Omnichannel is an integrated customer communication strategy where all contact channels work seamlessly together within one central system. Customers can move effortlessly from phone to live chat, email or social media without losing information or having to repeat their story. This is made possible by central customer data and advanced technical integration that connects all communication channels into one consistent, personalized customer experience.
What is omnichannel communication and how does an omnichannel strategy work?
Omnichannel communication means that all customer communication channels are fully integrated and function as one cohesive system. Instead of separate channels operating independently, telephony, email, live chat, social media and other customer touch points work together through one central CRM system. This ensures that complete customer information, call history and context are always available in real time to all employees, regardless of which communication channel is being used.
The main difference with multichannel is the degree of integration. With multichannel, although you have multiple channels available, they operate independently of each other. A customer who calls first and then sends an email often has to explain the problem all over again. With omnichannel, on the other hand, the employee answering the email has direct access to the earlier phone call.
Concrete examples make this clear. Suppose a customer starts a chat on your Web site but has to leave before the problem is resolved. Later, this customer calls back. With an omnichannel approach, the operator immediately sees the chat history and can continue the conversation where it left off. Or consider a customer who asks a question via social media, to which your team responds with a link to a knowledge base article. If the same customer calls later, your agent knows exactly what information has already been shared.
The technical integration that makes this possible consists of several components. A central database stores all customer interactions. A unified communication platform connects all channels. AI technology helps recognize customer intent and automatically routes them to the right employee. And an integrated agent desktop gives employees access to all necessary information in one place.
Why is omnichannel customer communication essential in 2026?
Customers today expect you to know and understand them no matter how they contact you. They don’t want to tell their story over and over again or wait while different departments exchange information. This expectation makes omnichannel no longer a luxury but a necessity for companies that want to stay relevant.
Customer behavior has fundamentally changed in the digital age. They switch effortlessly between channels during their customer journey. Maybe they start by researching on your website, then ask a question via chat, think about it for a day, and then call to make a purchase. Without omnichannel integration, each interaction feels like a fresh start, which is frustrating for the customer and inefficient for your organization.
The impact on customer satisfaction and loyalty is significant. Customers who receive a consistent experience across all channels are more satisfied and stay customers longer. They appreciate when your organization respects their time by remembering and using previously shared information. This translates directly into higher retention and more recommendations.
The competitive advantage of omnichannel lies in better accessibility and responsiveness. You are available when and where your customers want it, on their terms. This means not only offering more channels, but delivering the same quality and knowledge on each channel. Companies that do this well clearly differentiate themselves from competitors who still work in silos.
Omnichannel vs multichannel vs cross-channel: what are the differences?
The three communication strategies differ fundamentally in their approach to channel integration. Multichannel simply means that you offer multiple channels – phone, email, chat, social media – but they function as parallel, separate systems. Each department manages its own channel with its own systems and processes.
With multichannel, a customer can reach you through different avenues, but the experience is fragmented. The sales team on the phone doesn’t know what was discussed via email. The social media manager doesn’t have access to chat history. This leads to duplication, miscommunication and frustrated customers who have to explain over and over again.
Cross-channel goes a step further by allowing limited integration between some channels. Perhaps email and chat are linked, or phone operators can see order history but not social media interactions. It is an intermediate form where some channels share information but no fully integrated system exists.
Omnichannel, on the other hand, creates a fully integrated approach where all channels are connected through central customer data. Every interaction is captured in one system, accessible to all agents. The flow of information is bidirectional – not only can agents see all history, the system can proactively identify the best channels for specific customers.
Practical examples illustrate the difference. With multichannel, a customer who first chats and then calls has to explain everything all over again. In cross-channel, the telephone operator may have the chat history, but not the emails. With omnichannel, the agent immediately has the complete picture: chat conversations, emails, previous phone calls, order history and even sentiment analysis of social media interactions.
What channels are part of an omnichannel strategy?
A complete omnichannel strategy includes traditional and modern digital channels working together seamlessly. The exact mix depends on your target audience and industry, but channel integration is more important than the number of channels you offer. Better to have three channels perfectly integrated than 10 separate touch points.
Traditional channels remain relevant in the omnichannel mix. Telephone is still important for complex questions or emotional situations. Email remains the preferred channel for formal communication and documentation. Physical locations, where relevant, should be connected to digital channels so that store visits and online interactions reinforce each other.
Modern digital communication channels have become essential for effective customer service in 2026. Web chat provides instant support during browsing and significantly increases conversion rates. Social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn act not only as marketing tools but also as crucial customer service touchpoints for real-time problem resolution. Messaging apps such as WhatsApp Business and SMS combine the convenience of asynchronous communication with the immediacy of live chat support. Video support is becoming increasingly important for complex technical support sessions or face-to-face consultations where visual communication is essential.
Emerging channels also require attention in your strategy. Voice assistants such as Alexa or Google Assistant are increasingly being used for simple questions. IoT devices can proactively signal support questions. Augmented reality offers new opportunities for visual support. These channels may not yet be relevant to every organization, but it is important to be prepared.
Choosing specific channels should be based on where your customers are and what they expect. B2B companies may focus more on email and phone, while B2C retailers prioritize web chat and social media. Analyze your target audience’s behavior, test new channels on a small scale, and build on what works. Remember, each added channel should be fully integrated into your omnichannel platform.
How do you implement omnichannel communication in your organization?
Successful omnichannel implementation starts with a thorough analysis of your current situation. Map out what channels you are currently using, how they are performing, and where the pain points are. Identify data silos, communication gaps, and processes that frustrate customer experience. This baseline is necessary to set realistic goals and measure progress.
Technology assessment is the next step. You need a platform that can integrate all channels, is scalable, and connects to your existing systems. Look for unified communications platforms that combine telephony, digital channels and CRM integration. Pay attention to API capabilities for linkages with your current software. Consider cloud solutions for flexibility and scalability.
Organizational adjustments are at least as important as technology. Train your team not only in new tools but also in omnichannel thinking. Break down silos between departments. Create processes that actively share customer information. Set KPIs that reward collaboration rather than channel-specific metrics. Involve employees early in the process for greater support.
A phased rollout prevents overwhelm and makes adjustments possible. Start with a pilot project where you integrate two key channels. Measure results, gather feedback, and optimize. Then expand to more channels. This approach gives your team time to get used to it and lets you learn from initial experiences before scaling up.
Measure success with the right metrics. Look beyond channel-specific metrics to holistic customer experience indicators. Customer effort score, first contact resolution across all channels, and customer lifetime value are better metrics than just call handling time. Continuous improvement is needed – customer behavior evolves and new channels emerge.
We at Pegamento have years of experience guiding organizations in their omnichannel transformation. Our omnichannel business telephony solutions are specifically designed for Dutch companies stuck with legacy systems. We combine all communication channels in one integrated platform, with our AI technology providing intelligent routing and proactive customer service. With our approach of standard building blocks, we create customized solutions without the traditional customization costs.
For the meeset solutions, we use Sprinklr in combination with our own VoIP telephony system, Phone System.
Some examples of Omnichannel projects can be found here:
– Reference Chamber of Commerce
– Reference Kindergarden
– Reference Feenstra Installation Technology
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does implementing an omnichannel strategy cost and what is the payback period?
The cost varies greatly depending on your organization size and chosen platform, but count on €20,000-€100,000 for a medium-sized company. Payback is typically between 12-18 months due to higher customer retention, more efficient processes and fewer repeat contacts. Cloud-based solutions with monthly subscriptions make the investment more accessible without large upfront costs.
How do I convince my management of the need for omnichannel if our current channels are working 'well enough'?
Focus on measurable business impact: demonstrate how much time agents waste looking up information (20% on average), calculate the cost of customer turnover due to bad experiences, and benchmark against competitors who do use omnichannel. Ask for a pilot for one customer segment to demonstrate concrete results without major risks.
What are the biggest pitfalls in omnichannel implementation and how do I avoid them?
The three biggest pitfalls are: wanting to go too fast (all channels at once), underestimating organizational resistance, and focusing on technology without process optimization. Avoid these by working in phases, prioritizing change management, and streamlining processes first before automating. Start small with quick wins to build momentum.
How do I get my team to adopt the omnichannel way of working instead of falling back on old habits?
Make omnichannel working easier than the old way through intuitive tools and clear processes. Celebrate successes publicly, share positive customer feedback, and link bonuses to omnichannel KPIs such as cross-channel first contact resolution. Create 'omnichannel champions' on every team who can help and enthuse colleagues.
What data privacy and security considerations should I take into account when centralizing customer data?
GDPR compliance is critical: ensure explicit consent for data integration, implement data minimization, and regulate the right to oblivion across all channels. Choose platforms with end-to-end encryption, role-based access control, and audit trails. Make clear agreements about data retention and train employees in secure handling of centralized customer information.
How do I measure whether my omnichannel strategy is actually adding value for customers?
Implement cross-channel customer journey analytics to see how customers move between channels and where frictions arise. Measure Customer Effort Score after multi-channel interactions, track channel switching patterns, and monitor whether customers need to repeat information less often. Ask specifically in customer surveys about experiences with channel transitions and consistency.


