why your customers avoid getting help

67% of customers try to solve problems themselves first. Here's how to build a support experience they'll actually seek out.

"We need to launch a support team."

It's the inevitable conversation at every scaling SaaS company. Your CSMs are drowning in reactive questions — sometimes spending 60% of their time on issues that derail proactive work.

But here's the paradox: while customers desperately need support, research shows 67% try to solve problems themselves first, and 40% would rather struggle than reach out.

So why invest in something customers actively avoid using?

Here's the reality: Support isn't overhead. It's the difference between customers who succeed and those who just survive.

Customers avoid traditional support for three key reasons:

The Effort: Every interaction requires explaining context, waiting for responses, and repeating information. It's a hassle.

The Signal: Asking for help can feel like admitting incompetence, especially for technical buyers.

The Trust Gap: Most customers have been burned by unhelpful, scripted support experiences before.

This creates a death spiral:

customers avoid support → struggle with problems → achieve less value → churn.

The Support That Actually Works

Forget traditional reactive support. The companies winning here don't just react; they build support that changes customer behavior entirely.

Proactive Problem Detection

Don't wait for customers to ask. Flag usage patterns that signal confusion and reach out first: "We noticed you might be working on X. Here's a guide that usually helps."

Contextual Self-Service

Embed help directly into your product workflow. Instead of generic FAQs, show specific guidance for their exact situation: "Setting up Salesforce integration? Here are the three gotchas 89% of new users hit."

Escalation Intelligence

Every support interaction should accelerate customer outcomes, not just close a ticket. Train your team to think like consultants (not just problem-solvers) who understand the "why" behind the "what".

If you want to build out this kind of support, you have to measure what matters. Forget vanity metrics like CSAT and response times. Here's what actually predicts success:

  • Support Utilization Rate: The percentage of customers engaging with support monthly. Counter-intuitively, you want this to increase as customers learn it's a value-add, not a pain.

  • Post-Support Engagement: Does product usage and health improve after a support interaction?

  • Proactive Contact Rate: How many support interactions are you initiating vs. your customers?

When to Launch

You're ready to launch a dedicated support function when CSMs spend >30% of their time on reactive issues that could be systematized, and you're ready to treat support as a value-creation engine and revenue center, not a cost center.

Your customers need help, even when they won't ask for it. Build a support experience that makes asking for help irresistibly valuable.

Is your support team an overhead cost, or is it a growth engine?

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