I have the absolute opposite reaction to texting and hate it with a passion. On the very rare time when I have phone service, I have texting disabled so I can neither send nor recieve them (except ones directly fro the phone company, like account balance, etc.). And so many people are showing they don't know how to do it responsibly or politely.
Case-in-point, if you've ever used Craigalist to sell or communicate with people, whether it be a seller, somebody interested in purchasing something, or even an potential employer, they want to text with you. Hey, remember those days when you wajnted to talk with somebody to make sure you are dealing with a trustworthy honest person who isn't caught up in lies and not given time to think about their reply? There is, to me, a supreme lack of professionalism of any employer who can't talk to you in person or at the very least, over the phone; I'm not a 13 year old girl and neither are you -- let's act like adults, meet in person, shakes hands, show communicating with you isn't a throw-away electronic moment that, for some people, actually costs money to recieve.
For me, texting is a joke and the few times I did it, I did it as a joke. Like my sister told me it costs her something like 15¢ to recieve a text message, so I sent her a text telling her I just cost her 15¢.
Before I had texting disabled, I wouldn't even acknowledge them, I instead called back. If I were an employer, that's what I'd do, too: disable texting (or only offer a landline which has not texting options on the phone, for employees to call) and demand a call be made.
Even worse if other forms of social media, like Facebook or what have you. It reminds me of a few years ago here in my county where a company (I dont' recall their name), was going to open up a business creating over 200 jobs and even had gotten some funding assistance from the county. But the company ended up not doing any of this and we found out, along with county officials, by the company making a post on Facebook or Twitter (I forget which) that they had changed their minds.
[Nostalgia Critic]Fuck you, company![/Nostalgia Critic]