How to choose the right helpdesk

If you go to G2 and choose ‘helpdesk’ as your software category, the page throws up 457 listings (as on 23/7/2025). If you’re a small business owner, or the head of IT or CX at an enterprise company, narrowing down on one helpdesk that’s best suited to your team would be a mammoth task. 

Thankfully, most of us don’t look through each 457 before making a decision, and most helpdesks that are worth your time and research, are probably already well known. However, the question remains, how to choose a helpdesk that’s right for your team and company?

In this blog we explore the factors to consider when choosing a helpdesk. 

1. Start with your use case, not the feature list

Before comparing helpdesk platforms, zoom in on why your team needs one. Are you supporting customers, internal employees, or both? Do you need a full omnichannel platform or something streamlined inside your existing tools (like Microsoft Teams or Slack)? A helpdesk with hundreds of features won’t help if 90% of them don’t apply to your workflow. 

Tip: Make a short list of real-world scenarios your team handles. “Employee asks HR for tax proof,” or “Customer wants to return a product after the 7-day window.” Then evaluate how easily those can be solved within each platform.

2. Look for frictionless agent experience 

Clunky agent experiences = slower resolutions = lower CSAT. 

A good helpdesk should remove friction, not add it. Look for tools that allow agents to quickly respond, categorize, assign, and resolve tickets—without bouncing between apps, tabs, or menus. UI/UX design plays a huge role in how well your team adapts to the platform, especially if you have new agents ramping up often. 

Bonus points: A helpdesk that integrates natively with tools your team already uses (like Microsoft Teams, Outlook, or your CRM).

3. Don’t overpay for what you don’t use 

Many helpdesks market themselves as “all-in-one platforms,” bundling features like live chat, IVR, social media integration, and more. But ask yourself: Do you actually need all of that today? If your team just needs simple ticketing with smart routing and reporting, choose a platform that matches your maturity—not one that forces you into a bloated package. 

Look for: Pricing that’s per agent, with modular add-ons, so you scale only when you need to.

4. Customization shouldn’t require a developer 

 
Even lightweight helpdesks should allow custom fields, automations, SLAs, and branding tweaks. But beware of tools that lock these behind complex admin panels or developer-only workflows. 

Ask during demo: “Can a non-technical team lead set up automations, change categories, or edit forms on their own?” 

The more control your team has, the less dependent you’ll be on external support or engineering help, and the more agile your support process becomes.   

5. Evaluate reporting and accountability 

One of the biggest advantages of using a helpdesk is visibility. You should be able to track not just how many tickets you receive, but who’s responding, what your average resolution times are, where bottlenecks exist, and how satisfied your users or customers are.
 
Must-have: Customizable dashboards, scheduled reports, and basic SLA enforcement.
 
Nice-to-have: Agent-level performance breakdowns, CSAT/NPS integrations, or even heatmaps for common ticket categories. 

6. AI features: helpful or hype? 

Almost every helpdesk in 2025 will say they offer “AI support.” But not all AI is created equal. Look for platforms that use AI where it actually adds value: summarizing long ticket threads, auto-suggesting replies based on your past tickets, or drafting helpful responses using your knowledge base.
 
Avoid: AI that’s flashy but inaccurate. Bad automation can cost you more time than it saves.

7. Don’t forget onboarding, support, and culture 

A helpdesk is more than a software purchase. It’s a long-term relationship. Some of the best tools out there fall short when it comes to onboarding or ongoing support. Make sure the team behind the product is responsive, open to feedback, and regularly shipping updates that make your life easier. 
 

Red flags: Delayed responses during your trial, unclear documentation, or dated UI. 

Green flags: Transparent product roadmaps, customer community, and fast rollout of feature requests. 

So… how do you choose? 
 
It depends. A 5-person startup won’t need what a 200-agent call center does. But across the board, the best helpdesk for your team is the one that stays invisible when it’s doing its job right. It should blend into your existing workflows, and give you a bird’s-eye view of performance without overwhelming your agents or your admin team.
 
Desk365, for example, is built specifically for users who want powerful helpdesk capabilities without switching tabs all day. Whether you’re handling IT tickets internally or managing customer requests externally, it’s designed to be intuitive, fast, and fully customizable. And that without the price tag of bloated alternatives. 

In conclusion, you don’t need to evaluate 457 tools. But if you’ve narrowed it down to 3 or 4, pick the one that makes your team faster—not just your software stack fancier. 

Interested in trying Desk365? We’re an AI-powered helpdesk platform built for teams of all sizes. Get started here.

Table of Contents

Choose the right helpdesk for your business

Trusted by the best

Need assistance with Desk365? Get started with our articles in the Help Center!

Accordion Content

                   
Descriptive Image Text

Quick Overview of Desk365's Agent Bot and Support Bot for Microsoft Teams

Watch video

Getting Started with Desk365: Your Modern Helpdesk Ticketing System

Watch Video

Descriptive Text Here