Experts share essential advice for modern texting etiquette

Modern messaging groups require a fresh approach to digital texting etiquette across social platforms

Experts share essential advice for modern texting etiquette

Digital media professionals and communications copywriters established new parameters for modern texting etiquette in group chats on Friday. The collective guidance addressed widespread digital fatigue caused by overwhelming message volumes across social platforms. The emergence of distinct user personas like ghosters, thumbs-uppers, and skimmers prompted a formal review of online messaging behaviour.

Hindustan Times reported that the rapid accumulation of unread messages created noticeable social anxiety for global application users.

Managing chat volumes

Bengaluru copywriter Kruti Jariwala managed approximately 70 distinct messaging groups, making complete tracking impossible. Mumbai creative consultant Manasvi Bhatia handled 140 separate groups and regularly deleted entire chat histories without reading them. To survive massive unread message streams, users relied on artificial intelligence text summaries or requested direct screenshots of important conversational segments from friends.

Core messaging guidelines

The professionals detailed specific instructions for maintaining healthy texting etiquette in digital spaces:

  • Users should utilise platform emoji reactions instead of sending short single-word text responses like "OK"
  • Members must completely avoid sending voice notes for routine confirmations because they cause data clutter
  • Temporary holiday planning groups require immediate deletion after returning home to avoid creating exclusive cliques

Navigating social dynamics

The experts noted that text conversations often took an hour to conclude compared to a ten-minute in-person meeting. Senders frequently experienced deep anxiety from blue read-receipt indicators, but the copywriters confirmed that not every uploaded message required a text acknowledgement. Jariwala noted that a simple heart emoji effectively communicated that a message was heard, appreciated, and concluded.

Furthermore, family groups remained a strict exception where real-life deference extended directly to digital text threads. The communication consultants explained that group chats are highly democratic, allowing junior interns or new relatives to easily coordinate groups. Bhatia advised individuals to remain polite and direct when communicating in large threads to preserve collective user energy.