Your Customer Service Is Suffering—and Frontline Employees Say Understaffing Is to Blame
Your staff is committed to delivering top-rate customer experiences, but worries they don’t have enough people to sustain those standards.
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The Service Gap: Why Committed Employees Struggle to Deliver Excellence
American businesses can find encouragement in one enduring truth: their workforce remains deeply committed to customer satisfaction. Yet a troubling disconnect persists. According to new Gallup research, while most employees pledge to deliver exceptional service, fewer than one in four believe their organizations are willing to invest in the staffing levels required to make that promise a reality—and that gap is actively undermining their best efforts.
In an economic climate shaped by stubborn inflation, shifting trade policies, and global instability, many companies have adopted defensive hiring strategies: freezing recruitment or trimming payrolls to control costs. While financially prudent on paper, this approach carries a hidden cost. A Q3 2025 Gallup poll reveals that employees across all levels view understaffing as the single greatest obstacle to serving customers effectively—a challenge magnified by reorganizations, expanded workloads, and ongoing headcount reductions.
> "When employees are asked to do more with fewer people, even high levels of commitment and accountability cannot sustain consistent delivery," writes Gallup consulting associate Megan Mulherin, summarizing the survey's core insight.
## Commitment Is High. Support Is Not.
The dedication among workers remains strong. Fully 77% of respondents reported feeling a professional obligation to provide customers with quality products or services—with 43% characterizing that duty as "strong." That represents a meaningful increase from 72% in 2024.
Yet only 23% believe their companies actually deliver on the service promises made to customers. When asked why, employees pointed first to insufficient staffing (37%), followed by inadequate training (16%). Notably, managers expressed these concerns at even higher rates than frontline staff, suggesting leadership recognizes the strain but may lack the resources—or authority—to address it.
Compounding the issue: the very trend employees say they need reversed—more staffing—is becoming less likely. The report notes that staffing concerns have intensified alongside continued workforce reductions. Nearly one in four U.S. employees (23%) say their organization is currently shrinking its workforce, a 12-point jump since early 2023. Among those reporting layoffs, 65% say customer-facing individual contributors were the most affected. As teams shrink, internal pressure mounts.
The ripple effects are clear:
- 63% of respondents say they've been asked to absorb additional responsibilities due to downsizing
- 52% report that staff cuts came with corresponding budget reductions
- Nearly half of managers observe heightened stress and frustration among their teams
- Almost 30% cite increased difficulty balancing people management with hands-on work
## Growth Doesn't Always Mean Relief
Interestingly, the call for more support isn't limited to companies in decline. Employees in some of the nation's fastest-growing sectors—including healthcare, hospitality, retail, and technology—expressed the strongest desire for staffing increases, even though their organizations grew net headcount by 3% to 30% over the past year.
This paradox underscores a critical insight: growth alone doesn't resolve service delivery challenges. When demand rises faster than capacity, even expanding teams can feel stretched thin.
## A Path Forward—If Employers Are Willing to Invest
Muherin frames employee demands for additional hires not as complaints, but as signals of engagement. "Current employee demand for new hires is an expression of their high degree of engagement and determination to provide quality customer experience," she notes.
But goodwill alone can't bridge the gap. Without the financial capacity to provide adequate support, even the most motivated employees will struggle to meet customer expectations.
> "In a constrained work environment, protecting customer experience requires more than asking employees to care," Mulherin emphasizes. "Organizations must align expectations with staffing realities, clarifying priorities and enabling employees to focus where they can make the greatest difference for customers. When leaders address staffing barriers and support employees closest to customers, accountability translates into consistent delivery—and customers will likely feel the difference."
## The Bottom Line
Employee commitment to customer service is not the problem. The challenge lies in structural alignment: matching workforce capacity to service ambitions. For business leaders navigating tight margins, the choice isn't simply between cost-cutting and customer satisfaction—it's about recognizing that sustainable service excellence requires strategic investment in the people who deliver it. In an era where customer experience increasingly defines competitive advantage, that may be the most prudent investment of all.