Mary Jane Copps is known as “The Phone Lady,” so it’s little surprise that she gets a lot of phone calls. The former journalist offers classes that can cost $3,600 for a daylong group session, coaching tens of thousands of people over the years on improving their phone conversations—anything from simple pointers on breaking the ice to detailed strategies for closing a sale.
Lately, the tenor of the job has shifted. When Copps started her business two decades ago, what she calls “phone anxiety” accounted for about 10% of her work. Today, it’s almost half. “People are afraid to have conversations,” Copps says, recalling a client who sought anxiety medication just to pick up the phone.
She attributes this in part to a generational shift: People in their 20s grew up without talking regularly on landlines, instead relying on smartphone-enabled text, chat, and videos. They never learned the basics and now shun—or even fear—phone conversations. A survey conducted before the pandemic found that four in five younger Americans had to mentally prepare themselves before making a call. Then Covid-19 got everyone addicted to videoconferencing tools such as Zoom, and Slack grew into a vital forum for workplace chatter— leaving the good ol’ curly-corded handset to gather dust.
Esta historia es de la edición February 13, 2023 de Bloomberg Businessweek US.
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