home Contact Centre & Channels When disconnected CX turns people into middleware

When disconnected CX turns people into middleware

A customer does not see the systems behind their request. They do not see the service ticket, CRM record, policy workflow, approval queue or handoff between departments.

They see the wait.

On the other side of that wait is often an employee doing everything they can to help. They are copying information between platforms, chasing updates and filling the gaps technology was meant to close.

This is one of the most overlooked realities in customer experience today. Many organisations have invested heavily in digital tools, CX platforms, enterprise service systems and AI pilots. Yet the experience still depends on people manually holding disconnected processes together.

In effect, employees have become the middleware: the layer connecting systems, teams and processes that were never properly connected by design.

That is not sustainable. And it is not where the next phase of customer experience will be won.

The gap between ambition and impact

Across organisation and sectors, a consistent tension is emerging. The ambition is there. The platforms are often there. But the operating model underneath has not always caught up. Organisations want faster service, better personalisation, stronger visibility and more efficient delivery.

The problem is that too much of the work still happens across fragmented systems, inconsistent workflows and manual handoffs.

The result is a familiar and costly gap: more technology in the business, but not enough improvement in the experience.

Recent Ecosystm research found that 74 per cent of organisations in Australia are increasing technology investments to improve the experience. Yet only 35 per cent are seeing tangible benefits in reducing service volumes. Investment alone is not enough. The issue is whether those investments are connected to the way work actually gets done.

CX now depends on what happens behind the scenes

Customer experience is no longer shaped only at the point of interaction. It is shaped by everything behind it. A simple request might depend on customer data, identity checks, service history, approvals, compliance steps, case management and back-office fulfilment. If those pieces do not connect, the customer feels the delay, and the employee carries the burden.

That burden has become heavier as service expectations have risen. The same research found that 71 per cent of customer interactions are shifting to digital *, yet many organisations still lack the foundations to manage that shift consistently. While 57 per cent of Australian organisations have set CX KPIs across the business, only 20 per cent have a single *, unified source of customer data. Without that shared view, employees are forced to search, reconcile and interpret information across multiple systems before they can act.

The hidden burden on employees

This is where disconnected CX becomes a human problem.

People are often praised for “going the extra mile” to solve customer issues. In many organisations, that extra mile has become part of the operating model. Staff chase updates, re-enter information and use informal workarounds to keep service moving. Their effort protects the customer from some of the complexity underneath, but it also hides the true cost of fragmentation.

Over time, that cost shows up everywhere: slower response times, inconsistent experiences, higher service volumes, lower employee satisfaction and limited visibility for leaders. It also affects the return on major platform investments. A new CX system or AI tool can only deliver so much value if it is layered onto workflows that remain disconnected.

For leaders, this is where the issue becomes strategic. Human middleware is expensive, difficult to scale and hard to measure. It absorbs capacity, hides process failure and limits the return on CX, service management and AI investments. What looks like a service issue is often an operating model issue.

A cross-sector problem

The pattern is visible across the industries we operate in.

In financial services and insurance, fragmentation does not just slow service. It can increase operational risk. Customers expect fast, personalised digital service, while organisations operate within strict regulatory frameworks. When customer, compliance and operational workflows are not connected, teams lose time validating information and routing complex requests manually.

In government and the public sector, fragmentation can quickly become a trust issue. Citizens expect responsive, transparent digital services. Yet many agencies still manage siloed departments, legacy infrastructure and constrained budgets. When requests cannot flow cleanly into back-office case management, staff carry internal complexity on behalf of the citizen.

In the not-for-profit sector, fragmentation can directly reduce capacity for impact. Lean teams often work with limited budgets, fragmented systems and high demand for services. Every duplicated process or manual handoff takes time away from frontline service, donor engagement or program delivery.

AI cannot fix disconnected workflows by itself

AI has raised expectations for what experience delivery could become: faster, more predictive, more personalised and more responsive. But AI is only as useful as the environment in which it operates. If data is fragmented, processes are inconsistent, and teams do not trust the workflow, AI initiatives are likely to remain isolated.

Our whitepaper identifies key barriers to AI adoption in Australia, including low user adoption due to inconsistent or fragmented experiences, uncertainty about AI’s ability to deliver meaningful, context-aware responses, and privacy, security, and responsible AI concerns. These are not simply technology barriers. They are operating model barriers.

AI is not the shortcut around workflow integration. It is the reason workflow integration now matters more.

For AI to create value, it needs to be embedded into the way work actually happens. That means supporting routing, automation, decision-making and real-time guidance within connected workflows, while giving leaders a clear view of performance from first contact through to resolution.

From fragmented systems to connected outcomes

The organisations making the most progress are not just adding tools. They are rethinking how people, processes, platforms and data connect.

That starts with workflows. Before introducing more technology, leaders need to understand where work slows down, where information is duplicated, where handoffs fail and where people are compensating for system gaps. These friction points often reveal the real barriers to better customer and employee experience.

From there, organisations need to bring platforms together around the journey, not the department. Fragmented CX tools, service systems and custom integrations create cost and complexity. They also make it harder to deliver a consistent experience. Interoperable platforms and a common data layer can reduce duplication, improve visibility and help improvements scale.

Only then does AI become more than an experiment. When AI is connected to the right data and embedded into the right workflows, it can help triage requests, identify patterns, guide decisions and reduce manual effort. It can support people at the point of work, rather than sitting beside the work as another separate tool.

The next phase of experience transformation

For leaders, the next phase of experience transformation is about bringing customer experience, employee experience, workflow integration and AI into one connected agenda. As organisations look to improve efficiency and scale AI, the focus is shifting towards more responsive experience environments, supported by partnerships such as Nexon and Genesys that connect customer engagement, workforce collaboration and operational workflows.

This is less about removing people from the process and more about removing the friction that prevents them from doing their best work.

Because customers do not remember the workflow. They remember whether their issue was understood, whether the response was clear and whether the organisation made it easy to move forward.

They remember the wait.

When employees are no longer forced to act as the middleware, they can return to the work that matters most: solving problems, building trust and creating the kind of experience people remember and return for.

*Source: Ecosystm, Turning Fragmented Experiences into Connected Outcomes, sponsored by Nexon Asia Pacific, Genesys and ServiceNow, 2026. N=134

David Russell

David Russell is General Manager, Enterprise Digital (Corporate) at Nexon Asia Pacific, where he leads strategy, growth and commercial performance across enterprise digital solutions, with deep expertise in Unified Communications and Customer Experience. With more than 25 years in enterprise technology, David has built and scaled high‑growth digital practices that bring together collaboration, contact centre and CX platforms to deliver meaningful business outcomes for large organisations.

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