10 juin 2025

The butterfly effect of a poor digital employee experience (DEX)

The true cost of a bad employee experience can impact your entire organization and run much deeper than just a dissatisfied Glassdoor review.

Connect and support people

A delayed login. A frozen screen. Multiple disconnected tools.

Individually, these issues may seem minor. But over time, and across an entire workforce, they add up. Productivity stalls, customer service slows, and IT teams drown in support tickets. Eventually, the consequences move beyond your employees and start affecting business performance.

This is the ripple effect of poor digital employee experience (DEX). And it doesn’t stop at your service desk.

When the digital workplace doesn’t work properly, challenges such as slower operations, increased costs, rising digital friction, and employee frustration become more common. Everything from customer service and experience to employee retention, and even revenue are impacted.

It’s not all doom and gloom, however. With visibility into your systems and a proactive strategy, you can redirect the DEX butterfly effect and stop minor issues before they ripple outward. The result is a workplace that works for its employees, streamlines operations, and protects your from avoidable inefficiencies.

In this article

The butterfly effect of bad digital employee experiences

At its core, DEX is about understanding every aspect of how employees experience technology; from device, to app, to network, to how they feel about their experience. Picture this: a customer contacts support to resolve a billing error. However, your agent struggles to log in to the billing platform. The worst part? It’s not the first time. Many knowledge workers suffer from applications that repeatedly freeze, crash, or load slowly, especially during peak hours. Unable to access necessary data, your agent asks the customer to call back later.

Frustration builds. What should’ve been a five-minute task turns into a drawn-out exchange, and your customer shares their experience publicly. Others see it, and some decide not to buy. Internally; that support agent then becomes more disengaged due to negative feedback and performance-hindering digital issues and starts looking for another job.

A concept from chaos theory, the butterfly effect describes how a small, seemingly insignificant event can have larger, unexpected consequences. And just like the flap of a butterfly’s wings can cause a distant storm, minor digital friction can create major ripples across your organization.

This isn’t a unique situation. It’s how digital friction, slowness, downtime, and poor integrations turn into lost revenue, reputational damage, and employee churn. In fact, U.S. companies were at risk of losing $856 billion in 2024 due to poor customer service, with more than half of consumers reducing or stopping spending after a negative experience

These larger issues originated from everyday internal digital tools. The problem often begins with the assumption that technology is “working” just because it’s online. However, 47% of users experience high digital friction, with 34% facing it several times a week. This causes employees to waste nearly seven hours per week on tech problems. The ultimate result? Billions in lost productivity annually.

What poor DEX costs your business

The cost of a poor digital employee experience reaches far beyond frustrated employees; it hits your bottom line in multiple ways.

Lost productivity and revenue

Even the most satisfied employees can’t stay productive if their digital workplace technology constantly fails them. And this digital friction drains productivity, leading to frustration and disengagement.

In fact, studies show that workers spend nearly three hours every week (over 140 hours per year) fixing tech issues, costing businesses an average of USD4,072 in labor costs per employee annually. Almost half of employee's report losing between one and five hours of productivity each week due to IT problems, while 69% have missed deadlines because of these issues.

This lost productivity hits your revenue hard. For example, a HubSpot report found that lost productivity costs U.S. businesses a shocking $1.8 trillion every year. Similarly, Gallup estimates that low engagement costs the global economy USD8.1 trillion.

Customer experience and reputational damage

When employees struggle with their tools, it impacts the customers they serve. A frustrated support agent can't deliver the fast, efficient service customers expect. This results in poor customer experiences, and negative reviews can quickly tarnish your brand reputation.

Seventy-eight percent of customers state had a negative service experience due to tech issues. of how your business could face long-term repercussions in both customer loyalty and public perception due to poor DEX.

The cost of increased IT support

Frequent technical issues inevitably trigger a surge in support tickets, calls, and “quick fix” requests. For IT teams, this becomes an ongoing burden that stretches resources thin. Instead of focusing on bigger initiatives like system optimization or innovation, they’re stuck putting out fires.

In fact, IT teams typically spend 30% of their time on unplanned work, such as resolving technical issues and support tickets. All of this detracts from strategic initiatives and innovation.

This cycle doesn’t just increase operational costs; it also slows down your progress, creates burnout within IT departments, and delays the implementation of improvements that could prevent future issues altogether.

Over time, this diverts resources from innovation and long-term improvements, keeping your company stuck in reactive mode.

Recruitment and retention challenges

Lastly, a poor digital employee experience can drive up turnover rates. Employees struggling with inefficient systems are more likely to seek other opportunities. When your company gains a reputation for a frustrating digital environment, attracting top talent becomes even harder.

Think about the day-to-day experience: systems lagging, tools crashing, and workflows that slow people down. Even engaged employees can become frustrated and discouraged. In fact, 52% of workers say poor digital technology makes them more likely to leave their job.

As engagement drops, you’re left to deal with the added costs of recruitment and the productivity loss from higher turnover. According to Built In, the average cost to replace an employee is one-half to two times the employee’s annual salary.

But the good news is that technology plays a key role in motivation, too. Sixty-two percent of employees say access to best-in-class software and DEX tools drives their performance. But without that foundation, dissatisfaction builds, and retention suffers.

  • USD1,500 for hourly workers
  • 100–150% of a technical employee’s salary
  • Up to 213% of a C-suite employee’s salary

These impacts make one thing clear. A poor digital employee experience doesn’t just affect individual users. It ripples through productivity, customer satisfaction, IT performance, and even hiring and retention.

A better digital experience increases more than productivity

Improving your digital experiences doesn’t simply fix frustrations—it builds momentum across your entire business. Seamless DEX means your employees spend less time troubleshooting or facing downtime, and more time doing meaningful work.

Companies that prioritize employee experience management report improvements in both retention and customer experience. For instance, a global sports brand boosted its employee experience by using real-time insights to better understand and improve sentiment across its teams. Using AI-powered assistants, they automated support services and helped employees quickly get the answers they needed. While virtual workspaces and command centers enabled teams to keep working together.

When employees are supported by responsive systems and intuitive tools, they don’t just perform better—they’re more likely to stay, contribute, and help the business grow.

How you can shift this ripple effect

The good news is that you can mitigate the potential impact of bad digital experiences by embracing proactive IT measures and create a digital workplace that benefits both employees and business.

Here’s how.

Map current employee experience gaps

To start, understand where you have digital friction. This means identifying where systems are causing frustration or delays. Using employee feedback surveys or system performance reports can help highlight problem areas.

For example, Carollo used data from a variety of sources to find where their systems were holding employees back. They then worked to address those specific issues and improve overall efficiency.

Consolidate and modernize tools

Too many different tools can create confusion, disruption, and slow things down. It's best to focus on simplifying the digital environment by reducing the number of platforms employees need to use. This might involve integrating tools, modernizing your IT infrastructure, or replacing outdated systems.

Keeping tools up to date and easy to use is key to improving performance and employee experience.

Invest in proactive support systems

Make the shift from reactive support to proactive solutions. This could include using monitoring tools to identify issues early, or self-service options to help employees solve minor problems without needing IT assistance.

One global sports brand, for example, reduced IT support requests by implementing proactive systems. This allows employees to resolve issues quickly and focus on their work, without depending on potentially slow IT response rates.

With these steps, you can begin to move from reacting to a more proactive and efficient workforce, higher employee satisfaction, and better business results.

Summary

Just as poor digital experiences lead to a ripple effect of problems, the right improvements can create a ripple of positive changes. Improving DEX isn’t always easy, but it’s essential if you want to stay competitive and retain top talent.

By taking clear steps to improve digital workplace technology, simplify processes, and invest in the right digital workplace solutions, you can build a workplace that supports employees, customers, and your organization alike. Because when digital employee experience is made a priority, it creates a better environment for everyone.

Hannah Lenane

Senior Content Marketing Manager at TeamViewer

Hannah is a Senior Content Marketing Manager at TeamViewer. With years of experience in the DEX field, she has conducted research, collaborated with industry experts, and produced content that explores the intersection of technology, the workplace, and the future of work.

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