Have you invested in a brilliant Contact Centre as a Service (CCaaS) platform, only to watch adoption stall dead in its tracks? While CCaaS does promise lower costs, scalability, and better customer experiences, none of that matters if your agents don’t use it or understand how it will make their jobs easier. Without their buy-in, you’ll most likely have longer calls, frustrated customers, wasted investment, and your staff morale in free fall.
As someone who has worked with businesses of all sizes for over a decade, I can tell you adoption isn’t something to look into later – it’s the biggest determining factor in whether CCaaS fails or succeeds. In my experience, there are three main reasons behind the “agent adoption problem”: familiarity, lack of training, and feeling disconnected from the bigger strategy behind the change. Ignore those, and you risk turning a powerful solution into an expensive problem.
In this article, I’ll walk you through why agents resist CCaaS, the hidden costs of poor adoption, and most importantly, the practical steps you can take to turn resistance into buy-in — so your investment pays off, your agents feel supported, and your customers see the benefit.
Imagine having a system you’ve gotten used to working with over the years, suddenly being ripped away from you, only to be replaced with a new one you haven’t got the faintest idea how to use. Now, if you don’t understand how any given tool works, you can’t even begin to maximise its effectiveness. Instead, you’re most likely going to go back to the old solution you’ve been using just so that you can get your job done.
This is the reality so many contact centre agents face – and is ironically, one of the biggest reasons why CCaaS projects fail before they’ve even gotten off the ground. Introducing a new system can be complicated and intimidating. Yet, in many cases, agents haven’t been told why the change is happening or how it benefits them. Naturally, keeping them in the dark makes them feel helpless, causes them to disengage, and therefore resist the new CCaaS solution.
From my experience, resistance usually comes down to three things:
The problems don't end there: one of the deeper risks of poor adoption is “staff atrophy”. That’s when teams get stuck in old ways of working, their skills stagnate, and they stop adapting to change. While we’re all creatures of habit, technology is continuing to evolve in front of our very eyes. So, having a culture open to lifelong learning ensures that your organisation constantly makes the most of the tools you give them.
Technology can’t run itself, and your agents aren’t just users of the system — they are the system. I always say that your agents are the most valuable resource you have, and if they aren’t positioned to succeed with CCaaS, the investment simply won’t deliver the results it’s capable of.
This is why the rollout and onboarding stage is absolutely critical: it’s the foundation of ROI. It’s not enough to run through a generic user manual or a demo. You need to show your agents the benefits: how this system will make their jobs easier, faster, or less stressful. When agents are supported properly, the whole solution comes to life. It stops being “just another IT project” and becomes a set of tools that empower your staff to do their jobs better. That’s how you set yourself up for CCaaS success.
If you’re a small team of about five to ten people, poor adoption can hit you harder than it does a large enterprise and has an immediate impact. Simply because you don’t have the luxury of hundreds of agents, and every single person counts.
Here’s what happens when adoption goes wrong:
In an SMB, these issues are magnified because, with poor adoption, there is no internal user champion of the service. Dissatisfied agents are then taking calls from customers who have just struggled through a poorly understood system — and they’re taking out their tempers on staff who are feeling the same frustrations. All of this is, of course, a recipe for disaster.
I’ll never forget when a large enterprise went against what was advised and chose a CCaaS system purely based on cost. Within months, catastrophe struck: calls weren’t closing, agents couldn’t log or transfer properly, and the whole system collapsed. This resulted in six weeks of downtime when emails, invoices and records were lost, no one could tell up from down, and customers were furious. The worst part was that the business was never really able to recover, even after deploying a new system.
Now, you might think, “That’s enterprise-level. The same doesn’t apply to my small business.” But trust me, if it can happen to them, it can happen to anyone. And for an SMB with limited resources, the impact can be nothing short of devastating.
The irony is that the biggest fix for agent adoption isn’t a technical one — it’s communication. The best results I’ve seen with the deployment of new systems have been well communicated from the outset. By taking the time to uncover what is actually needed in the technology, communicating the need for change, and having open communication with the users when problems are encountered, adoption strategies can be worked through and adapted.
When adoption is handled well, agents feel informed, valued, and confident. They don’t just use the system — they make the most of it. And when that happens, customers feel the difference.
So, if you’re worried about adoption in your business (which you probably are if you’re reading this article), my best piece of advice is simple: talk to your agents. As end users of the call centre system, they aren’t going to be staying up at night worried about a PSTN switch-off or cloud adoption. That’s not their job. Their job is to serve your customers. So make sure they understand how the technology helps them do exactly that.
Valuing your agents will ensure that the tech you’ve invested in transforms how your business serves customers, energises your staff, and sets you up for future growth. And for SMBs, where every agent counts, getting adoption right really makes all the difference in the world.
Over the years, I’ve seen both sides of this story: projects that struggled because agents were left behind, and projects that thrived because leaders put people first.
So, as you consider your next steps, don’t just ask, ‘Which platform should I choose?’ Instead, ask: ‘How will my people adopt this, and what do they need to succeed?’ Start the conversation with your agents today, and you’ll be setting the foundation for a contact centre that truly works — for your staff and your customers.