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Omnichannel Marketing That Actually Works

Omnichannel marketing is not about more channels – it’s about how well they work together.

MarTech series about making MarTech work in practice from strategy to execution

What It Means for Your Company

Why this matters in practice

  • Many omnichannel initiatives fail because channels are managed in silos
  • You risk fragmented customer experiences and inconsistent messaging
  • Your teams struggle to coordinate efforts across platforms

What you gain when it works

  • A consistent customer experience across all channels
  • Better coordination between marketing, sales, and service
  • Higher engagement and conversion through connected journeys

Bottom line: Omnichannel marketing only creates value when channels actually work together.

Introduction

Omnichannel has been a key ambition for many organisations for years.
The idea is simple: create a seamless customer experience across all touchpoints.

In reality, this is much harder to achieve.
Many organisations operate across multiple channels, but those channels are not truly connected.

The result is not omnichannel. It is multichannel without coordination.

The Real Problem

Why omnichannel marketing often fails in practice

Most organisations don’t lack channels. They lack integration.

Common challenges include:

  • Channels managed by different teams with separate goals
  • Inconsistent data across platforms
  • Disconnected tools and systems
  • Lack of a unified view of the customer journey

As a result:

  • Customer experiences feel fragmented
  • Messaging becomes inconsistent
  • Opportunities for engagement are missed

Omnichannel fails when coordination is missing.

From Strategy to Execution

What actually needs to happen

To make omnichannel marketing work, organisations must move beyond channel thinking.

This means:

  • Designing customer journeys—not individual campaigns
  • Connecting data across channels
  • Aligning teams around shared objectives
  • Ensuring consistency in messaging and timing

Omnichannel is not about being everywhere.
It is about being connected.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Where companies go wrong

Typical pitfalls include:

  • Treating omnichannel as a technology project
  • Focusing on channels instead of customer journeys
  • Lack of coordination between teams
  • Inconsistent messaging across platforms

These mistakes lead to fragmented experiences.

Key Components That Make It Work

What to focus on

To build omnichannel marketing that works:

  • Customer journey focus
    Start with how customers move between channels
  • Connected data
    Ensure relevant data is shared across systems
  • Aligned teams
    Marketing, sales, and service must work together
  • Consistent experience
    Deliver the same message and value across channels

These elements create a coherent experience.

How I Would Approach This in Practice

A simple, proven approach

  1. Map key customer journeys across channels
    Understand how customers actually move and interact
  2. Connect data and systems where it matters most
    Focus on key touchpoints first
  3. Align teams and messaging
    Ensure a consistent experience across channels

This approach creates clarity and improves customer experience.

Conclusion

From multichannel to real omnichannel

Most organisations are not truly omnichannel.

They operate across multiple channels—but without coordination.

Organisations that succeed focus on connection, alignment, and consistency.

That is how omnichannel marketing creates real business value.

Article series: Making MarTech Work in Practice


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