Marketing News Reporter & Industry Journalist
Vicky Sidler is an experienced marketing industry journalist and strategist with more than 15 years in journalism, content strategy, and digital marketing. As a Marketing News Reporter for Strategic Marketing Tribe, she covers breaking developments, trends, and insights that shape the marketing world—from AI in advertising to the latest in customer experience strategy.
Vicky is a StoryBrand Certified Guide and Duct Tape Marketing Certified Strategist, combining two of the most effective marketing frameworks to help small businesses simplify their message and build marketing systems that work. Her journalism background ensures every piece she writes is fact-checked, insightful, and practical.
Her articles regularly analyze key marketing trends, platform updates, and case studies—offering small business owners, marketers, and industry professionals clear, actionable takeaways. She specializes in topics such as:
Digital marketing strategy
Content marketing and brand storytelling
Marketing technology and automation
AI’s impact on marketing
StoryBrand and Duct Tape Marketing best practices
By Vicky Sidler | Published 21 September 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
“Your call is very important to us. Please hold while we erase any goodwill our ads created.”
Tom Fishburne drew that cartoon years ago. It still holds up.
What’s changed since then? Well, AI came along promising to fix everything. Cheaper, faster, smarter customer service. Human-level problem solving without the humans.
What actually happened?
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff just proudly announced they cut nearly half their customer service team—4,000 jobs—thanks to AI. Other companies are racing to do the same. And yet the experience for customers hasn’t improved.
If anything, it's gotten worse.
A recent Atlantic article by Chris Colin explains why. The problem isn’t just the tools. It’s the sludge.
Big brands are automating customer service to save money
But customers are stuck in even worse support experiences
“Sludge” means slow, frustrating, and intentionally messy processes
AI makes sludge easier to scale—not fix
Klarna reversed course and now promises more human support
Small businesses can stand out by making help easy to find and fast to resolve
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix
AI Customer Service Is Broken. Here’s What to Fix
What Is “Sludge” and Why Is It a Problem?
AI Was Meant to Help. So Why Is It Making Things Worse?
Klarna’s Wake-Up Call—Why More Brands Might Follow:
1. Use AI as a helper, not a wall:
3. Track resolution, not just response:
4. Don’t punish customers for needing help:
5. Train your team to think like humans:
Your Brand Is Built in the Support Queue:
AI Disrupts Consulting—Even McKinsey Is Struggling to Adapt
Humans Beat AI at Adapting—Here's Why That Matters for Your Business
AI vs Human Creativity in Problem Solving: What Works Best?
AI Business Advice: Why It Helps Some Owners but Hurts Others
Klarna Reverses AI Customer Support After Backlash—Why Human Support Is Making a Comeback
Hyper-Connectivity Is Reshaping Marketing—Here's What To Do
FAQs on AI Customer Service and Sludge
What is “sludge” and why does it matter?
How does AI contribute to bad customer service?
Can AI ever improve customer support?
What did Klarna do differently?
What can small businesses do better than big brands?
Sludge is the bureaucratic mess you have to crawl through to get help from a company.
Tom Fishburne drew it as a joke. Chris Colin lived it. His car’s steering locked mid-drive, and what followed was 108 days of phone trees, lost calls, incorrect emails, and case files that mysteriously vanished or closed themselves.
He eventually got a buyback from Ford—but only after a journey that nearly broke him.
Sludge, as defined by Cass Sunstein and Richard Thaler (of Nudge fame), is “tortuous administrative demands, endless wait times, and excessive procedural fuss that impede us in our lives.”
But it’s not always about inefficiency. Often, it’s about incentives.
Companies create sludge to reduce refunds. They design processes that wear people down. The harder it is to escalate, the less likely you are to try.
One expert said it bluntly: “Sludge is often intentional.”
AI was supposed to be the fix.
Faster answers. Better routing. Fewer angry hold times.
Instead, AI is helping sludge go pro. Bots block you from real help. Automated voices loop endlessly. And if you do get a person, they often can’t do anything.
You might get a refund. Or you might get transferred. Or disconnected. Or told your email address doesn’t exist.
Chris Colin calls this the “state of F**k it.” The moment customers stop fighting and just eat the cost.
AI allows sludge to scale. A chatbot can now block thousands of people a day from reaching real support—and no one is held accountable.
The more sophisticated the system, the more it can pretend to help without actually doing so.
Klarna went all-in on AI.
And then Klarna backed off due to the severe backlash.
CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski put it plainly:
“We just had an epiphany: in a world of AI nothing will be as valuable as humans … we are going to kick off work to allow Klarna to become the best at offering a human to speak to.”
Turns out people don’t want to scream “LET ME SPEAK TO A HUMAN!” into their phone.
They want help. From someone who can actually help.
Klarna’s shift is a lesson: AI isn’t the problem. It’s how you use it. Do you make things smoother? Or do you scale the sludge?
If you’re a small business owner, this might feel far away. You don’t have call centres. You don’t have 14 agents named Pamela.
But you do have support processes. Even if it’s just you and a Gmail inbox.
And as you grow, it’s easy to copy what the big brands do—especially if it looks efficient.
Here’s how to stand out instead.
AI tools should support your customer, not gatekeep them. Always offer a way to talk to a real person.
Your contact info should be easy to find. Don’t make people click around five pages just to ask a question.
It’s nice to reply quickly. It’s better to solve the problem fast. That’s the metric that matters.
You shouldn’t make people prove they deserve support. Help them once, and they’ll trust you next time.
Scripts are useful. But don’t let them replace common sense. People notice when they’re being “handled” instead of helped.
Every ad you run builds a promise.
Customer service is where you keep it—or break it.
And if that experience turns into sludge, all that clever marketing collapses.
But here’s the good news: small businesses can do better. You can make support feel personal, fast, and human.
Some of the brands I trust most—like Xneelo and HighLevel—use AI the right way. Their bots help with the basics, then hand you over to a super polite, helpful human almost immediately. It’s smooth, it’s respectful, and it feels like someone actually cares.
On the other end? You’ve got Meta, which feels like it was designed by someone who actively resents their users. I’ve seen help articles that are out of date, links that go nowhere, and support that’s either missing or robotic. You can run ads with them in minutes, but good luck getting a refund or even a reply when something goes wrong.
The contrast isn’t just annoying—it’s a competitive advantage for businesses who get this right.
The real win? When a frustrated customer walks away thinking, That was easier than I expected. That’s what gets you word-of-mouth referrals, positive reviews, and loyal clients.
In a world of sludge, clarity and care cut through.
👉 Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to help you write one clear, powerful message that earns trust—before the bot loses it.
Even the biggest strategy firms can’t implement AI without hitting human-shaped roadblocks. This article expands on how high-stakes industries are facing the same AI challenges you're trying to solve in customer service.
If you liked the Klarna example, you’ll love this one. This article dives into why human adaptability outperforms AI in fast-changing environments—and how to lean into that strength.
You saw how AI fails in customer service when nuance is needed. This article takes that idea further, showing when to use AI—and when to step in yourself.
Before you automate your support team, read this. It explores the risks of relying on AI advice when your business is already stretched thin.
This article is the full backstory on Klarna’s AI mess. If you’re serious about doing support better, you’ll want to see what went wrong (and how they recovered).
While this blog focuses on customer service, this piece zooms out to show how rising digital expectations are reshaping all your customer touchpoints—including support.
Sludge refers to unnecessary friction in customer service—things like long wait times, repetitive processes, or agents who can’t solve your problem. It matters because it drains time, patience, and trust.
Not always—but often it's the result of how companies are structured. Systems are designed to reduce refunds, complaints, and call volume, even if it frustrates customers in the process.
When AI is used poorly, it creates more barriers instead of fewer. Bots can block access to real help, fail to solve complex issues, and make customers feel ignored or stuck.
Yes, when used well. AI should speed things up and support human agents—not replace them. The key is designing AI that enhances the experience, not one that hides the humans.
After relying heavily on AI, Klarna saw a drop in customer satisfaction and decided to invest in human support again. They now promote their ability to offer real people, not just chatbots.
Be reachable. Solve problems quickly. And make sure your customers never have to guess how to get help. Clear, fast, human service is something small businesses can actually do better than big ones.
Every customer touchpoint reinforces or erodes your brand. If your support experience feels like sludge, no amount of marketing can fix the trust you lose.
Download the5-Minute Marketing Fix to craft a one-liner that works across your marketing, support, and sales—so your message is always clear and consistent.
Created with clarity (and coffee)
Mail
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
Website