A customer calls after three missed updates, convinced nobody cares. Before explaining logistics, mirror the feeling: “I hear how exhausting this has been, especially after waiting and receiving silence.” Ask one clarifying question that honors urgency, then summarize. Only after acknowledgment should you discuss options, timelines, and proactive check‑ins. Notice how naming the inconvenience reduces volume, restores dignity, and creates a path where the customer helps prioritize next steps instead of relitigating disappointment.
In live chat, messages may arrive in bursts, signaling anxiety rather than aggression. Slow the scroll by anchoring presence: type a brief acknowledgment, set expectations for your response time, and reflect the core concern. If they send multiple questions, paraphrase them into a single list, validating each. End with a choice: quick workaround now or full resolution slightly later. The structure communicates care, steadies pacing, and makes the process feel collaborative rather than chaotic.