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Posted On 07.03.08

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how much I dislike phone calls. I don’t mind a quick call here or there (though I prefer a text message,) but any long call that involves important decision making or conversation I dread. I wasn’t sure if it was just me, or even why I felt that way. It seems like I’m not alone as D. Keith Robinson recently discussed a similar dislike and got a resounding response in the comments. Here’s what I’ve figured out:

  1. I love email and even text messaging.
  2. I love talking face to face.

For a long time, I dismissed my dislike of the phone as an affectation of my shyness. Why then do I like talking to people face to face? It would seem that that would make a shy person even shyer. The more I think about it, the more I realize there are two other factors that make me hate the phone.

Turn Based Communication

I think one of the biggest issues that arise when two humans communicate is the understanding and respect of whose turn it is to talk. It’s easy to talk with someone when it’s clear when they’re done speaking and it’s my turn. Then there aren’t interruptions, and the conversation goes back and forth, like a game of pong, without error.

With email, this concept of turn based conversation is taken to the extreme. Your turn isn’t up until you’ve finished a thought and hit send. When you get an email, you know it’s your turn to respond when you’re done reading. There’s no interrupting each other. Maybe this is why I love long email chains.

In a face to face conversation, you can use body language to signify you would like to add to the conversation. This lets the other person know they should pause, that you would like it to be your turn. It’s also much easier to graciously interrupt if you have something pressing to say or the other person is getting long winded.

On the phone there’s no way to tell if you or the other person wants to take their turn. Anyone who’s been on the phone with a salesman knows this. Salesmen love the phone because they can just ramble on and on and on (see Boiler Room.) As someone who was raised not to interrupt, this adds to the stress level since I don’t want to be rude but would like to put in my two cents.

Ramble On

Many people are verbose. I’m as guilty as the next guy for often going on, and on, and on. If someone sends you a long email, you can skim through it, omitting entire sections, to get to the heart of the matter. When you’re in person it’s much easier to be interested in what someone is saying—you can make eye contact, laugh, and more easily offer witty asides and quips. On the phone, I feel trapped. If the person I’m talking to launches into a long diatribe, I’m stuck, locked into my seat until the ride is over. This feeling leads to stress and anxiety, especially if I see a call coming in for a notorious rambler.

So it seems that my dislike for the phone isn’t based in some deep-seated social phobia, but rather in my need for structure in a conversation and a love of efficiency.

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Comments

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Justin Dickinson
July 3, 2008 2:27 pm

Sameera (great name!) you are definitely not alone. My phone will ring and I get such an anxious feeling.

There was another part I left out: When I'm on the phone I get easily distracted. One of the big parts of communication for me is visual, and on the phone that isn't satisfied. I usually end up surfing the web, or washing dishes, and then I realize that I have NO IDEA what the person on the other end has just said to me. Embarassing...

sameera
July 3, 2008 12:57 pm

Bang on!
It is good to know that I am not alone. There are times when I feel like speaking to a person on chat, but the phone is a long arm away!

I hesitate to lift many calls and used to wonder if I was weird. Now I know that there are others who feel the same way about the phone :)

Vanessa
July 4, 2008 12:47 am

I don't like talking on the phone but I think it is for more practical reasons. There is no record of what is talked about whereas, email gives you a written record. Email is a way to avoid confusion for me, especially because I had a supervisor that liked to say one thing but then change his mind without telling me later.

Susan RoAne
July 4, 2008 10:46 pm

GOod points.And Shyness, time constraints and not being able to control the phone process--- have an impact on our phone comfort levels. But the phone offers the opportunity to hear tone, inflection and intent that the texted or printed word does not.

How about using whatever mode works for you and for the recipient? A colleague or friend might prefer a text message but a grandparent may want a call or visit with a favorite grandchild. In that way, we must be chameleons and conversant using many forms of communication.

DISCLOSURE: I wrote How To Work a Room and the forthcoming Face to Face: How To Reclaim the Personal Touch in a Digital World. And my grandparents wanted to "SEE"(pinch our cheeks and hug) us so I propose we consider face to face when it feels right.

boon
July 4, 2008 4:18 pm

As much as I love emails, IMs and blogs over the phone, I know that other people don't.

Just yesterday, I had to force myself to make phone call, instead of waiting for an email reply.

In this case, I didn't have a choice of face-to-face - the person was in another country.

But somehow there was a big void between a phone call and emails, and emails didn't seem to cut it.

The short conversation I had on the phone solved a bunch of mysteries that would have wasted time and effort if done over email.

You're right about the awkwardness, but learning how to communicate over the phone is really important, and I don't think that's going to go away anytime soon.

GenerationXpert
July 6, 2008 1:07 pm

I hate the phone, too. I especially hate talking to the inlaws.

Breanne
July 3, 2008 6:16 pm

I posted a similar topic today. Great minds think alike...

http://www.brazencareerist.com/2008/07/03/flex-your-communication-style-...

Ulyana
July 3, 2008 7:25 pm

Definitely, what works for you best, that's the approach you should take. I find that a good mix of talking on the phone, in person, and via email is the key. I feel I have a great effect on people in person. Also, I can get more done on a five minute call asking targeted questions than exchanging email after email. And, leaving a good message will get me a quicker response than an email. I find that I need to prioritize - email is for things I don't need an immediate response, phone calls are for more urgent tasks, and in person meetings, which are rare, accomlish what no phone call or email can - puts my face to my name, let's my client know me, which later leads to more productive work.

Alaia Williams
July 3, 2008 7:46 pm

I prefer email over phone as well. Face to Face is good too...depending on who I am dealing with.

Similar to you, Justin, when I'm on the phone I get easily distracted. At least when I'm writing an email, I focus on my writing and then move on to something else. Similar to you, when I'm on the phone, I'll surf the web, or eat, or something. The only time that doesn't happen is when I'm in bed and the lights are off and the plan is to go to bed as soon as I hang up the phone.

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