Poor customer service consumes a large amount of time for consumers in the United Arab Emirates. A recent industry report shows that residents across the country spend about 83 million hours each year trying to resolve service issues. These hours disappear in long call queues, repeated explanations, and slow systems that delay solutions.
This figure equals more than 10 million working days lost each year. For individual consumers, the average loss stands at about 10.8 hours annually. That equals more than a full workday spent chasing customer support.
Businesses in the region now face pressure to fix the service gap. Many companies already invest in artificial intelligence and digital tools. Yet poor integration, outdated systems, and weak service design continue to slow support teams and frustrate customers.
Customers Spend Hours Solving Simple Issues
Customer support should solve problems quickly. In practice, many customers face delays that stretch across several days.
Research across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa shows that many service issues take three to four days to resolve. In sectors that rely heavily on fast response, such as banking and telecoms, customers still face long waiting periods. Manufacturing companies often take nearly a full workweek to close support cases.
Even technology companies struggle with response time. Only 18 percent of service issues receive resolution within one hour.
These delays push customers through repeated cycles of phone calls, chat messages, and email threads before they receive help.
Dissatisfied Customers Are Ready to Switch Brands
Poor service not only wastes time. It also drives customers away.
About 41 percent of consumers in the UAE rate customer service as average, poor, or terrible. In addition, 45 percent say they will switch to a competitor after a single bad experience.
Other studies support this pattern. Research on consumer behaviour shows that a single negative experience often ends customer loyalty. Many buyers prefer to move to another brand instead of waiting through another frustrating interaction.
This behaviour carries financial consequences. Companies lose repeat customers, while the cost of acquiring new ones continues to rise.
AI Improves Speed, but Empathy Remains Weak
Artificial intelligence has started to improve parts of the service process.
About 62 percent of consumers in the UAE say AI tools have improved customer support in recent years. Many users report faster response times, greater convenience, and better access to 24-hour assistance.
Despite these improvements, customers still complain about the human side of service.
More than half of consumers say they struggle with a lack of empathy during support interactions. Customers want agents who listen carefully and understand their situation before offering solutions.
Chatbots also face limitations. Many customers attempt self-service first, yet 47 percent report that chatbots fail to understand their questions or concerns.
This gap explains why phone support remains popular. Nearly nine in ten consumers still prefer speaking with a human agent when problems arise.
Fragmented Systems Slow Down Support Teams
Customer service agents face their own operational challenges.
Many support teams work across several disconnected systems. Agents often jump between platforms to gather information, check orders, and update records.
In the UAE, 73 percent of service representatives must log into three to five systems before they resolve a single issue. These systems rarely share data smoothly.
Agents also spend less than half of their working time helping customers. Administrative work, data searches, and manual updates consume the rest of their day.
Inconsistent data adds another barrier. More than half of service representatives report difficulty accessing accurate customer information.
These operational problems slow response time and increase frustration for both customers and support staff.
Leadership Often Misreads Customer Expectations
A clear gap exists between executive priorities and customer expectations.
Consumers often complain about being transferred between departments or repeating information. Half of customers in the UAE identify this as a major frustration.
However, only 36 percent of executives recognise this issue as a major concern.
The same gap appears in empathy. Customers rank empathy as a top priority in service interactions. Yet fewer than one quarter of executives place a strong focus on it.
This disconnect explains why many companies invest in new technologies without fixing the underlying service design.
Unified Systems Offer the Path Forward
Technology alone cannot fix poor service. Companies need systems that connect customer data, internal workflows, and support teams.
Many organisations still operate in silos. Fewer than half of companies in the UAE integrate their data into a single shared platform. Even fewer maintain a company-wide strategy for artificial intelligence.
When organisations connect systems across departments, support teams gain a full view of the customer journey. Agents respond faster because they access the right data in one place.
This structure also frees service representatives to focus on communication and empathy. Customers receive clearer answers and fewer transfers between departments.
Businesses that improve service quality will gain an advantage in a market where customers switch brands quickly after poor experiences. Companies that ignore the service gap will continue to lose time, trust, and revenue.










