The biggest wasters in customer contact are poor routing that leads customers to the wrong departments, repetitive questions that must be answered manually, fragmented systems with no centralized overview, lack of self-service options, and employees having to switch between multiple screens. These wasters lead to increased costs, longer handling times and declining customer satisfaction. Organizations lose valuable time and resources daily without fully realizing it.
What are the biggest wasters in customer contact?
The five biggest wasters in customer contact are poor routing, repetitive queries, fragmented systems, missing self-service capabilities and inefficient screen usage. These wasters cause customer service teams to spend far more time and energy on tasks than necessary.
Poor routing means that customers are systematically directed to the wrong department or employee through outdated menus or IVR systems. This results in redirects, repeat calls, and duplicate handling times. A customer calling with a question about an invoice may first end up in the sales department, have to be transferred to administration, and then again to the billing specialist.
Repetitive queries are a second big waster. When hundreds of customers ask the same questions daily about opening hours, delivery status or password recovery, employees spend valuable time on tasks that could be automated. Specialists who could solve complex issues are stuck in simple, repetitive conversations.
Fragmented systems without a centralized view mean that organizations have multiple vendors for telephony, chat, WhatsApp and email. These systems do not communicate with each other, leaving employees without a complete customer view and having to switch between different applications. Management cannot report on customer contact because there is no integrated view.
The lack of self-service options means that for simple questions, customers are required to contact them during business hours. Outside these times, there is no way to find answers on their own, leading to frustration and a spike in contact moments when they open.
Employees who have to switch between four to six different screens lose hours of searching and administration every day. They have to look up customer information in the CRM, find order information in the ERP system, view communication history in the phone system, and take notes in yet another system.
Why do customers keep ending up in the wrong department?
Customers end up in the wrong department due to outdated IVR systems with unclear drop-down menus, lack of intelligent routing, insufficient integration between channels, and lack of skill-based routing. These routing problems lead to duplicate handling times and frustrated customers who have to repeat their story multiple times.
Outdated IVR systems operate with static drop-down menus that do not match actual customer inquiries. A menu of options such as “press 1 for sales, press 2 for service” does not help when a customer has a question about a pending order that affects both sales and service. Customers have to guess which option fits best, which frequently leads to wrong choices.
Intelligent routing based on customer data is often completely lacking. Systems do not recognize that a calling customer was already in contact yesterday on the same topic, or that this customer has VIP status. Each call is treated as if it were the first interaction, with no context or history.
Integration between different contact channels is insufficient. A customer who was first contacted by email and then calls has to retell the whole story because the telephone operator does not have access to the email correspondence. This fragmented approach frustrates customers and wastes employee time.
Skill-based routing, where calls automatically go to the most appropriate employee based on expertise, does not exist in many organizations. A technically complex question is just as likely to reach a junior employee as a specialist, leading to call transfers and longer resolution times.
As a result, employees waste a lot of time transferring calls. They must first figure out what the customer needs, then determine who can best help, and then transfer the customer with a summary of the problem. This double handling effectively doubles the time required per call.
How do you recognize that your customer contact is inefficient?
You recognize inefficient customer contact by a high percentage of call transfers, many repetitive questions, employees switching between multiple screens, limited accessibility due to staff shortages, lack of reporting, customers repeating their stories, and rising costs without growth in contact volume. These signs point to structural problems in the customer contact organization.
A high percentage of call transfers is a clear signal. When more than 20 percent of all calls must be transferred, it indicates routing problems. Employees then spend a significant portion of their time transferring calls rather than resolving queries.
Repetitive questions about the same topics indicate missing self-service capabilities or unclear communication. When dozens of customers a day call with identical questions about delivery times, opening hours or procedures, it’s a missed opportunity for automation.
Employees who have to switch between four to six different screens to answer one customer question are working inefficiently. They lose time searching for information, have to log into multiple systems, and cannot form a complete customer view because data is scattered across different applications.
Limited accessibility due to staff shortages is a common problem. Organizations that have to limit their opening hours to only the morning, or are structurally unable to fill vacancies, struggle with inefficient processes that require too much manual capacity.
The lack of reporting on contact reasons and channel visibility means that management has no insight into why customers contact them. Without this data, it is impossible to recognize patterns, communicate proactively, or make data-driven improvements.
Customers who have to repeat their story when switching channels experience poor service. When a customer switches from email to phone and has to explain the problem again, it indicates fragmented systems without shared customer history.
Rising operational costs without proportional growth in contact volume indicate inefficiency. If you need more employees to answer the same number of inquiries, or if the cost per contact increases, there are structural problems in the organization of customer contact.
What hidden costs are there in poorly organized customer contact?
Hidden costs in poorly organized customer contact include duplicate handling times, wasted specialist time, increased personnel costs, licensing costs for multiple systems, customer loss due to poor experience, and missed revenue opportunities. These costs often stay out of the picture because they are not directly visible as a cost.
Double handling times due to call transfers and replays are a major cost. If a call takes ten minutes on average but first ends up in the wrong department for five minutes, you are effectively paying fifteen minutes in personnel costs for one query. With hundreds of calls a day, these costs add up quickly.
Specialists who waste time on basic questions instead of dealing with complex problems cost a lot of money. A technical expert who costs thirty euros an hour and spends half his time answering questions that a junior employee costing fifteen euros an hour could answer is wasting five hundred euros a month in misdirected capacity.
Increased personnel costs due to inefficient work processes are piling up. Employees who have to switch between multiple systems, manually transcribe information, or reconstruct customer history from multiple sources require more time per inquiry. This means you need more employees for the same contact volume.
Licensing costs for multiple fragmented systems from different vendors are higher than for an integrated platform. Organizations often pay for telephony at vendor A, chat at vendor B, WhatsApp Business at vendor C, and a separate ticketing system at vendor D. Each system has its own licensing costs, implementation costs and maintenance contracts.
Customer loss due to poor customer experience is difficult to measure but very costly. Customers who become frustrated with repetitions, long wait times, or the feeling that no one understands their problem move on to competitors. The cost of customer turnover far exceeds the cost of retaining existing customers.
Missed sales opportunities due to limited accessibility and missing proactive communication often remain invisible. When customers cannot be helped outside business hours, or when you lack the ability to communicate proactively about relevant products or services, you miss sales opportunities without noticing it right away.
How do you tackle the biggest wasters in customer contact?
You address waste in customer contact by implementing intelligent routing, creating self-service options, integrating all channels into one platform, using data analytics for proactive action, and automating standard processes. These steps make customer service more efficient and improve the customer experience without costly customization.
Intelligent routing ensures that customers go directly to the right department or employee. By using customer data, contact history and skill-based routing, you drastically reduce call forwarding. For example, the system recognizes that a calling customer placed an order yesterday and connects directly to the order department.
Self-service options for repetitive questions relieve your team and improve customer satisfaction. Customers can find their own answers to frequently asked questions about delivery status, opening hours or product information outside business hours. This reduces the number of calls and gives customers the control they value.
Integration of all customer contact channels into one omnichannel platform creates a centralized view. Employees see full customer history across phone, email, chat and WhatsApp in one screen. This eliminates switching between systems and prevents customers from having to repeat their story. We offer this customer contact integration as part of a total package.
Data analytics helps identify and proactively address contact reasons. By analyzing why customers contact you, you can recognize patterns and address them at the source. If many customers call about unclear invoices, you improve invoice communication. Our expertise in data analytics supports this optimization.
Automation of standard processes with Agentic AI frees up employees for complex issues. Instead of traditional bots that only follow instructions, we deploy self-thinking assistants that take initiative and act independently. This evolution from executive bots to intelligent assistants handles routine questions automatically, allowing specialists to focus on issues that require human expertise. Check out our solutions for an integrated approach to customer contact optimization.
By combining these approaches, you create efficient customer contact without the complexity and cost of traditional customization. We use smart combinations of proven standard building blocks that are customized for each organization. All under one roof, with a single point of contact for implementation, management and support.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to implement an integrated customer contact platform?
Implementation time varies between 6 to 12 weeks, depending on the number of channels to be integrated and the complexity of existing systems. With a phased approach, you can start with the first channels within a few weeks, while other integrations are prepared in parallel. The advantage of a standard platform is that you don't need months of custom development as with traditional solutions.
What are the first steps to solve routing problems?
Start by analyzing your current call-through rate and contact reasons to understand where customers are getting stuck. Then implement skill-based routing where calls automatically go to employees with the appropriate expertise. Also, make sure the system has access to customer data and contact history so that returning customers get straight to the right person without repeating their story.
Can I add self-service without replacing my current systems?
Yes, modern self-service solutions can be linked to existing systems such as your CRM or ERP via APIs. You can start incrementally with a knowledge base for frequently asked questions and expand this with automated workflows for status updates, password recovery or order information. A phased approach prevents large upfront investments and lets you learn from customer behavior.
How do I prevent employee resistance to new systems?
Involve employees in the selection and implementation process from the beginning, and clearly demonstrate how the new system will make their jobs easier by eliminating screen changes and providing instant access to customer information. Invest in proper training and provide a gradual transition that gives employees time to get used to it. Employees embrace change when they see frustrations such as redirects and information searches disappear.
What is the difference between traditional chatbots and Agentic AI?
Traditional chatbots follow pre-programmed scripts and can only respond to specific questions for which they have been trained. Agentic AI, on the other hand, can think independently, understand context, take initiatives and perform more complex tasks without human intervention. These intelligent assistants learn from interactions and can make decisions within established frameworks, allowing them to handle much more than just FAQs.
How do I measure the ROI of customer contact optimization?
Measure concrete KPIs such as the percentage of call-throughs, average handling time per contact, number of repeat contacts on the same topic, and staffing versus contact volume. Also compare cost per contact before and after optimization, and monitor customer satisfaction via NPS or CSAT scores. Most organizations see measurable improvements in efficiency within 6 months and positive ROI within a year due to lower staffing costs and higher customer satisfaction.
What if my organization is too small for a full omnichannel platform?
Smaller organizations also benefit from integrated customer contact, precisely because they often operate with limited capacity. Modern platforms are scalable and you only pay for the channels and functionality you actually use. Start with the channels that are most important to your customers and expand as needed. The efficiency gains are often greatest precisely with smaller teams, because every wasted minute has an immediate impact.


