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CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE SHOULD THE MARKETING AND CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENTS BE HARMONIZED? By Carolyne Gathuru M arketing and Customer Service roles have unique purposes in the organization, each working towards ensuring a sustainable bottom line. Both departments have the similarity of cutting across the company divide, and require the support of other units to function effectively to deliver business objectives. Many organizations suffer from the ‘silo’ effect where different sections work on their own, independent of each other, whilst all are trying to forge forward towards a common goal. Marketing and customer service are not exempt from this syndrome. Solving this fundamental organization challenge is the bane of team building and strategy consultants’ existence, who are invariably confronted by it in a bid to enhance working relationships and ensure smooth flow of work. Marketing’s key deliverable is to attract and bring in customers, ‘‘ If the way customers experience a brand is incumbent upon their interaction with it pre, during and post the buying process, and the responsibility for a delightful outcome lies with both the marketing and the customer service department, then the question any reasonable business analyst would ask, is why these are two different departments? Should they not be harmonized and operate as one to ensure unification of action and seamless delivery?’’ 40 MAL 17/17 ISSUE creating conversion from potential to actual and influencing the buying decision to have more feet through the door and currency out of wallets; directly contributing to the revenue bottom line. Many factors and strategies go into delivering this outcome, and marketing is constantly on the organization butcher’s block to drive the ‘numbers’. Customer service on the other hand, is designed to ensure that the brand promises made by marketing are delivered to specification, ensure consistency of service, and put in place systems and structures to increase customer retention. What is demanded of customer service as a key deliverable is to ensure that the experience delivered is up to the required standard, and that any complaints are handled with speed and effectiveness. If the way customers experience a brand is incumbent upon their interaction with it pre, during and post the buying process, and the responsibility for a delightful outcome lies with both the marketing and the customer service department, then the question any reasonable business analyst would ask, is why these are two different departments? Should they not be harmonized and operate