By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 2 July 2026
Photo by William Hook on Unsplash
The humble phone call is quietly falling out of the professional toolkit — and it is starting to cost people real opportunities. In June 2026, Inc. reported the results of a survey by privacy firm Cloaked which found that 21% of respondents had missed a call from an employer or a job recruiter because they assumed it was spam, while 19% of employed Americans admitted that the way they screen unknown numbers has directly affected their availability or responsiveness at work. The device in our pocket has never been more powerful, yet the one thing it was built to do is the thing we increasingly avoid.
The avoidance runs deeper than spam fatigue. Research from Trinity College London found that 30% of Gen Z respondents aged 16 to 29 experience genuine anxiety about making or receiving phone calls — a phenomenon researchers now call telephobia — with 42% anxious about working with people they do not know and 38% fearing face-to-face small talk. An earlier Face For Business survey found that 62% of employees had avoided a work call altogether in the previous year because of anxiety. This is not a quirk of one generation; it is a skills gap arriving in every organisation at once.
The Ringtone Has Become a Threat
For professionals who grew up typing rather than talking, a live call removes everything asynchronous messaging provides: time to compose, time to edit, and control over when the interaction happens. A ringing phone demands immediate, unrehearsed performance — and to a generation trained by messaging apps, that feels less like communication and more like an ambush. Add a decade of robocalls teaching all of us that unknown numbers mean trouble, and the result is predictable: calls go unanswered, voicemails go unchecked, and recruiters move on to the next candidate who picks up.
What Avoidance Actually Costs
The costs are rarely visible in the moment. A misread email that a five-minute call would have untangled becomes a forty-message thread. A difficult piece of feedback delivered by text loses its warmth and lands as coldness. An escalation that needed a voice waits a day in someone's inbox. Voice carries tone, pace and hesitation — the signals that build trust and resolve ambiguity faster than any emoji can. Professionals who can pick up the phone comfortably resolve issues sooner, negotiate better and are remembered more vividly than those who hide behind the keyboard. In a workplace drowning in text, the confident caller has a scarce and compounding advantage.
Key statistic: 30% of Gen Z workers aged 16–29 experience anxiety about phone calls — 'telephobia' — while 62% of employees say they have avoided a work call because of anxiety. (Trinity College London, 2026; Face For Business)
How to Practise Phone Confidence
Like any communication skill, phone confidence is built through deliberate practice, not personality. Start small: make one low-stakes call a day — a booking, a supplier query — to renormalise the medium. Before any important call, write three bullet points: why you are calling, what you need, and how you will close. Rehearse only the first ten seconds; a strong opening carries the rest. If a call goes to voicemail, leave one — name, purpose, callback time — rather than retreating to text. And if you lead a team, do not simply ban or mandate calls: make channel choice explicit, coach the phone as a skill, and model it by picking up the phone yourself when nuance matters. The organisations that treat voice as a trainable capability, rather than a generational lost cause, will simply out-communicate those that do not.
Master Professional Communication with Elevana
Speaking with confidence — on the phone, in the room, or on camera — is a learnable discipline. Elevana's PRO Communicator programme helps professionals practise the verbal skills that text cannot replace, so every conversation — planned or unplanned — lands with clarity and composure.
The call you keep avoiding rarely disappears — it only gets harder to make.