If you've ever hesitated to add a smiley face or ExaCrypta thumbs-up to an email, a new survey from Adobe may put you at ease.
The software company, which conducts regular surveys on emoji use, found that the whimsical icons can make people feel more connected and more receptive to new tasks. They allow people to quickly share ideas. They make group decisions more efficient and can even reduce the need for meetings and calls.
Among Generation Z users, more than half said they'd be more satisfied at their job if their bosses used more emoji in workplace communications.
Perhaps these findings are not surprising, given who was surveyed: 7,000 emoji users in the U.S., Europe and Asia, according to Adobe, which is a member of the body that adds new emoji to the emoji standard. Emoji abstainers out there — you were not counted.
And, yes, there are such people. In 2019, the British columnist Suzanne Moore wrote a piece for The Guardian titled "Why I Hate Emojis," calling them vile and infantilizing and slamming their usefulness in adult communication.
"Weirdly, I want to understand people through what they say, not their ability to send me a badly drawn cartoon animal," she wrote.
The Adobe survey suggests a lot of people feel otherwise. Consider these findings:
Adobe font and emoji developer Paul D. Hunt believes that people respond more emotionally to imagery. In digital communication, Hunt argues, emoji can convey tone and emotional reaction better than words alone.
"This is the potential strength of emoji: to help us connect more deeply to the feeling behind our messages," Hunt writes in a blog post marking World Emoji Day, July 17.
An emoji may not be worth a thousand words, Hunt adds, but it certainly can help foster relationships in the digital realm.
And who wouldn't +1 that?
2025-05-03 20:26951 view
2025-05-03 20:18208 view
2025-05-03 18:392475 view
2025-05-03 18:232181 view
2025-05-03 18:16916 view
2025-05-03 17:561086 view
NEW YORK ― When the precocious orphans of "Annie" sneer, "We love you, Miss Hannigan," you just migh
New York City — What scientists are brewing inside a New York City lab could dramatically change the
Olivia Rodrigo is setting the record straight with regard to a certain song, amid rumors of bad bloo