
A customer reaches out with a question about an outstanding order. The customer service representative pauses, clicks through a few systems, and puts them on hold. Two minutes pass. Then three. Sixty-four percent of the time, that’s where the interaction ends.
When a customer service interaction breaks down, the instinct is to look at the employee: Have they had enough training? Do they know their stuff? Are they moving too slowly?
But according to The Knowledge Gap Report, a recent consumer survey conducted by LumApps, customers don’t see it that way. When they have a bad service experience, they point to a breakdown in internal systems and knowledge workflows — not employee performance — as the root cause.
LumApps’ report reveals that poor customer experiences are less often the result of employee failure but of broken internal knowledge flow. When teams can't access accurate information quickly, customer trust, retention and efficiency all suffer.
Ineffective internal communication remains a challenge for most organizations, costing companies hundreds of lost working hours and thousands of dollars in lost salaries each year. According to a recent Axios report, a single employee earning between $50,000 and $100,000 loses as many as 35+ working days per year due to poor internal knowledge sharing and communication.
But this internal breakdown doesn't only affect employees. Customers also feel the effects: 44% say employees lack the tools or information needed to provide high-quality support, and only 16% blame the individual employee. Over a third (36%) cite poor coordination across teams as the underlying issue, and 41% believe the problem is getting worse year over year.
This is despite continued investments in technology meant to improve communication. Fragmented systems, siloed knowledge and poor internal communication — not talent — are driving service outcomes in the wrong direction.
The clock starts the moment a customer asks a question. Seventy-seven percent will wait less than five minutes for an employee to look up an answer, and over a quarter (27%) report watching employees navigate to a separate system just to provide them with help. When knowledge is scattered across disconnected tools, that search is felt in the interaction, and it shapes how customers feel about the company.
When help is slow, some customers escalate. But many take a different path: 75% say they've resolved issues themselves rather than waiting for an employee to find the answer. This isn't self-service in the way most organizations design it, as an accessible portal or FAQ page that puts answers conveniently at customers' fingertips. This is customers working around a system that isn't working, which in turn affects their perception of the brand.
Among customers who experience poor service, 26% say they lose trust in a company's ability to deliver, and 23% assume the problem reflects broader organizational dysfunction.
For high-value customers, the stakes are even sharper. Among households earning $100K to $149K, 36% say they lose trust in a company’s ability to deliver quality service when employees don’t have access to necessary information or can’t find the answers to their questions promptly. Then, they spread the word.
Nearly half (47%) say they'll share the experience with friends or family, compared to 37% overall. Another 19% say they'd post about it online or on social media. When your highest-spending customers become your most vocal critics, the cost of a poor interaction multiplies fast.
The consequences of broken internal knowledge flow don’t stop with the customer who walks away. Beyond customer trust and retention, when internal tools don’t work, it slows everyone down.
If a service interaction leaves someone with an unclear or incomplete answer, 43% of customers shared that they’ll contact the company again. Each incoming request adds volume to already-strained frontline teams, extending wait times for other customers and pulling employees away from higher-value work.
The survey found that when knowledge isn’t standardized across systems or teams, it comes with multiple operational costs: 32% of customers say they receive inaccurate information, 22% receive conflicting answers, and 40% escalate to a manager when this happens.
More escalations mean more senior employee time spent on issues that should have been resolved at first contact. Repeat contacts also lead to longer queues and lower satisfaction across the board. As employees invest more time searching for information, they’re spending less time solving problems, building relationships or doing the work that actually moves the business forward.
The cumulative picture is an organization moving more slowly than it should, not because of the people in it, but because of the systems behind them.
Organizations that address internal knowledge gaps at the source, rather than patching information on the customer-facing side, see these outcomes reflected in their results. The difference shows up in the moments when a customer’s experience hinges on that flow of information.
With the answer available, in context, a retail associate can handle an out-of-window return without pulling in her manager, a hospitality employee can confirm a guest's loyalty upgrade or special request without putting them on hold at the front desk and a customer service rep doesn't have to toggle between three systems to figure out why a refund is still pending.
Ultimately, when knowledge flows clearly across an organization — from leadership to the frontline, across every team and tool — response quality improves, escalations decrease, and the customer on the other end of the interaction doesn't have to wonder whether the person they're speaking with actually has the answer.
Organizations that treat internal knowledge flow as a business-critical function are the ones whose employees show up to every interaction equipped to actually help.
Our AI Employee Hub is built around a simple premise: Employees — whether on the frontline or in the corporate office — should never have to search for what they need to do their jobs.
By bringing communication, knowledge and productivity tools into one intelligent platform, organized around how work actually happens, LumApps reduces friction and helps employees move work forward with greater clarity and focus. A platform like LumApps brings work and knowledge together into a single, well-governed, accessible place, allowing employees to stop navigating disconnected systems and start finding answers in the flow of work.
For the organization as a whole, this means fewer escalations, fewer repeat contacts and more interactions that end the way customers expect. To see how LumApps helps employees find the right answer at the right moment, request a LumApps demo today.