
REDUX: Habituation and the risk to customer experience
March 2, 2026
How CX leaders can turn insights into measurable business outcomes
March 9, 2026Today’s episode of the Punk CX podcast features Justin Robbins, Founder & Principal Analyst at Metric Sherpa, Inc and a newly minted author. Justin joins me to talk about his new book called: More Than A Motto: Reignite Your Purpose, Rediscover Your Joy At Work. We discuss the highlights from the book, including the leadership blind spot, that burnout is a system outcome, not a personal failure, why purpose breaks without rhythm, and the RHYTHM model.
This interview follows on from my recent interview – The split personality disorder plaguing many brands – Interview with Ping Wu of Cresta – and is number 576 in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders who are doing great things, providing valuable insights, helping businesses innovate and delivering great service and experience to both their customers and their employees.
Here are the highlights of my chat with Justin:
- CX is Downstream of EX: The state of customer experience (CX) is a direct downstream result of the employee experience (EX). CX leaders must address internal systems to see external results.
- The Intent-Action Gap: A critical organisational failure occurs when leaders’ positive intentions (what they say they value) are contradicted by the actual operating systems, metrics, and processes that dictate daily employee behaviour (what the system reinforces).
- The Leadership Blind Spot: This is the erroneous belief that a leader’s clarity and intent will translate intact to the front lines. The reality is that organisational systems—even subtle ones, like the placement of a metric on a scorecard—are the true shapers of behaviour.
- Burnout as a System Outcome: Burnout is fundamentally a design issue, not a personal failure. It is most pronounced in high-capacity, high-performing employees whose sustained effort to compensate for broken, friction-filled systems eventually leads to exhaustion and disengagement.
- Purpose Requires Design, Not Motivation: The primary challenge is not an employee’s lack of purpose, but a work environment that fails to reinforce and enable that purpose to be lived out. Leaders must shift from running motivational campaigns to designing operational discipline.
- The Role of Rhythm: Intentional organisational Rhythm is proposed as the essential operating system that prevents purpose from breaking. It provides a repeatable pattern that guides action and ensures consistency, rather than relying on unsustainable, heroic leader intervention.
- Resolving What Matters (R): The starting point of the R.H.Y.T.H.M. framework is establishing clarity so employees know precisely “what wins when priorities collide.”
- Holding the Line (H): This element emphasises intentionality—making an intentional pre-decision to ensure that operational standards and core values survive everyday inconveniences and the pressure of trade-offs.
- You Belong Here (Y): To counter the isolation that drives burnout, leaders must intentionally foster connection and ensure that employee contribution is made visible, acknowledged, and owned.
- Tempo (T) and Making it Repeat (M): Tempo focuses on recovery, ensuring that energy is built during the workday. Making it Repeat focuses on establishing the long-term cadence necessary to build sustainable organizational habits and operational discipline.
- Justin’s best advice: Stop asking people to push harder inside of systems that are misaligned. Fix the misalignment.
- Justin’s Punk CX brand: Delta
About Justin
Justin Robbins, is the Founder & Principal Analyst at Metric Sherpa, Inc.
Justin is a leadership and customer experience expert with more than 20 years of experience helping organizations close the gap between intention and execution. His work spans contact centre operations, in-person service delivery, quality assurance, workforce development, and CX strategy, with a consistent focus on turning ideas into action.
Across his career, Justin has worked inside operations, advised global brands, and partnered with SaaS leaders to shape how work gets done and how people experience it. His perspective bridges employees and executives, combining practical execution with a deep understanding of how trust, purpose, and clarity drive performance.
Through his writing, research, and speaking, Justin challenges leaders to move beyond slogans and create environments where people can find meaning, energy, and pride in their work again.
Find out more about Metric Sherpa, Inc, check out Justin’s new book (More Than A Motto: Reignite Your Purpose, Rediscover Your Joy At Work) and feel free to connect with Justin on LinkedIn here.
Image credit: Photo by Arnaud Padallé on Unsplash




