Customer Escalation Brief Skill
Produce a clear, concise escalation brief that gives internal stakeholders — VP CS, CCO, product leadership, or the CEO — everything they need to understand the situation, make decisions, and act fast.
A good escalation brief is not a complaint. It is a professional document that states the facts, assigns accountability honestly, and proposes a specific resolution plan.
Required Inputs
Ask for these if not already provided:
- Account name, tier, and ARR
- CSM name and account owner
- Nature of the escalation — what happened, what the customer is saying
- Timeline of events leading to escalation
- Customer contact who escalated (name, role, influence level)
- What the customer wants — their stated ask
- What we believe the root cause is
- What has already been done to address the situation
- Renewal date and current renewal risk assessment
Escalation Levels
Calibrate urgency and audience based on escalation level:
| Level | Trigger | Audience | Response time |
|---|---|---|---|
| L1 — Account Risk | Customer expressing dissatisfaction; renewal at risk | CSM + CS Manager | 24 hours |
| L2 — Executive Escalation | Customer escalated to their exec; requesting vendor exec involvement | VP CS + Account Exec | 4 hours |
| L3 — Churn Risk | Customer has issued notice or is in active churn conversation | CCO / CEO + Revenue leadership | 1 hour |
| L4 — Public Risk | Customer threatening public escalation, legal, or press | CCO / Legal / Comms | Immediate |
Output Format
Escalation Brief: [Account Name]
Escalation level: L[1/2/3/4] — [Label] Date raised: [Date] Raised by: [CSM name] Escalation owner: [Name of exec or senior stakeholder now leading response]
Account at a Glance
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| ARR | £/$/€[X] |
| Tier | Enterprise / Mid-Market / SMB |
| Customer since | [Date] |
| Renewal date | [Date] — [N] days away |
| Renewal risk (pre-escalation) | Green / Amber / Red |
| Renewal risk (current) | Green / Amber / Red |
| Customer contact who escalated | [Name, role, seniority] |
| Executive sponsor (customer) | [Name, role — active / passive / vacant] |
| Executive sponsor (vendor) | [Name, role] |
What Happened — Summary
[3–5 sentences. State the facts plainly. What the customer experienced, how they reacted, and how we learned about the escalation. No editorialising. No blame.]
Timeline
List in chronological order. Each entry: [Date / time] — [What happened. Who did what.]
Include:
- When the original issue or trigger event occurred
- When the customer first raised concerns (informally)
- When it escalated (formal escalation or exec involvement)
- Actions taken since escalation
Root Cause
Primary cause: [One clear sentence. What specifically went wrong.]
Contributing factors:
- [Factor 1 — be honest about internal failures as well as external ones]
- [Factor 2]
Is this a systemic issue or isolated? [ ] Isolated to this account [ ] Pattern seen in other accounts — details: [_______] [ ] Product or process gap that needs fixing
Customer's Stated Position
What the customer says happened: [Their version of events — fair and unfiltered]
What they are asking for: [Their explicit ask — compensation, fix by date, exec call, SLA credit, exit clause]
Sentiment of escalating contact: [Frustrated but constructive / Angry / Seeking exit / Unknown]
Risk of public escalation: Low / Medium / High — [evidence if Medium or High]
Business Impact
| Impact type | Detail |
|---|---|
| ARR at risk | £/$/€[X] |
| Potential churn probability | [X]% |
| Reputational risk | Low / Medium / High |
| Reference / case study status | [Was a reference — now at risk / Not a reference] |
| Expansion pipeline at risk | £/$/€[X] |
What Has Been Done So Far
- [Action taken — by whom — date — outcome]
- [Action taken — by whom — date — outcome]
- [Action taken — by whom — date — outcome]
Has a formal apology or acknowledgement been issued? Yes / No
Proposed Resolution Plan
Immediate actions (next 24–48 hours):
| Action | Owner | By when |
|---|---|---|
| [Action] | [Name] | [Date] |
| [Action] | [Name] | [Date] |
Medium-term actions (next 2–4 weeks):
| Action | Owner | By when |
|---|---|---|
| [Action] | [Name] | [Date] |
What we are NOT offering: [Be explicit about what is not on the table — avoids misaligned expectations]
Success criteria: [How will we know the escalation is resolved? What does the customer need to confirm they are satisfied?]
Decision Required from Escalation Owner
[State clearly what decision or resource the escalation owner needs to provide. Be specific — do not make them ask. E.g.: "We need approval to offer a 20% service credit for Q2" or "We need an exec call with [name] within 48 hours."]
Communication Plan
| Audience | Message | Channel | Owner | By when |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Escalating customer contact | [Summary of message] | Email / Call | [Name] | [Date] |
| Customer exec sponsor | [Summary] | Call | [Name] | [Date] |
| Internal CS team | [Summary] | Slack / Meeting | CS Manager | [Date] |
Quality Checks
- Root cause is specific — not "communication breakdown" or "product gap" without detail
- Customer's position is stated fairly — not minimised or dismissed
- A clear decision is requested from the escalation owner — brief does not end with "what do you think?"
- ARR at risk is quantified
- Communication plan has owners and dates — not "TBD"
- Language is professional and blameless toward individuals