17th September 2025
Employee burnout is a growing concern in contact centres, where high stress and demanding workloads are common.
Understanding the main causes of burnout is essential to creating a healthier work environment and retaining talent.
This article explores five key factors contributing to burnout among contact centre agents and offers practical advice on how to address them.
Employee burnout is a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion caused by prolonged stress or overwork, especially when employees feel overwhelmed, undervalued, or unsupported.
It often leads to decreased motivation, reduced productivity, and increased absenteeism, negatively affecting both the individual and the organization.
Burnout can be caused by a variety of factors that slowly drain agents’ motivation and energy. Here are 5 top causes of employee burnout in contact centres and how to address them:
Not everyone is built for the pace and pressure of contact centre work, and bringing the wrong people into the role sets them (and your team) up for failure. When new hires quickly feel overwhelmed or disengaged, burnout follows fast.
Traditional hiring methods often miss critical soft skills like emotional resilience, patience, and the ability to multitask under pressure. A candidate might give the right answers in an interview but still struggle once they’re on the floor.
What helps:
If you want to know what to look out for when hiring agents, read our article: The Top Call Centre Agent Skills to Look for When Hiring
Day after day of identical tasks, with little room for creativity or variation, wears down even the best agents. Repetition fatigue leads to mental exhaustion and emotional detachment, classic hallmarks of burnout.
Call handling, scripting, and performance metrics are important, but over-structuring the role can leave agents feeling like they’re just ticking boxes.
What helps:
Initial onboarding may cover the basics, but it’s often not enough. When agents aren’t fully trained on systems, processes, or customer scenarios, they become uncertain, anxious, and prone to mistakes. That stress builds up quickly.
Worse still, training often stops after the first few weeks. Without ongoing development, agents feel unsupported and stagnate in their roles, which leads to frustration and disengagement over time.
What helps:
For tips on how to successfully train call centre agents, read our article: 50 Call Centre Training Tips
Clunky systems, multiple logins, slow load times, and disjointed platforms all create unnecessary friction in an already fast-paced role. Instead of focusing on the customer, agents get bogged down in processes, which increases call times, errors, and stress levels.
Over time, tech frustration can lead to cynicism and disengagement, especially when agents feel their concerns aren’t being addressed.
What helps:
Contact centre work is emotionally demanding, often invisible, and frequently underappreciated. When agents don’t feel seen or valued, their motivation drops, and burnout creeps in quietly.
Recognition doesn’t always have to come in the form of bonuses or awards. Even simple, authentic praise makes a difference, especially when it’s timely and specific.
What helps:
If you want to know ways you can reward your employees, read our article: How to Improve Your Employee Reward Schemes – With Examples
This article is a revised version of 5 Reasons for Contact Centre Employee Burnout, originally published by Genesys.
For more on ways to prevent and avoid employee burnout, read these articles next:
Reviewed by: Rachael Trickey