Texting
How to keep a conversation going over text
A text conversation stalls when it turns into a question-and-answer form: you ask, they answer, silence, repeat. Keeping it alive is less about being endlessly clever and more about creating easy hooks, sharing a little yourself, and knowing when text has done its job.
In this article
Ask better questions, not more questions
Yes-or-no questions dead-end fast. Open ones that ask about experience or opinion give people something real to say. Instead of asking whether they had a good weekend, ask what the best part of it was. Small change, much more to reply to.
Use callbacks to inside jokes and earlier details
The fastest way to make a conversation feel warm is to reference something from earlier: a joke, a story, a plan they mentioned. Callbacks signal you were paying attention and create a shared thread that generic small talk never builds.
- Bring back a running joke instead of starting from zero.
- Follow up on something they were nervous or excited about.
- Reference a preference they shared when you suggest a plan.
Avoid the dry-texting spiral
When replies go flat, resist the urge to double-text or try harder in the same lane. Change the format instead. Send something playful, switch topics to what they actually care about, or move toward a call. Dry texting is often a sign the thread is ready for a different channel, not more effort over the same one.
Know when to move it to a date
The real goal is not an infinite text streak; it is spending time together. Once you have rapport, keeping the conversation going means suggesting a plan, not just more messages. If you want help finding the right questions and the right moment to make that move, Talking Stage, an iPhone dating coach, offers lessons and an AI practice room built for exactly these conversations.