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The Surge Economy: Why “Normal Volume” No Longer Exists in Customer Care

Updated on: April 22, 2026

There is no longer a “normal day” in customer care.

Yes, most organizations still plan for an average volume week. Then a surge hits, and everything is strained, sometimes even to the breaking point. Not just service levels, but trust, compliance and downstream revenue.

The reality is that volatility is no longer episodic. It is the bruising baseline.

Customer care has shifted from predictable workloads to moment-driven demand. Volume is now subject to external triggers: policy changes, outages, enrollment cycles and macro events—not stable patterns. What used to be considered a spike is now a regular operating condition.

 

Volatility Is Structural, Not Situational

This shift is not theoretical. It is visible across regulated, high-volume environments today.

According to the State Reported Medicaid Unwinding Data Brief, call-center volume increased by more than 150% in just a few months during Medicaid unwinding, with abandonment rates peaking at 17.7%, exceeding 30% in multiple states.

At the federal level, the strain is just as clear. Based on findings from the Social Security Administration’s Telephone Metrics, the national 800-number received approximately 94 million calls in fiscal year 2025, with 25% abandoned and millions more unable to get through.

Even at the state level, variability is extreme. According to the November 2025 Medicaid/CHIP Eligibility Operations & Enrollment Snapshot, some Medicaid call centers reported wait times exceeding two hours and abandonment rates of more than 40%, while others operated within more manageable ranges.

This is why “average volume” is a precarious metric. It smooths out the very volatility that defines real-world performance.

And the nature of the work is changing at the same time.

Automation is removing routine contacts. What remains are higher-stakes, emotionally charged interactions that require judgment, clarity and empathy. That makes surge conditions not just bigger, but harder.

It is not just more volume. It is more complexity, with less margin for error.

 

What Surges Actually Break

When surge hits, the first failure is rarely headcount.

It is systems.

Governance models that worked under normal conditions begin to fracture, maybe fail. Knowledge becomes inconsistent. Escalations increase. Compliance risk rises, especially in regulated environments where policy interpretation and accuracy matter.

These fractures and failures often show up in gray areas:

  • Eligibility confusion
  • Benefit disputes
  • Fraud escalation
  • Policy interpretation gaps

And they compound quickly.

Abandonment becomes more than a service metric. It becomes a flashing signal of lost trust. Inconsistent answers become compliance exposure. Repeat calls become cost overruns and brand damage.

Surge does not just test capacity. It exposes whether your operating model is built for reality.

 

The Surge Operating Model

Designing for surge is not about staffing higher. It is about building a system that can flex— operationally, structurally and humanly.

A surge-ready model is one that can scale empathy, accuracy and authority on demand.

These four pillars for quality customer experiences (CX) define that model:

1. Elastic Infrastructure

This is not reactive hiring. Rather, it means having on-demand staffing capability in place to tap as needed. That requires foresight and built-in flexibility.

Reserve capacity, cross-trained teams and flexible workforce models are necessary, all designed and ready before the surge.  They enable organizations to scale without sacrificing quality.

The question is not how fast you can hire. It is how well you planned to flex and perform.

2. Predictive Playbooks

Surge CX response should never be improvised.

Triggers, whether policy changes, weather events or enrollment cycles, must be predefined, with corresponding operational mechanisms at the ready.

Playbooks are not documents. They are strategic systems.

3. Trusted Transitions

Routing decisions must reflect the complexity of the moment, not just the channel.

High-stakes emotionally charged interactions require seamless transitions from automation to human support. Poor handoffs are where trust breaks fastest.

Capacity without continuity does not solve surge.

4. High Emotional Quotient (EQ) CX at Scale

What remains after automation is not easier. It is harder.

Customers are calling with urgency, confusion or stress. The differentiator is not speed alone, it is whether they feel understood, informed and supported.

You cannot scale trust without professional contact center agents trained for these moments.

 

Trust Is Built Under Pressure

Customers do not remember the average experience. They remember the moment something went wrong and a competent, caring agent fixed it. There and then.

Surge events—outages, policy changes, benefit disruptions—are when customers decide whether they trust your brand.

Speed matters. But accuracy and empathy matter more.

This is where most organizations miscalculate. They optimize for efficiency under normal conditions, but fail to design for trust, or grace, under pressure.

And that is where the real cost shows up.

What CX Leaders Should Do Now

Surge readiness is not about heroic response. It is about sound system design.

Based on real-world operations, three priorities stand out:

  • Pretrain for surge scenarios Benefits, outages, fraud, claims, enrollment, eligibility. You cannot onboard judgment or empathy in the moment. Preparation determines performance.
  • Define surge-mode governance Who makes decisions, what changes and what does not. Without clear authority and protocols, everything else slows down under pressure.
  • Measure stabilization, not just speed Abandonment during surge, time to stabilize, compliance drift, trust signals. The critical question is not how fast you answered, but how quickly the system returned to consistency. In a word, normalcy.

Optional but increasingly critical:

  • Maintain a dynamic reserve model Pretrained, ready-to-activate capacity within hours, not days. This is not overstaffing. It is strategic resilience.

 

The Shift Leaders Need to Make

The biggest mindset shift is simple, but difficult: Stop designing for averages. Start designing for volatility.

Because surge is no longer a scenario to plan for. It is the condition you are operating in.

The organizations that win will not be the ones that react faster.

Instead, they will be the ones that respond decisively, having done their due diligence.  Engineered to succeed, not succumb.

 

Are you prepared?

As unpredictable demand becomes the norm, contact centers must be designed to flex without sacrificing accuracy, empathy or trust.

Does your strategy reflect this reality? Talk to an expert at Working Solutions to learn how to make your contact center flex ready.

customer care surge - contact center volatility - elastic customer experience model

Surge isn’t an exception anymore. It’s the operating environment. If your CX model isn’t built for volatility, it will break under pressure. Let’s talk about how to design for elasticity, resilience and trust at scale.

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