Jonathan Justus
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Why 66% of Lost Customers Blame Communication, Not Price

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 18 June 2026

Among customers who switched to a competitor this year, 66% say they left because of the poor communication skills of the company's representatives — not price, not product. The figure comes from Project.co's 2026 communication report, and it reframes a skill many professionals still treat as soft. In a market where products converge and prices are matched within days, how a person explains, listens, and follows up has become the part of the offer a rival cannot copy.

The internal picture is just as stark. Axios HQ's latest survey found that 79% of employees say the quality of communication they get from leaders directly affects how well they understand organisational goals, and 72% say better communication from the top would improve their engagement. Gallup, meanwhile, reports that 62% of the global workforce remains disengaged and only 21% are actively engaged. The thread running through all three datasets is the same: the bottleneck is rarely strategy or talent. It is the clarity of the people in the room.

Two professionals in conversation across a table in an open office

Photo by Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

Communication Is Now a Productivity Multiplier

The most striking finding in the Axios HQ data is not about deficits but about gains. Among workers who practise effective communication, 82% report being more productive — and that figure climbs to 96% among those who are also fluent with AI tools. Effective communicators in the same study reported better quality of work, higher job satisfaction and noticeably more confidence at work. Communication, in other words, is not a finishing polish applied to good work. It is part of what makes the work good in the first place.

Key statistic: 66% of customers who moved to a competitor in 2026 did so because of the poor communication skills of company representatives — while 96% of AI-fluent workers who communicate well report being more productive. (Project.co Communication Report 2026; Axios HQ State of Internal Communications 2026)

The Skill Is Specific, Not Innate

It is tempting to treat communication as a personality trait — you either have presence or you don't. The behaviour the research rewards is more concrete than that. It is the ability to make a point in a meeting without overstating it, to write an email a senior reader finishes, to give a status update that earns trust rather than invites more questions, and to disagree upward without damage. These are not gifts; they are repeatable moves that can be learned, drilled and improved like any other professional discipline.

That distinction matters because it changes what a professional can do about the gap. A trait you are born with leaves you stuck. A skill you can name leaves you a path: identify the specific moments where clarity fails, and rehearse them until they hold under pressure.

What Professionals Should Do Now

The evidence points to three habits. Prepare the one sentence that matters before any meeting, so your central point survives the moment your nerve is tested. Write for the reader who skims, putting the ask and the answer first. And treat every difficult conversation — the no, the pushback, the bad-news update — as a rehearsable event rather than an ambush. None of this requires charisma. It requires deciding that communication is a craft worth practising.

For a short, practical primer on the mechanics of being heard, Julian Treasure's TED talk on how to speak so that people want to listen remains one of the best ten minutes a professional can spend:

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Elevana's PRO Communicator programme teaches professionals the specific moves this research rewards — speaking up with credibility, writing that senior people actually read, and handling difficult conversations without losing the room. It covers professional communication in far more depth than any single article can.

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Products can be matched by lunchtime; the person who explains them clearly cannot.

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