A family member gave you an Echo Dot for your birthday. Or your new phone has Siri built in. You know voice assistants are supposed to be helpful, but trying to figure out what to actually say — and whether it's safe to use — feels like its own challenge.

This guide cuts through that. It covers what voice assistants actually are, how to get started with the three most common ones, useful commands to try today, and how to manage your privacy along the way.

What Is a Voice Assistant?

A voice assistant is software that listens to your voice, processes what you say, and does something with that information — whether that is answering a question, playing music, setting a reminder, or controlling your thermostat. You talk to it like you would talk to a person. No tapping, no typing, no menus to navigate.

The three voice assistants most seniors encounter are Siri (Apple), Alexa (Amazon), and Google Assistant (Google). Each lives in different places — on your phone, on a dedicated speaker, or on a screen device — but the idea is the same across all of them: you speak, it responds.

They are genuinely useful for seniors who find small-screen text difficult or who just want to do something quickly without opening an app. And once you know the basics, they become hard to live without.

Meet the Big Three

Apple

Siri

Built into every iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch. No setup needed — it is there when you first turn on your Apple device. Say "Hey Siri" followed by what you need. Works hands-free while you are driving or across the room.

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Amazon

Alexa

Lives in Amazon Echo speakers (Echo Dot, Echo Show) and some Fire tablets. Requires an Amazon account to set up. Particularly strong for controlling smart home devices — lights, plugs, thermostats, doorbell cameras — by voice. Say "Alexa" followed by your request.

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Google

Google Assistant

Built into Android phones, Google Nest speakers, and available on iPhones via the Google Assistant app. Excellent at answering questions with up-to-date information — weather, traffic, sports scores, definitions. Say "Hey Google" followed by what you need.

You already have one

If you have an iPhone, you already have Siri — it has been on every iPhone since 2011. You do not need to buy any new device to start using a voice assistant today. Open your iPhone, press and hold the home button (or say "Hey Siri" if it is enabled), and try asking something.

Getting Started: First-Time Setup

Setting up a voice assistant is a one-time step. After that, using it is as simple as speaking.

  1. 1
    For Siri on iPhone: Go to Settings → Siri & Search. Turn on "Listen for 'Hey Siri.'" Follow the voice training prompts — you say a few phrases so Siri learns your voice. That is it. You are ready.
  2. 2
    For Alexa on an Echo device: Plug in the device. Download the Alexa app on your phone or tablet (free from the App Store or Google Play). Open the app, sign in with your Amazon account, and follow the steps to connect your Echo. The app walks you through it in about 5 minutes.
  3. 3
    For Google Assistant on Android or iPhone: On Android, it is already set up — just say "Hey Google." On iPhone, download the Google Assistant app, sign in with your Google account (or create one), and follow the prompts. Say "Hey Google" to activate.
Mute when you need privacy

Every smart speaker has a microphone mute button — usually a small icon of a microphone with a line through it. Press it to turn off the microphone. The device cannot hear you while muted. Use this when you are having a private conversation, changing in a room with a smart speaker, or just do not want it listening for a while. Unmute when you are ready to use it again.

Useful Things to Ask Your Assistant

The easiest way to get comfortable with a voice assistant is to try things you actually want to do. Here are the most practical uses for seniors.

Weather
"What's the weather today?"
Works on all three assistants. Great first command to try.
Reminders
"Remind me to take my pills at 9am"
Siri, Alexa, and Google Assistant all set reminders. Great for daily routines.
Calls
"Call my daughter"
After adding a contact once, you can call anyone hands-free instantly.
Music
"Play Frank Sinatra"
"Play jazz" or "Play classical music" works too. Alexa and Google play from your preferred music service.
Timers
"Set a timer for 10 minutes"
Useful in the kitchen. "Set a timer for 20 minutes for the pie."
Questions
"What time is it in New York?"
Google Assistant is best for factual questions. "How many tablespoons in a cup?" "What's the capital of Florida?"

If the assistant does not understand you, try rephrasing. Say it the way you would ask a person — natural language almost always works better than trying to match a specific format.

Privacy and Safety: What Your Assistant Hears

One of the most common questions from seniors is whether these devices are always listening. The honest answer: yes, they are always listening — but only for their specific wake word. They do not send audio to the cloud until they hear that word. Everything before the wake word stays on the device and is not recorded or transmitted.

That said, here is what you should know.

Privacy steps worth taking
Review and delete your voice history regularly. All three assistants keep a log of what you have asked them. You can view and delete this history in Settings on your phone or in the Alexa/Google Assistant app. Doing this every month or two keeps your data lean.
Do not store financial details in assistant profiles. While Alexa and Google Assistant can make purchases by voice, adding credit card information to these accounts carries risk. If a grandchild asks your Echo to order toys, you could get an unexpected charge. Set up a voice PIN or purchasing code in the app to prevent unauthorized purchases.
Be cautious with skills and actions. Alexa "skills" and Google "actions" are third-party add-ons that extend what your assistant can do. Only enable skills from developers you recognize, and review what permissions each one requests. If a skill wants access to your contacts or location and that does not make sense for the skill, skip it.

When to Ask for Help

If your first experience with a voice assistant left you frustrated — the device did not understand you, you could not find a setting, or a family member set something up and you do not know what it does — that is a normal reaction. Voice assistants have a learning curve like anything else.

One session with TechKNOWphobia is usually enough to get your assistant set up correctly, walk through the commands that matter most to you, and leave you feeling confident.

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Need help getting started with your voice assistant?

TechKNOWphobia offers patient, judgment-free 1-on-1 sessions in Fort Lauderdale and over video call. We will set up your device, walk through useful commands, and make sure you feel confident before we wrap up.

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