Jan 27, 2026
Why Customers And Stakeholders Go Dark

Being ghosted is one of the most common challenges in Customer Success. Customers rarely disappear randomly—they stop responding when the message loses relevance, the value isn’t clear, or the ask no longer makes sense in their context.
Being ghosted is one of the most common problems in Customer Success.
Almost every CSM I talk to brings it up.
“Customers stopped responding.” “Stakeholders disappeared.” “We can’t get a meeting anymore.”
Here’s the pattern most teams miss:
Customers don’t go dark randomly.
They go dark because something stopped making sense for them.
Pattern #1 - Ghosting Is Not Personal. It’s Contextual.
In a recent pod episode, we unpacked this with Lincoln Murphy.
First rule - don’t take it personally.
CS is a professional relationship. Ghosting will happen.
When teams make it emotional, they lose clarity.
When they make it logical, they regain control.
A useful reframing I often share in workshops:
Ask yourself - am I ghosting someone right now?
A vendor. A sales rep. An internal stakeholder.
Usually the reason is simple:
It’s not a priority
The truth is uncomfortable
I don’t have a decision
I don’t see enough value yet
Your customers are doing the same thing.
Pattern #2 - Not All Ghosting Is The Same
There’s a critical distinction most teams blur.
Customers who stop engaging after they were engaged.
And customers who never engaged in the first place.
Both are bad. But they signal different problems.
If engagement stopped, something changed.
Messaging. Expectations. Pressure. Relevance.
If engagement never started, you never earned attention.
Treating these as the same leads to the wrong actions.
Pattern #3 - We Overestimate Our Importance
This is the uncomfortable one.
We believe our product sits at the center of the customer’s world.
It doesn’t.
At least not yet.
I see teams respond to silence by pushing harder.
More emails. More nudges. Bigger asks.
That usually makes things worse.
A CEO told me this last week:
“We’re acting like we’re the main character in their story. We’re not.”
Customers don’t care about your product.
They care about:
Their goals
Their timelines
Their risks
Their internal pressure
When communication is about you, silence is rational.
Pattern #4 - WIIFT Beats Features Every Time
There’s an old acronym Lincoln brought up again:
WIIFT - What’s In It For Them.
Most ghosting emails fail this test.
Even well-written ones.
Talking about your product helping them achieve goals is not enough.
You have to talk about their goal.
The right one.
I’ve seen this go very wrong.
One company launched a feature that accidentally competed with a subset of their customers.
They sent the same announcement to everyone.
That segment churned shortly after.
Wrong relevance. Wrong message. Right outcome - from the customer’s perspective.
Pattern #5 - Ghosting Is Often Self-Inflicted
Here’s a hard truth:
We often teach customers to ignore us.
Generic templates. Conflicting messages. Multiple people reaching out. Big asks with no context.
One re-engagement email tries to do everything:
“Let’s jump on a call.” “Let’s review the account.” “Let’s plan the future.”
That’s not re-engagement. That’s pressure.
Pattern #6 - Re-Engagement Is A Game Of Steps
The teams that un-ghost customers think in steps.
Not straight to the outcome we want.
The first goal is not a full restart or even a meeting.
The first goal is a reply.
Open the door. Build trust. Restore relevance.
In a previous role working with a CRM platform, we used a simple tactic.
We identified duplicate records in the customer’s database.
Then sent a message:
“We found X duplicates. Want help cleaning them up - free of charge?”
No meeting request. No agenda.
Just value.
Replies came back.
Conversation restarted.
Momentum followed.
The Customer Pattern
Customers don’t go dark because they’re rude.
They go dark when:
You’re not relevant right now
The ask is too big
The value is unclear
The message is about you
In the AI era, customers expect two things at the same time:
Hyper efficiency. Hyper customer centricity.
Ghosting is what happens when you deliver neither.
The leaders who win don’t chase harder.
They resonate better.