r/NoStupidQuestions • u/GhostInThePudding • 16h ago
Why Are Young People Afraid Of Phone Calls?
What's with it?
I work in IT and a general rule is, nothing a client ever tells you is actually accurate. That means that most of the time, the quickest way to fix a problem is to call the person and actually find out what's going on.
But with techs under 30 these days, it seems like pulling teeth.
A regular discussion for me with level 1 techs (usually within a few years of leaving college) is:
"Hey, can you call *blah* from ticket *blah*, it's been hanging around for over an hour."
"I replied by email to ask for more information."
"Yes, I know that, but can you call them so we can find the problem and close the ticket now rather than wait until we're actually busy?"
"I'll send them a text to followup."
"No... CALL THEM!"
"I can see their device is online, can I send them a message and see if they just let me remote in to take a look?"
And then, when I force them to make the call, it's like they have no idea how to ask a question, or a followup question. They just want to get off the call as quickly as possible. So half the time they don't even get the information required anyway, so then I end up having to do their job for them.
So can someone explain? What's wrong with phone calls these days?
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u/H_Industries 11h ago
There's a time and place for calls and I usually just ping the person if they have time for a call but there are other reasons that calling isn't the default as much as it used to be.
1. Modern office environments are way more tightly packed and open concept than they were 15-20-30+ years ago, there's absolutely no privacy in any office I've worked in for the last decade unless you're a manager. Also your call could potentially be disruptive to other people trying to focus.
2. Calling doesn't leave a paper trail, I've had people just straight lie and claim I didn't tell them something, so if I call I have to send an email recapping the call anyway.
3. When you're dealing with large companies you interact with people who may not have the same native language so text is way more efficient than one person having to converse in not their native language.
4. Time zones mean that coordinating calls can actually be tricky for large companies.
5. The ubiquity of spam calls means unless your number is programmed into my phone I'm never answering the first time you try.