Customer Service Metrics Are Broken: What Really Matters

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Written by: Karl Evans

CEO

Published Date: October 6th, 2025 | 7 min
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Most companies think they’re measuring customer service metrics. In reality, they’re only measuring themselves. Average handling time. Tickets closed per day. Agent productivity. These numbers look neat on dashboards, but they don’t tell you what really matters: how your users felt, and how long they were left waiting for a solution.

Efficiency doesn’t equal experience. A service that looks productive on paper can still leave users frustrated, unheard, and walking away from your brand. And that costs far more than any short-term gain in efficiency.

This post breaks down why most customer service metrics are flawed, and what leaders should focus on instead if they want to build trust, loyalty, and long-term growth.

The Inside-Out Trap

Here’s the mistake: companies measure service from the inside out. They track what they’re doing and hope it reflects positively on the user. It rarely does.

  • Inside-out metrics: “How many tickets did we close today?”
  • Outside-in metrics: “How fast did we solve the problem, and how did the user feel?”

The difference is everything. When you look from the inside out, you end up with busy dashboards and disengaged customers. From the outside in, you see the experience as your users see it, and you can adapt to improve it.

The Only Two Metrics That Matter

Strip it back, and service success comes down to just two measures:

  1. Total Case Time – The clock starts the moment the issue happens or is reported, and it stops when it’s fully solved. That’s the true measure of impact on the user.
  1. Experienced Quality (user happiness) – How well was the user looked after? Did they feel understood, cared for, and supported? This can be tracked through audits, surveys, and feedback loops.

Everything else is background noise. These two metrics keep teams focused where it counts: the user.

Further reading: Setting KPIs Based on the User Experience

Why Control Metrics Hold You Back

Managers cling to traditional control metrics because that’s what the textbooks teach: efficiency, productivity, cost control. But if the aim is to deliver service that stands out, it’s time to rewrite the books.

Flawed metrics don’t necessarily break service, but they make it harder to deliver excellence. They push teams toward micro-measures that make them look good internally, without creating a better service externally.

The Healthcare Test

Think of it like healthcare. If you measure a doctor’s productivity by how many patients they see in a day, how much equipment they use, and how much they cost, you get a very scary system.

But if you measure how well they understood the patient’s need, how quickly they helped, and whether the patient got better the first time, you build a system that works the way we’d all want.

That’s the difference between inside-out and outside-in.

What Happens When You Get It Right

When companies flip to user-first metrics, something shifts:

  • Teams focus on the user and the service first.
  • They see the direct impact of their actions, for better or worse.
  • Service improves because it’s anchored in outcomes, not activity.

The result? Stronger trust, lower churn, and a brand that feels like it cares.

Further reading: Turning Customers Into a Marketing Army

The Real Cost of Getting It Wrong

The hidden cost of flawed metrics is churn and reputation. Just like marketing, you can’t always measure exactly how much a single ad, or a single bad service experience, changes the numbers. But over time, the momentum builds.

For example, a recent report shows that UK firms lose around £7.3 billion per month due to poor customer service (Institute of Customer Service). That’s not just inefficiency, that’s customers walking away.

And it’s not limited to one sector. Which? found that UK energy and broadband customers lost £298 million and 27.3 million hours last year due to poor service (Which?).

A First Step

Want to make the shift? Start by looking at support the same way you look at marketing.

Marketing isn’t just a cost center. It’s an investment in visibility and brand reputation. It’s not about one advert or one campaign, it’s about the story you build over time.

Support is the same. It’s not about tickets closed. It’s about customers who stay.

The Real Metric

It costs much less to look after the customers you already have than to find new ones.

That’s why metrics matter. Get them wrong, and you waste time proving efficiency that no user cares about. Get them right, and you build trust, loyalty, and a brand that lasts.

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