OnRamp Blog

What Is Customer Effort Score (CES)?

Written by Melissa Scatena | 4/7/26 1:38 PM

Your customers don't leave because they're dissatisfied, they leave because you made them work too hard.

That's the insight behind Customer Effort Score, it's a deceptively simple metric that's become one of the strongest predictors of customer loyalty in B2B. While most companies pour resources into delighting customers, research from Gartner (formerly CEB) shows that reducing effort matters more than exceeding expectations when it comes to keeping customers around.

In this guide, we'll break down exactly what CES is, how it differs from CSAT and NPS, how to calculate it, when to deploy CES surveys, and how to use the results to build lower-friction experiences, especially during customer onboarding, where effort levels can make or break the entire relationship.

What Is Customer Effort Score (CES)?

Customer Effort Score is a customer experience metric that measures how easy or difficult it was for a customer to complete a specific interaction with your company. Unlike broader satisfaction metrics, CES zeroes in on one thing: friction.

The standard CES survey asks a single question:

"[Company] made it easy for me to handle my issue."

Customers respond on a scale, typically 1-5, 1-7, or a Likert scale from "Strongly Disagree" to "Strongly Agree." Higher scores indicate lower effort (easier experience), while lower scores signal friction that needs attention.

The concept was introduced in a 2010 Harvard Business Review article titled "Stop Trying to Delight Your Customers," which argued that companies overinvest in exceeding expectations and underinvest in simply removing obstacles. The research behind that article,  conducted by the Corporate Executive Board (now part of Gartner,) found that effort reduction was far more predictive of future loyalty than satisfaction alone.

Why CES Matters for B2B Companies

The business case for measuring customer effort is especially strong in B2B:

  • 96% of customers who report high-effort experiences become more disloyal, compared to just 9% of those with low-effort experiences
  • 94% of low-effort customers express intent to repurchase
  • 88% of low-effort customers say they'll increase their spending
  • 81% of high-effort customers plan to spread negative word of mouth

For B2B SaaS companies specifically, these numbers translate directly to churn risk, expansion revenue, and Net Revenue Retention. A customer who struggles through onboarding, fights to get support, or finds your renewal process confusing isn't just unhappy, they're actively evaluating alternatives.

CES vs. CSAT vs. NPS: Which Metric Should You Use?

Customer Effort Score isn't meant to replace your other CX metrics. Each measures something different, and the most effective programs use all three at different moments.

CSAT (Customer Satisfaction Score)

CSAT measures how satisfied a customer is with a specific interaction, product, or experience. It typically asks "How satisfied were you with [X]?" on a 1-5 or 1-7 scale.

Best for: Transaction-level feedback (post-support, post-onboarding, post-purchase) Limitation: Satisfaction is subjective and influenced by mood, expectations, and recent experiences beyond your control

If you're building out your CSAT program, our customer satisfaction survey guide includes 50+ questions and downloadable survey templates.

NPS (Net Promoter Score)

NPS measures loyalty and advocacy by asking "How likely are you to recommend [Company] to a friend or colleague?" on a 0-10 scale. Respondents are classified as Promoters (9-10), Passives (7-8), or Detractors (0-6).

Best for: Quarterly or semi-annual relationship health checks, benchmarking against industry Limitation: Broad and backward-looking — doesn't tell you why someone would or wouldn't recommend you

CES (Customer Effort Score)

CES measures how easy it was to complete a specific task. It's the most diagnostic of the three because it points directly to friction.

Best for: Post-interaction feedback — after support tickets, onboarding milestones, feature adoption, self-service usage Limitation: Narrowly focused on effort; doesn't capture broader sentiment or loyalty trajectory

When to Use Each

Metric

Question It Answers

Best Timing

Predicts

CSAT

"Were you satisfied?"

After any specific interaction

Short-term satisfaction

NPS

"Would you recommend us?"

Quarterly / relationship milestones

Long-term loyalty & advocacy

CES

"Was this easy?"

Immediately after a task or interaction

Repurchase intent & churn risk

The most effective approach combines all three. Use CES to identify friction in real time, CSAT to gauge satisfaction at key milestones, and NPS to track overall relationship health over time. Together with a customer health score, these metrics give you a complete picture of account risk and opportunity.

How to Calculate Customer Effort Score

The CES calculation is straightforward:

CES = Sum of all individual scores ÷ Total number of responses

Example Calculation

You survey 50 customers on a 1-7 scale (1 = Very Difficult, 7 = Very Easy). The total sum of all responses is 285.

CES = 285 ÷ 50 = 5.7

On a 7-point scale, 5.7 indicates most customers found the interaction relatively easy, but there's room for improvement.

What's a "Good" CES?

There's no universal benchmark because CES depends on your survey scale, industry, and the type of interaction being measured. However, these general ranges apply:

On a 1-7 scale:

  • 6.0-7.0: Excellent — low friction, high ease
  • 5.0-5.9: Good — most interactions are smooth with some friction points
  • 4.0-4.9: Needs attention — customers are encountering noticeable friction
  • Below 4.0: Critical — high effort is actively driving churn risk

On a 1-5 scale:

  • 4.0+: Strong
  • 3.0-3.9: Moderate
  • Below 3.0: Concerning

The real value isn't in hitting a benchmark number, it's in tracking your CES over time and correlating changes with specific product, process, or team improvements. A CES that improves from 4.8 to 5.6 over two quarters tells you more than any absolute score.

CES Survey Questions: What to Ask and When

Core CES Question Formats

Agreement scale (recommended): "[Company name] made it easy for me to [complete specific task]." Scale: Strongly Disagree (1) → Strongly Agree (7)

Effort scale: "How much effort did you have to put in to [complete specific task]?" Scale: Very High Effort (1) → Very Low Effort (5)

Ease scale: "How easy was it to [complete specific task]?" Scale: Very Difficult (1) → Very Easy (7)

The agreement format tends to perform best because it's clear, concise, and uses positive framing that reduces respondent confusion.

CES Questions by Customer Journey Stage

After onboarding milestones:

  • "[Company] made it easy for me to get started with the platform."
  • "How easy was it to complete your account setup?"
  • "How easy was it to understand the next steps in your onboarding?"

Measuring CES during onboarding is especially valuable because friction in the first 30-90 days is the strongest predictor of churn. If you're tracking customer onboarding metrics, CES should be one of them.

After support interactions:

  • "[Company] made it easy for me to resolve my issue."
  • "How much effort did you put in to get your question answered?"

After self-service interactions:

  • "How easy was it to find the information you were looking for?"
  • "[Company]'s documentation made it easy for me to solve my problem independently."

Pre-renewal (combine with CSAT):

  • "Overall, how easy is it to do business with [Company]?"
  • "How easy is it to get value from [Product] on a day-to-day basis?"

Follow-Up Questions

A single CES score tells you what but not why. Always pair your CES question with at least one open-ended follow-up:

  • "What would have made this experience easier?"
  • "What part of this process required the most effort?"
  • "Is there anything we could change to make this simpler?"

These qualitative responses are where the actionable insights live. A CES of 3.2 tells you something is broken; the follow-up comments tell you what to fix.

When to Send CES Surveys

Timing is critical. CES surveys must be sent immediately after the interaction you're measuring, ideally within minutes, never more than 24 hours later. The further the delay, the less accurate the response.

Recommended CES Survey Touchpoints

During onboarding:

  • After kickoff call completion
  • After first milestone (e.g., account setup, data migration, first workflow created)
  • After onboarding goes live / handoff to BAU support

During ongoing support:

  • After every support ticket resolution
  • After escalation resolution
  • After self-service article or knowledge base interaction

At relationship checkpoints:

  • After product training sessions
  • After QBR (Quarterly Business Review)
  • 60-90 days before renewal (combined with churn prevention efforts)

For a deeper look at optimal survey timing across the full customer journey, see our survey timing guide, covering everything from Day 1 post-kickoff through pre-renewal check-ins.

How to Reduce Customer Effort: 7 Proven Strategies

Collecting CES data is only useful if you act on it. Here are seven strategies that consistently lower customer effort in B2B environments.

1. Reduce Channel Switching

Every time a customer has to switch from chat to email to phone to repeat their problem, effort skyrockets. Map out your support handoff points and eliminate unnecessary transfers. If a customer starts in chat, they should be able to resolve in chat.

2. Kill the Repeat Explanation

Nothing inflates effort scores like asking customers to re-explain their issue. Ensure your CRM, support tools, and onboarding platform carry context forward so the next person who touches the account already knows the full picture.

3. Invest in Proactive Guidance

Don't wait for customers to get stuck. Use in-app guidance, milestone-triggered emails, and onboarding portals to surface the right information at the right moment. A well-structured customer onboarding process anticipates friction before it happens.

4. Build Effective Self-Service

The lowest-effort interaction is the one the customer handles themselves. Invest in searchable knowledge bases, in-app help, and contextual tooltips. Then measure CES on your self-service touchpoints to make sure they actually reduce effort.

5. Shorten Time to Value

The longer it takes a customer to see value, the more cumulative effort they'll perceive. Time to value is closely linked to CES, reducing one almost always reduces the other. Focus on getting customers to their "aha moment" faster by stripping out unnecessary onboarding steps.

6. Set Clear Expectations Upfront

Much of perceived effort comes from confusion, not complexity. If a customer knows a process will take 3 steps and 15 minutes, they'll rate a 15-minute process much lower in effort than if they went in blind. Transparency about what's required and what happens next dramatically lowers CES.

7. Close the Loop on High-Effort Scores

When a customer reports high effort, treat it like a churn signal. Route high-effort responses to the account team for immediate follow-up. A quick call saying "I saw your feedback, let me help" can reverse a negative trajectory before it reaches the renewal conversation.

CES in Customer Onboarding: Why It Matters Most Here

If you only measure CES at one stage of the customer lifecycle, make it onboarding.

Here's why: 70% of churn happens in the first 90 days. That's the period where customers are doing the most work — learning a new platform, migrating data, changing habits, training their team. Every unnecessary step, unclear instruction, or missing resource compounds perceived effort.

According to OnRamp's 2026 State of Onboarding Report, 62% of CS leaders lack real-time visibility into onboarding progress, and 57% say onboarding friction directly impacts revenue realization. CES gives you a quantifiable, real-time signal of exactly where that friction lives.

How to Implement CES in Your Onboarding Program

  1. Identify 3-5 key milestones in your onboarding workflow (kickoff, setup, first value milestone, go-live, handoff)
  2. Trigger a CES survey within 1 hour of each milestone completion
  3. Set an alert threshold — any score below 5 (on a 1-7 scale) gets flagged to the CSM
  4. Review weekly — aggregate CES by milestone to identify systemic friction (e.g., if "data migration" consistently scores 3.2, that step needs redesigning)
  5. Correlate with outcomes — track whether low onboarding CES predicts lower NPS, lower renewal rates, or longer time to value

The companies that treat onboarding effort as a leading indicator, rather than waiting for lagging indicators like churn, are the ones that build durable revenue growth. If you're thinking about how to build a more structured onboarding experience, our guide on customer success covers the full framework. 

CES Survey Template

#

Question

Type

Scale

1

[Company] made it easy for me to [complete task.]

Likert

1-7 (Strongly Disagree → Strongly Agree)

2

How much effort did you personally have to put forth to handle your request?

Effort

1-5 (Very Low → Very High)

3

How easy was it to get the help you needed?

Ease

1-7 (Very Difficult → Very Easy)

4

Were you able to accomplish what you set out to do?

Yes/No

Yes / Partially / No

5

How many times did you have to contact us to resolve this?

Numeric

1 / 2 / 3+

6

What would have made this experience easier?

Open-ended

Text

For a complete set of downloadable survey templates with auto-scoring formulas — including CSAT, NPS, and a master dashboard, check out our customer satisfaction survey guide.

Key Takeaways

  • Customer Effort Score measures friction, not satisfaction — and it's the strongest predictor of repurchase intent and loyalty
  • Use CES alongside CSAT and NPS, not instead of them — each metric answers a different question
  • Survey immediately after the interaction you're measuring, never more than 24 hours later
  • Always include a follow-up question to understand why effort was high or low
  • Onboarding is the highest-leverage moment for CES — 70% of churn happens in the first 90 days, and friction during this window compounds rapidly
  • Act on the data — route high-effort scores to the account team and review aggregate CES by journey stage weekly

Looking to reduce customer effort during onboarding? OnRamp helps B2B teams build guided onboarding experiences that surface the right information at the right time — reducing effort, accelerating time-to-value, and improving retention. Book a demo to see how.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good Customer Effort Score?

On a 7-point scale, a CES of 5.5 or above indicates a relatively low-effort experience. On a 5-point scale, aim for 4.0+. However, there's no universal benchmark — what matters most is tracking your CES over time and improving it.

How often should you measure CES?

Measure CES after every key interaction — support tickets, onboarding milestones, product training, and self-service usage. Avoid surveying the same customer more than once per month on the same interaction type.

Is CES better than NPS?

They measure different things. CES is more diagnostic and actionable (it tells you where friction exists). NPS is better for tracking long-term loyalty trends. The best programs use both.

What causes a low Customer Effort Score?

Common drivers include channel switching (having to repeat information across chat/email/phone), unclear instructions, slow response times, complex processes, and lack of self-service options.

Can you measure CES during customer onboarding?

Yes, and you should. Onboarding is when customers experience the most friction. Measuring CES at key milestones (kickoff, setup, go-live) gives you early warning signals before they become churn risks.