight away, shoot a text.
      • Most people who think they need an answer "now" don't actually need an answer as urgently as they think.

        No, if you need an answer "now," leave a message, and if I agree that it's urgent, I'll call back.

        A whole lot of people have an inflated sense of what "emergency" means.

    • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
      Unfortunately, spammers also leave messages and send texts.
    • It's all spam. If it's important they'll leave a message or text.

      That has been my experience with every number that calls me that I do not know. A sales pitch. A political pitch. A scam call.

  • I'm older, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CAIMLAS ( 41445 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:25PM (#64741386)

    Phone calls are really unpleasant now, for numerous reasons. I can understand why, especially since there are better alternatives.

    First, you've got the fact that most calls are going to be spam or cold calls. With a number from another state, I'd say 50% are of that nature, from the state where the number was originally from. The rest are 'adult' type things, like businesses calling me back.

    Second, if I do actually talk to someone, I've got to content with horrible codec over compression and filtering. That means: people with really deep voices will be hard to understand, and people with high pitched voices will similarly be difficult to understand and their voices will be shrill. Everyone else will be compressed, and horrible. It's not like in the 'old' days of analog or high quality VOIP calls, cell calls are generally quite trash.

    Third, add in the fact that it's got to have a high degree of intentionality. It's not really useful for anything except "long conversations on the phone" or "exigent situations" - and you've got to catch someone when they're not going to be interrupted.

    Then, there are better alternatives: facetime/whatsapp, etc. all have higher quality audio, with video. I can have a clear conversation.

    Most of my phone calls last about 10-30 seconds and are highly transactional and exigent, due to the above.

  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:25PM (#64741390) Homepage Journal

    When my great grandparents were young, people would not normally have telephones in their homes, so they are another generation that wouldn't normally answer the phone either. It wasn't until 1910s-1920s when it become more common for someone to have their own telephone.

    As someone who deals with Gen Z and Millennial regularly. They answer very quickly from a DM on Discord or Slack. Even if they are in the middle of a meeting or playing a game.

    There is a gap separating generations on the priority for forms of communication. When 90% of the voice calls you get are a scam or spam, you learn pretty quickly to not bother answering. Now imagine doing that for most of your childhood and adult life.

    It's a behavior that was taught to them by REALITY. And probably better than what my Mom is doing, which picking up the phone and talking to anyone. And helping them log into her computer remotely. JFC, she's had people in her bank and credit account so many times the banks formally notified her they won't cover the losses if it happens again.

    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
      Exactly. It's a common trend, because of this. Anyone attributing malice/laziness/etc to the trend just has it wrong. I'm sure some do that, but work avoidance is not the sole domain of the young.
      • by evanh ( 627108 )

        I sometimes won't answer a call from work after hours and that's a conscious decision. And true for emails too. If at work, or on call, then of course answering the phone goes without question. Although there can be times where a delayed call-back also happens. Like when on the loo.

        Just ignoring it completely is clearly being lazy, at the least.

      • Work avoidance? If I'm not at work, it's not my fucking problem. I'm not on call and nothing at my job is SO important it can't wait until I get to work at 5am the next day. I'm also not in charge of a team and texting between people in my department is always sufficient.

        If you are on call or a manager, then expectations are different. Probably make more then I do as well. It's called a tradeoff.

        • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
          When did I say anything about outside of work hours? The summary, and in further depth the article, include it happening at work. Your time is your own, unless you're compensated for it not to be.
  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:28PM (#64741402)

    I always just use an operator to connect my calls, especially when calling long distance. Much more convenient and better than texting.

  • Those worthy of my attention know not to use voice unless it's a legit emergency i.e. the kind they should call first responders to before calling me.

    I make that crystal fucking clear. RL Boomer here who prefers asynchronous comms. If I'm on call then I know whose messages to be alert for.

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:36PM (#64741444)

    If you don't pick up the phone you may not know that it's expired

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Hey now, I enjoyed the conversation that I had with a nice guy with an Indian accent from the IRS last week. I had no idea about the back taxes that I owed! It was also pretty generous of him to let me pay off my debts with Google Play gift cards. Much easier to having to send a check in the mail!

  • It is cheaper to make noise than signal, and sufficient laws have not been passed (which includes funding for enforcement) to allow a reasonable amount of signal to come through to be worthwhile.

    Also, facilities to direct your call to the place you want when you want it are add-ons, if they exist at all.

    Ringers should be off at school, automatically, for instance, and failing to turn them off can have big consequences.
      Ditto in other venues.

    • Spammers have ruined phones - I don't answer if your caller ID doesn't match something in my contacts list.

  • > Voice notes have emerged as a compromise, with 37% of 18-34 year-olds preferring them to traditional calls.

    the worst. The. Worst.

    • Voice notes? Like... sending people voicemail so you don't have to interact directly with another human being? Like... the least convenient of all phone-based communication methods?

      I seriously think I'd just ghost somebody who only wanted to talk by leaving those kinds of messages. I don't want to waste my precious time compensating for your lack of social skills. And I say that as someone who is lacking in social skills.

      • I spend a lot of time in a country where they speak another language. While I can speak the language, if someone leaves me a voice message it is typically going to be mumbly and way too fast for me to understand. If I send you a dm on WhatsApp, it means I want you to reply the same way. Don't reply with a video, a voice message, or dick pics...
    • Why? Phone OSK is terrible for mail, and you might not be available for phone call, just leave a message it's fine. Voice notes are like answer phones, they served a purpose before phones had keyboards.

      • No, they're really terrible. Voice notes are the equivalent of ten minute youtube videos explaining something that could have been expressed in two sentences. They're like rambling phone conversations where you can't tell the person at the other end to get to the fucking point.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Voice notes

      Voice mail.

      It works. My system does a passable speech to text and e-mails me a copy. Sometimes it's hilarious but I can always revert back to the original recording.

  • by flink ( 18449 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:41PM (#64741476)

    Not a millennial, but I hardly ever use the phone as well. Cellphones sound like garbage, and that's where most phone conversations take place. I grew up having hours-long conversations on landlines with friends, family, girlfriends, etc., so it's not like I'm adverse to phone conversation. Same for the first half of my career - lot's of long meetings on those triangle conference phones.

    It's just now every other sentence needs to be repeated due to being misunderstood from crap codecs or talking over each other due to lag. I don't want to have a detailed conversation over the phone because of that. If you want to talk, schedule a zoom meeting. If it's quick, shoot me a text or a DM.

    Also, I get so many spam calls, that unless caller ID is enabled and shows a number I recognize, I'm not picking up.

    • Not a millennial, but I hardly ever use the phone as well. Cellphones sound like garbage, and that's where most phone conversations take place. I grew up having hours-long conversations on landlines with friends, family, girlfriends, etc., so it's not like I'm adverse to phone conversation. Same for the first half of my career - lot's of long meetings on those triangle conference phones.

      It's just now every other sentence needs to be repeated due to being misunderstood from crap codecs or talking over each other due to lag. I don't want to have a detailed conversation over the phone because of that. If you want to talk, schedule a zoom meeting. If it's quick, shoot me a text or a DM.

      Also, I get so many spam calls, that unless caller ID is enabled and shows a number I recognize, I'm not picking up.

      I have that problem with zoom meetings, the quality is very hit or miss.

  • by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @06:50PM (#64741510)

    I refuse to answer the phone if I don't recognize the numbers, it's not in my phone already or the call ID isn't something I recognize. When I use to answer the phone, it was almost always a telemarketer. Why even bother.

    Anyone I know would text or be in my phone. Government will send snail mail. So why would I ever answer the phone?

    If they ever want to fix caller ID and stop letting scammers abuse the phone system, then I'll consider answering the phone. That won't happen else it would of already by now. It's a political issue, not a technical issue.

  • I plan to use MY phone, that I bought and paid for, however I like. If I don't want to answer calls, I won't.

    Work is a different story. Especially if you're carrying your employer's device. You might be expected to answer. But you should bill your time accordingly.

  • Those of us from an older generation were taught to listen and respond when someone is talking to you. For the younger generations, this is known as being polite. That said, entities who aren't friends feel that it's perfectly fine to call people, interrupt them, and waste their time. It's difficult to break oneself of the habit of answering the phone. The other side of this coin is that when you want to call some entity, their default position goes something like this: "We're experiencing higher than no

  • It goes in the draw at 5:35 when I leave the office, I'm not contracted for on call and they refused to pay me more when they tried that on - so being a good capitalist I refused to do so,
  • ... I let answer machines and voice mails answer. I do mostly messaging.

    • Forget that, I have an IVR system answer my calls. Yes that's my personal number. For work I have an AI answer the call. It's hooked up to chatgpt.

  • I don't give my phone number to companies, retailers, etc.; If they have something important to say, I want it in writing.
    >90% of calls are spam/scams; I never pick up if I don't have the number in my address book.
    I never answer work calls if I'm not on the clock (I'm not paid to be on call).
    I only ever answer calls on WhatsApp; There's where everyone I want to talk to is.
    Most of the time it's easier to sort it out over chat (We typically read 3-4 times faster than we can speak). If it's more complic
  • ...I don't text
    I can't use the tiny screen and awful touch keypad
    And no, I'm not some kind of clueless technophobe, I'm a semi-retired computer engineer
    I just can't use the text UI
    I use a proper computer, with a 32", 4K screen, keyboard and mouse
    Maybe someday when brain to computer interfaces are perfected, I will use them, but for today, if you wanna talk to me, use the phone

  • I work in IT and get way to many unsolicited vendor calls trying to sell me crap which puts me off answering the call if I don't know the number. I am talking multiple calls in one day.

  • That's why most people eventually learned to not answer phone calls, especially the younger generation who grew up never experienced the time when phone calls were usually important.

    Many text are scams also, but those are comparatively easier to identify and waste less time to ignore.

  • Younger folks will still call if it's something that's really sensitive. Unless someone is recording the conversation, there won't be any record of the discussion. No screenshot or logs (there will be a call log, but it only has the time and number) . Unless you're the NSA or the cops with a surveillance warrant.

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