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20 May '07 - 07:54

When texting teenagers hit the work force ... will we see change or chaos?

I stumbled across an interesting article in the Washington Post today "For Texting Teens, an OMG Moment When the Phone Bill Arrives"

it talks about how teenagers in the US send thousands of text messages per month (one single teenager that is) and how that increases the phone bills. For Europeans, this is not so much news as sms have been here en vogue for a longer time than in the US but I was still shocked about the numbers.

The article ends with some warm nice story about the kid - in the beginning the one with the thousands of sms - goes on a vacation and has to talk to other kids "in real". We know this kind of story building.

That aside I surely see how people in everyday life use SMS around me, and also use chat as a way of communicating. Tools like twitter.com (think chat goes sms on speed) make it even easier to go this route.

I have been saying for some years now that I am curious to see the day when people enter the work place who grew up on email and chat as they will have quite a different expectation on how communcation works rather than somebody grown up on expensive telefon calls like myself.

It is even more strange to think about a teenager which is in constant chat mode to imagine they would be able to concentrate on something in solitude. :)

E-mail is said to be for the old people, and writing real letters (perhaps even by hand?) for dead people?

Looking at the way most companies still work (successfully btw), I cant even start to imagine what it will mean for employers having to deal with this kind of new type of employee.

I would be interested to hear about your thoughs on this article and how the use of text messaging is done in your country and if you can tell from your own childreen perhaps.

The part about text messages being out of the control of parents btw was especially intruiging. :)

"It's a form of silent communication; they can do it whenever, they can do it fairly secretively," said Rob Callender, trends director for Teenage Research Unlimited. In a recent study of teens, he said, TRU found that texting is the second most popular use for cellphones, right after using them to check the time. Plus, every phone number a child calls is recorded on the family phone bill, with a time stamp. But text messages remain an anonymous, faceless lump number.



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1 comments
  1. I use SMS regularly at work to communicate with team members at other locations. At 29 I am young, but I grew up on pagers, not cell phones.

    I work as a business intelligence consultant and am actively looking for ways to encorporate SMS into the enterprise. I am thinking SMS will be a regular part of many corporations long before the teenagers of today get salaried jobs.
    Jackson 20 May '07 - 17:33



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female. european. geek.

About Nicole Simon I love working with people and help them get successful, especially through the use of social software. Though I have been on the net for over a decade and have consulted SMB for years, I also understand the corporate side, as I have worked in a major corporation for 15 years.

If you need a name for what I do, I usually call myself a European New Media Specialist with a special interest in blogging, podcasting and second life. I also love to 'testdrive' products / concepts which is best described as Technology Implementation Analyst.

You can read more about me on my Xing profile or contact me for more information.

When I do interviews (mainly pre conference podcasts I put them up here: Bloxpert so I can seperate blog / podcast talk a bit more from the stuff here.

Useful Sounds is my personal podcast, and I also have a German blog. Living in Lübeck, Germany, a European point of view comes with everything.



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