Business | Schumpeter

Customer service is getting worse—and so are customers

What could fix it?

An illustration of telephone, with the transmitter and receiver showing the heads of a customer and worker, arguing with one another.
Image: Brett Ryder

Rare is the company today that does not claim to be “customer-centric”. Anyone unfortunate enough to have sought assistance or redress from big business may quibble. Many interactions with customer service make you feel central only in the sense of being the prime target of corporate abuse. Such experiences grew especially maddening amid the staff shortages and supply-chain snarl-ups of the pandemic. But trouble has been brewing for some time. After rising steadily for two decades, the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI), a barometer of contentment, began declining in 2018. Although it has edged up from its pandemic nadir, it has shed all of its gains since 2006.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Your call is important”

From the September 30th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Pat Gelsinger, chief executive officer of Intel Corp., holds an artificial intelligence processor

Intel’s troubles deepen, as its boss makes an abrupt exit

Pat Gelsinger’s surprise departure poses a dilemma for Donald Trump

Food packaging with "Notpla Coating" is pictured at Notpla.

Could seaweed replace plastic packaging?

Companies are experimenting with new ways to reduce plastic waste


A sequoiq tree with a metal detector scanning around the Silicon valley and California.

Has Sequoia Capital outgrown its business model?

Venture capital’s hardiest perennial gets back to its roots


On stupid rules and quick wins

Why every boss can benefit from asking employees what most infuriates them

Will the trouble ever end for Volkswagen and its rivals?

From strikes to Trump tariffs, calamities abound