No ?

please don't send a 5-minute voice note when a sentence would do

Imagine opening a chat and finding a 5-minute voice note with zero context about what's inside... πŸ€¦β€β™€οΈ

❌ Don't do this

T.J Miller chat avatar
T.J Miller 2:00 PM
4:37
Thomas Middleditch chat avatar
Thomas Middleditch 2:20 PM
I'm in a meeting, can you type it?
T.J Miller chat avatar
T.J Miller 2:21 PM
12:19
Thomas Middleditch chat avatar
Thomas Middleditch 2:45 PM
I still can't listen right now

T.J Miller thought it was faster to just talk: it's easier to explain out loud. But a long voice note forces the other person to stop everything, find headphones, and listen in real time β€” with no way to skim, search, or reference it later.

Most people who do this don't mean to be inconsiderate. It's a habit: "Speaking is faster than typing for me."

But in work chat, voice notes are the opposite of async-friendly. They can't be skimmed, searched, quoted, or translated. And a 5-minute monologue often contains 30 seconds of actual information buried in filler.

The same goes for:

  • Multi-minute voice notes for simple questions
  • Sending a second voice note because the first one wasn't clear
  • Voice notes with no text summary of what's inside
  • Rambling voice notes that could be one typed sentence
  • Voice notes in group channels where 20 people have to listen

If it takes more than 30 seconds, type it!

βœ… Instead, try this

T.J Miller chat avatar
T.J Miller 2:00 PM
hey! quick update on the client call: they want to move the deadline to next Friday and add two more pages to the scope. I pushed back on the timeline but agreed to the extra pages. Full notes in the doc.
Thomas Middleditch chat avatar
Thomas Middleditch 2:02 PM
got it, makes sense. I'll update the backlog
T.J Miller chat avatar
T.J Miller 2:03 PM
perfect, linked the doc in #project-updates too
Thomas Middleditch chat avatar
Thomas Middleditch 2:04 PM
great, I'll review after my meeting

A typed message can be read in 10 seconds, skimmed, and referenced later β€” a 5-minute voice note can't do any of that.

Instead of a long voice note, try:

  • Type a summary with the key points
  • If it's complex, write it in a doc and share the link
  • Use bullet points for multiple topics
  • If you must send audio, keep it under 30 seconds and add a text summary

Text is searchable, skimmable, and async. Your teammates will get the info faster, reference it later, and never have to whisper "what did that voice note say?" in a meeting.

When done right, everyone stays informed without headphones. πŸŽ‰