June 23, 2026 - by Will Payman
There’s an old saying in customer experience circles: “Oops, your org chart is showing.”
For years, humans have compensated for that reality. When systems didn’t talk to each other, people did. When context was missing, frontline teams filled in the gaps.
AI changes that.
As more customer interactions are handled or influenced by AI agents, there’s no human buffer left to smooth over disconnected systems. What customers experience on the outside is now a direct reflection of how well things are connected on the inside. And that’s forcing a rethink of what “owning CX” really means.
AI agents operate strictly within the boundaries of:
If customer context is split across CRM, contact center, marketing platforms, and analytics tools, the experience fragments in real time.
But this is not just a platform, data, or integration issue. In practice, organizations are seeing a broader mismatch between:
When these elements are out of sync, AI doesn’t hide it; it exposes it at scale.
It’s tempting to treat this as a digital customer experience problem and stop there. But modern CX failures rarely originate in the experience layer itself.
They originate upstream:
Fixing the interface without fixing the underlying systems is like repainting a cracked wall.
This is exactly where we see CX efforts stall: when responsibility is fragmented. Digital experience teams own the interface, CRM teams own customer truth, contact center teams own continuity, and data teams own insight.
Delivering a coherent, AI-enabled customer experience requires coordination across disciplines that have historically operated in parallel:
None of these groups can solve the problem alone. Together, they determine whether AI becomes a force multiplier or a friction amplifier.
When clients bring CX discussions to Synoptek, we always look under the hood to understand whether CRM, contact center, digital, and data teams are designing journeys together, and where AI can become a force multiplier. When they aren’t, fragmentation simply becomes more visible to customers.
In the past, experience orchestration depended on people knowing when to step in. Today, it depends on context being available at decision time.
That means:
This shift from manual orchestration to context‑driven orchestration is what separates AI experiments from real CX transformation.
Great customer experience in an AI-driven world isn’t created at the edge; it’s created in the connections.
From our vantage point, success won’t come from moving fastest. It will come from investing in shared context, clean data, and cross-functional ownership of the experience.
Modernizing your CX is no longer just about improving interfaces; it’s about rethinking how your entire ecosystem works together to serve a new kind of customer: one that’s represented, assisted, and increasingly mediated by AI. Now is a good time to assess whether your CX ecosystem is built to deliver the context, continuity, and trust that AI-enabled experiences require.
Will Payman is Senior Director of Strategy - CX at Synoptek. He has led the digital strategy and analytics discipline for various clients across different industries. With over 25 years of experience in the digital field, he works with teams to build and improve product management processes to create digital products that solve customer problems and generate revenue. He leads the analytics team from setup, insights, and recommendations for experience improvements, and also supports clients with digital strategy activities and deliverables.