Why it matters
A human answered the phone in fifteen seconds. People were pleasantly surprised every time.
Here's how we actually ran it at PipelineCRM. We tracked first response several ways: time to answer our 866 number, which ran about 10–20 seconds; time to a real email reply, which was same business day; and missed calls, the flip side of phone answer speed. But the numbers are only half the story. We never had an IVR — no "press 1 for this, press 2 for that." A human answered the phone, every time, and people were genuinely, pleasantly surprised by something that simple. We never hid our 866 number either; it sat on the homepage in large font, on purpose. We wanted to talk to customers and prospects.
That was a deliberate strategy, not an accident of being small. Most of our competitors — large and small — set a low bar on support, so we saw responsiveness as an opportunity to shine. Because here's the truth no amount of product polish gets you out of: customers will be confused, they'll hit bugs, they'll deal with slow pages and downtime, no matter how many designers you put on usability. Support isn't a failure of the product; it's a permanent part of owning one. So the question isn't whether customers will need you — it's whether you'll be there fast when they do. First response is where you answer that.
And responsiveness signals something deeper than speed. "Customers matter to you" was one of our core values, and first response time is where a customer first feels whether that's true or just a slogan. A fast human reply says you matter, we've got you. A slow one — or an IVR maze, or a hidden phone number — says the opposite, before you've had any chance to actually help. That's why I'd argue first response is the single highest-leverage first impression in the whole customer relationship, and why treating support as a cost center to be minimized is one of the most expensive mistakes a SaaS founder can make.