I think people are probably more concerned that it doesn't have economic significance. It might have statistical significance, but the effect is still very small, so does it really matter? That's a common trap people forget to consider. You see this a lot in finance research where some variable is statistically significant in a model, but the difference in the economic outcome is so small that it doesn't matter.
In this case, these are indeed tiny percentages. But you're going from something that a lot of people dislike and that is more complicated (from a technical standpoint), so we can simplify things and user interaction with live chat is not impacted.
You'd hope that the percentages here would be small: people need to be facing a problem with your product before they are part of the sample population.
There is a lot of potential economic impact here; during a major problem (which WILL happen) the number of people looking for support would increase sharply. If people are blind to your support system, you could be saying goodbye to a large amount of customers. Ignoring stuff like this is a far more common trap. We spend a lot of money on firefighters, even though we hope they never have any fires to fight.