Imagine needing a URL, a password, or a meeting ID, and someone sends it to you buried inside a voice note... π€¦ββοΈ
T.J Miller thought voice was more convenient: it's faster for me to just say it. But sending a URL, a password, or technical details inside a voice note makes the info impossible to use β the recipient can't copy, paste, search, or bookmark it.
Most people who do this don't realize the friction they're creating. It feels efficient: "I'll just dictate it real quick."
But certain information only works as text. Voice notes for data, links, or instructions force the other person to listen, transcribe by hand, and pray they got it right.
The same goes for:
If it needs to be copied, type it!
Typed information can be copied, pasted, bookmarked, and searched β a voice note saying "the URL is aitch tee tee pee ess colon slash slash..." can't.
Instead of a voice note for data, try:
Voice is for tone, text is for data. Use each where it shines. Nobody wants to replay a voice note three times to transcribe a URL character by character.
When done right, everyone can just copy and paste. π