How to move from ticketing to resolution-based support
Learn how to shift from managing queues to delivering faster, higher-quality outcomes across customer and employee service.
Candace Marshall
Vice President, Product Marketing, AI and Automation
Laatst gewijzigd 13 mei 2026
What is resolution-based support?
Resolution-based support is an operating model that measures success by problems solved, not tickets closed. Teams own each request through to a confirmed outcome, ensuring the issue is fully resolved across customer and employee service. This approach improves coordination and supports users right up to resolution. Unlike ticket-centric models that prioritize speed and volume, it reduces effort and builds trust through consistent, reliable outcomes.
Customers are tired of fragmented, impersonal support. They reach out with a simple issue, get a reply, then repeat the same details to someone new. Meanwhile, the problem remains unresolved.
Behind the scenes, it looks like progress. Tickets move forward, responses are sent, and metrics improve. But from the customer’s perspective, nothing has actually been fixed. Traditional ticketing models create this gap. They track activity, not outcomes, often rewarding speed over resolution.
Resolution-based support shifts the focus to solved problems and confirmed outcomes. In this guide, you’ll learn how to move from managing requests to delivering complete resolutions that improve customer satisfaction, employee service quality, and operational efficiency.
Understanding the shift from ticketing to resolution-based support
Traditional ticketing systems focus on tracking requests and closing support tickets efficiently. But as support becomes more complex, activity alone doesn’t guarantee resolution.
Resolution-based support shifts the focus to solving issues end-to-end, with clear ownership and accountability for outcomes. This change drives faster resolutions, more efficient operations, and higher customer and employee satisfaction—while redefining how teams measure success.
Defining success metrics and service level agreements
Resolution-based support changes what success looks like. Tracking volume and response times is no longer enough. Teams measure whether issues are resolved, how much effort customers expend, and how consistently service is delivered. SLAs and metrics evolve to reflect this shift, setting clear expectations for both speed and outcomes.
What are SLAs in resolution-based support?
Service level agreements (SLAs) define clear commitments for how quickly teams respond and resolve issues. They set expectations for both the business and the customer.
In a resolution-based model, SLAs extend beyond first response times to include resolution targets that ensure issues are fully addressed. This shift creates accountability for outcomes and gives customers confidence that their issue will be handled end to end.
From ticket metrics to outcome metrics
Traditional ticket metrics focus on volume, backlog, and response speed. Outcome metrics focus on whether the issue was resolved and how the customer experienced that resolution.
Key metrics include:
Mean time to resolution (MTTR), which measures how quickly issues are fully resolved.
Deflection rate, which tracks how many requests are handled without agent involvement.
Together, these metrics provide a clearer view of performance. They measure resolution speed, quality, and effort. This gives teams a more accurate picture of what customers actually experience.
Tracking performance with dashboards and alerts
Outcome metrics only matter if teams can act on them in real time. Dashboards surface SLA compliance, backlog, and workload as they change. This visibility enables immediate action. Teams can spot delays, rebalance work, and resolve issues before they escalate.
A comparison between traditional and outcome-based metrics makes this shift clear and actionable:
Traditional ticket metrics
Outcome-based metrics
Tickets closed
Issues fully resolved
First response time
Mean time to resolution (MTTR)
Ticket backlog size
SLA compliance (response and resolution)
Tickets per agent
Customer effort score (CES)
Deflection rate (basic)
Deflection rate (resolved without agent intervention)
Average handle time (AHT)
Customer satisfaction (CSAT)
How AI and automation streamline resolutions
AI and automation make resolution-based support possible at scale. Routine requests are handled instantly, while complex issues move faster with AI-driven support. Teams use AI-powered ticketing to triage requests, surface context, and take action across systems. This removes manual steps and keeps issues moving toward resolution.
The result is faster, more consistent outcomes—with less effort from both customers and agents.
Automation vs. AI-powered support
Traditional automation relies on predefined rules and workflows. It works well for predictable tasks like routing tickets or sending standard responses. AI-powered support, including conversational AI, goes further. It analyzes each request, understands context, and determines the next best action in real time.
This difference matters for resolution. While automation handles repeatable tasks, conversational AI can adapt to complex issues, coordinate across systems, and move requests toward a complete outcome.
Practical use cases for AI in support
AI operates across the support workflow, from the moment a request is received. It triages incoming requests, identifies key context like intent and language, and routes them to the right team or system.
For routine issues, AI can resolve requests through self-service, often powered by chatbots, by retrieving accurate answers or completing simple actions. For more complex cases, it supports agents with suggested replies, relevant context, and next steps.
These use cases reduce manual effort and keep requests moving. Issues are routed faster, responses are more consistent, and resolutions happen with fewer delays.
Impact on resolution efficiency
AI has a direct impact on resolution efficiency. Many teams automate between 20 and 60 percent of interactions as they scale their use of AI. This reduces manual work and frees agents to focus on complex issues. Response times drop, and resolutions happen faster with fewer handoffs.
As adoption matures, automation can expand further, allowing teams to resolve the majority of requests while maintaining quality and control. For example, HelloSugar automates 66 percent of customer requests, allowing the company to scale operations without increasing headcount while saving $14,000 per month.
Empowering agents with tools, training, and new performance goals
Shifting to resolution-based support requires more than new systems. Agents need the tools, context, and incentives to deliver consistent outcomes.
Modern teams support agents with:
Context-rich interfaces that bring customer history, knowledge, and workflows together—reducing time spent searching and keeping issues moving.
Outcome-based performance goals like customer satisfaction (CSAT) and first contact resolution (FCR), aligning success with resolved issues rather than volume.
Focused training on knowledge and runbooks, so agents can follow clear processes and work effectively alongside automation.
This approach changes how agents work day to day. Instead of managing tickets, they focus on resolving issues with speed, consistency, and confidence.
How to avoid common pitfalls in the transition to resolution-based support
Transitioning to resolution-based support introduces new challenges. Most teams face similar barriers, but they can be addressed with the right planning and approach. Common pitfalls include:
Disconnected data and knowledge: When customer data and knowledge sources are scattered, agents and AI lack the context needed to resolve issues.
Solution: Connect key systems and knowledge sources so every interaction starts with complete context.
Missing integrations across systems: If support tools aren’t connected to backend systems, teams can’t take action to resolve issues end to end.
Solution: Integrate core systems so workflows extend beyond ticketing and enable real resolution.
Weak change management and adoption: Shifting the model without aligning teams leads to inconsistent execution and slow adoption.
Solution: Set clear SMART goals for customer service, update performance metrics, and train teams on new workflows and expectations.
Over-reliance on basic automation: Rule-based automation alone can’t handle complex requests, leading to stalled or incomplete resolutions.
Solution: Combine automation with AI that can adapt, make decisions, and support end-to-end resolution.
Addressing these challenges early keeps the transition on track. With the right foundation, teams can scale resolution-based support without introducing new complexity.
Measuring outcomes and increasing ROI
Resolution-based support improves speed, cost efficiency, and customer satisfaction by focusing on outcomes, not activity. Teams now measure resolution speed, customer effort, and cost per interaction using metrics like MTTR, deflection rate, and cost per resolution.
As adoption scales, these gains combine. Many organizations automate between 20 and 60 percent of interactions, improving SLA performance and consistency. A simple way to evaluate ROI is to compare before and after the shift:
Before (ticketing model)
After (resolution-based support)
High ticket volume
Lower ticket volume, higher-quality resolutions
Slower resolution times
Faster end-to-end resolution
Repetitive manual work
Automated routine requests
Rising cost per ticket
Lower cost per resolution
Inconsistent outcomes
Predictable, measurable results
By aligning metrics, workflows, and incentives around resolution, teams improve efficiency while delivering better customer experiences.
Frequently asked questions
The biggest challenges include fragmented context during handoffs, manual routing errors, and resistance to changing established workflows. These issues prevent teams from maintaining ownership and delivering consistent resolutions. Addressing them requires connected systems, automated routing, and structured change management to ensure alignment across teams.
Automation improves resolution times by eliminating repetitive manual tasks and resolving simple requests instantly. This allows agents to focus on complex issues that require judgment and expertise. Quality is maintained through structured workflows, consistent processes, and oversight that ensures every issue is handled correctly.
Personalized service is maintained by using automation to handle routine requests, freeing agents to focus on more complex interactions. AI can deliver accurate, context-aware responses for common issues, while agents provide empathy and tailored support where it matters most. This balance ensures efficiency without losing the human touch.
Teams adopt new workflows successfully when changes are clearly communicated and supported with practical training. Phased rollouts reduce disruption, while hands-on guidance builds confidence in new tools and processes. Ongoing support and clear performance goals reinforce adoption and ensure consistent execution.
Docebo enhances B2B CX with Zendesk AI
“Without a doubt, Zendesk AI is the best in the support game—it just works. It’s intuitive, it’s smart, and it keeps us focused on what matters most—the customer experience.”
Resolution-based support shifts the focus from tracking requests to solving issues end to end. Teams resolve problems faster, reduce customer effort, and keep customers informed throughout the entire experience.
The Zendesk Resolution Platform connects conversations across channels, automates repetitive work, and routes requests intelligently—so issues move toward resolution without delays or unnecessary handoffs. The result is faster, more consistent outcomes at scale. Explore the full platform to see how resolution-based support works in practice.
Candace Marshall
Vice President, Product Marketing, AI and Automation
Candace Marshall is a seasoned product marketing leader with a passion for solving complex problems and driving innovation in fast-paced environments. Her career began in operations and research, but her love for understanding customers and translating insights into impactful strategies led her to product marketing. Currently, Candace leads product marketing for Zendesk AI including AI agents and Copilot, driving growth across AI-powered solutions and the core service offerings. Her team delivers end-to-end product marketing strategies, from market validation and messaging to go-to-market execution and customer adoption. Before joining Zendesk, Candace spent nearly a decade at LinkedIn, where she built and led the product marketing team for the rapidly scaling Marketing Solutions division, overseeing key advertising products in the multi-billion-dollar business.
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