Customer service is a design choice

13.10.2025
BenB
m

If customer service is one of your company’s values, it shouldn’t stop at your contact form.

We tend to think of customer service as a team, a department, or maybe a cheerful chatbot in the bottom-right corner of a screen. But if service is part of your brand DNA, if you pride yourself on being helpful, transparent, respectful of your customer’s time, then that spirit should be baked into more than your support channels. It should live in your content structure.

Because here’s the thing: most content isn’t written for the reader. It’s written for search engines, or for internal approval, or to fill the blank space on a marketing calendar. It assumes attention, rather than earning it. And that’s a problem, especially when attention is in short supply, and your potential customer is weighing whether to invest their time in what you’ve written.

Let’s talk about customer pain.

Imagine this: you’re looking for a solution. You find an article that might be helpful, based on a vague title and a thumbnail image that could’ve been generated by AI in 2017. You click. You scan. You bounce.

That’s not just bad UX, it’s inconsiderate.

So what does it look like when your content actually serves the customer? When it reflects the same values you’d expect from your support team?

Here are three small structural details that speak volumes:


1. Purpose-written summaries, not auto-generated excerpts

Excerpts are often just the first 30 words of an article, chopped off mid-thought. They’re not informative – they’re placeholders. A customer-centric article respects the reader enough to say, “Here’s what this piece is about, and why it matters to you.” It’s an invitation, not a tease.


2. Estimated reading time

It’s a simple addition, but one that signals empathy: “This will take five minutes of your time.” It gives control back to the reader. Just like any good service experience, it sets expectations upfront.


3. Visible publication dates

Outdated information can be more harmful than no information at all. Including a date shows transparency and if your article is evergreen, gives you a reason to keep it fresh. When you hide the date, you’re asking readers to guess how current your thinking is. That’s not helpful. That’s homework.


These small touches don’t require a platform change or a content strategy overhaul. But they do require a shift in mindset: from “what do we want to say?” to “what does our customer need to know and how can we help them get it faster?”

Because at the end of the day, customer service isn’t just a value it’s a design choice. And if your content doesn’t reflect it, your customer will feel it long before they reach your support team.

BenB
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