Volume 13, 2026
About | Services Offered | Products | Contact Us
Soft Skills Every Customer Service Employee Must Have
The Human Element: Mastering the Soft Skills of Service
In an era of AI-driven chatbots and automated ticket systems, the “human” part of human interaction has become your greatest competitive advantage. While product knowledge is essential, it’s the soft skills—the intangible qualities that govern how we interact—that turn a frustrated caller into a lifelong advocate.
Here are the non-negotiable soft skills every customer service professional needs to master in 2026.
1. Radical Empathy: Empathy isn’t just saying “I understand.” It’s the ability to step into the customer’s shoes and acknowledge their frustration as valid.
- The Goal: Move from “fixing a problem” to “supporting a person”.
- Quick Tip: Use “Validation Statements” like, “I can see why that would be frustrating,” and, “I want to make sure we get this sorted for you.”
2. The Art of Active Listening: Most people listen to respond; great service professionals listen to understand. This means picking up on subtext, tone, and what isn’t being said.
- The Technique: Mirroring. Briefly summarize what the customer said before offering a solution. It proves you were paying attention.
3. Emotional Intelligence (EQ): High EQ allows you to stay calm when a customer is heated. It’s the “buffer” that prevents you from taking a customer’s bad day personally.
- Key Behavior: Depersonalizing the conflict. They aren’t mad at you; they are mad at the situation.
4. Adaptive Communication: Not every customer wants a chatty, upbeat interaction. Some want a clinical, efficient solution. Being able to read the room (or the “vibe” of the chat window) and mirror the customer’s desired pace is crucial.
- The Skill: Tone-matching. Adjust your level of formality and energy to match the person on the other end.
5. Clear, Jargon-Free Language: Complexity is the enemy of satisfaction. The best communicators can explain a technical $100 problem with $5 words.
- The Rule: If you can’t explain it to a ten-year-old, you haven’t simplified it enough.
“Customer service shouldn’t just be a department; it should be the entire company.” – Tony Hsieh
Put It Into Practice: This Week’s Challenge
Next time you encounter a difficult request, try the “Positive Reframing” technique. Instead of saying “We can’t do that until Monday,” try, “We’ll be able to get that started for you first thing Monday morning.” The facts are the same, but the feeling is entirely different.
What do you think?
Which soft skill do you find the hardest to maintain during a busy shift? Reply to this email and let’s discuss—we might feature your insight in next month’s edition!
Want to get started on training Soft Skills for your employees? Contact Amy@InsightYouCanUse.com today.
Utilizing Reporting Tools
Below is a sample of the many free reporting tools available to our clients, “Improvable Sections”:
The reporting tool listed below is just one example of the many powerful tools we have available to current clients.
IMPROVABLE SECTIONS
★ Shows a percentage of answer options.
★ Section Score: Percentage of possible score achieved for this section
★ Potential Impact: If this section was scored perfectly, your overall score would have increased by the shown amount

Customer Service Statistic You Shouldn’t Ignore
90% of Americans use customer service as a factor in deciding whether or not to do business with a company. (Microsoft)
How are we doing?
We’d love to hear about your experience with Shoppers, Inc. Click here
Past Newsletters:
Volume 1 Volume 7
Volume 2 Volume 8
Volume 3 Volume 9
Volume 4 Volume 10
Volume 5 Volume 11
Volume 6 Volume 12





