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Stop Saying “Contact Center or CX Leader” Like They’re the Same Thing

By Justin Robbins posted 14 days ago

  

This article originally appeared at Metric Sherpa: https://metricsherpa.com/stop-saying-contact-center-or-cx-leader-like-theyre-the-same-thing/

I heard it again the other day: “Contact center or CX leader.” As if those two roles are interchangeable. As if managing a contact center is the same thing as owning the entire customer experience.

It’s not.

And the data makes it clear just how damaging this confusion is. In a recent research study I conducted, I interviewed and surveyed 350+ business leaders responsible for “customer experience.” Across industries, one theme kept emerging: 88% lacked the authority, influence, and cross-functional alignment needed to actually improve CX across the organization.

Here’s the conclusion I arrived at—the vast majority of people with “CX” in their title are set up to fail. Not because they aren’t capable, but because their organizations don’t understand what CX leadership actually requires. Many of these leaders are siloed in customer service or marketing, without real control over the experiences they’re supposed to be shaping.

This is what happens when businesses mistake service management for experience leadership. It leads to misaligned strategies, leaders being set up for frustration, and CX efforts that never move beyond reactive problem-solving.

A Contact Center Leader's Job: Managing Service at Scale

A contact center leader is responsible for delivering efficient, high-quality service interactions. Their world revolves around:

  • Staffing, forecasting, and scheduling to meet service demand.
  • Operational performance metrics like handle time, first-contact resolution, and SLAs.
  • Agent development and coaching to maintain strong customer interactions.
  • Technology enablement (AI, automation, omnichannel) to optimize service.

They are masters of operational excellence—making sure customers get the support they need, when they need it. But their scope begins and ends with service interactions. They don’t own why customers are calling, what the company is promising customers, or how those promises are fulfilled across marketing, sales, and product.

A CX Leader’s Job: Orchestrating the End-to-End Experience

CX leaders don’t just react to customer issues. Their focus is on shaping how customers engage with the business at every touchpoint, ensuring the entire experience aligns with the company’s goals and brand promise.

That means they:

  • Identify experience letdowns – conducting root cause analysis to determine why friction happens.
  • Resolve conflicting objectives – breaking down silos between sales, marketing, product, and support.
  • Orchestrate customer interactions – ensuring that every touchpoint is intentional and aligned with the company’s brand promise.
  • Quantify the impact of CX decisions – using data to measure customer sentiment, behavioral shifts, and business outcomes.
  • Evolve the strategy continuously – adapting to new insights, market trends, and customer expectations.

Rather than being confined to a single function, CX leaders influence the entire organization. They connect strategy to execution and ensure that every part of the business contributes to a stronger, more consistent customer experience.

Here’s Why Confusing the Two Is Dangerous

  1. It Overloads Contact Center Leaders with Impossible Expectations
    When companies assume contact center leaders are also “CX leaders,” they expect them to influence things outside their control. A contact center leader can’t fix a broken product, redesign a confusing website, or change pricing policies. Yet, they’re often blamed for customer frustration caused by issues elsewhere in the organization.
  2. It Creates a Reactive, Service-Heavy Model
    If a business equates CX with the contact center, it prioritizes solving customer problems instead of preventing them. Instead of fixing broken experiences, they’ll just train agents to handle complaints better. This approach doesn’t improve CX—it only makes recovery smoother.

It Leaves CX Leaders Out of the Conversations That Matter
The flip side? When CX leaders are excluded from service operations, they miss out on critical insights from frontline interactions. A great CX strategy must be informed by the contact center—but ownership of CX cannot be confined to a single department.

I’ve Lived This Confusion Firsthand

At one point in my career, my title changed to include “Customer Experience”—but my job didn’t. I was still running the contact center, still responsible for service operations, still measured on efficiency and performance.

Yet suddenly, people inside and outside the company assumed I could influence things I couldn’t. Some colleagues believed I had the power to change the customer journey across the business. Others left me out of critical CX conversations entirely because they thought I was just running the contact center.

It was frustrating. It was limiting. And it made me realize how many companies are getting CX leadership wrong.

So when I interviewed and surveyed those CX professionals this past fall, and I kept hearing the same struggles, I knew this wasn’t an isolated issue. Too many businesses give leaders a CX title without giving them the scope to succeed.

The Better Approach: Two Distinct, but Connected, Roles

Instead of treating these roles as interchangeable, businesses need to do two things:

  1. Define Contact Center Leadership Clearly
    • Ensure these leaders have the resources, technology, and authority to run an outstanding service operation.
    • Recognize that they are a key voice in CX but not the owner of CX strategy.
  2. Give CX Leaders the Scope and Authority They Need
    • Make CX leadership a cross-functional role that aligns marketing, product, sales, and support.Ensure they are measured on the entire customer journey, not just service interactions.

What Am I Really Saying? Get This Right, or Stay Stuck

Organizations that fail to separate CX leadership from contact center management will continue to struggle. They will keep burdening service leaders with responsibilities they can’t own, while CX leaders remain sidelined in the decisions that define the customer journey.

Contact centers play an essential role in customer experience, but they cannot be the entire strategy. Businesses that truly prioritize CX understand that it requires alignment across every function, from product and marketing to service and support.

So, the next time someone says “Contact center or CX leader,” correct them.

They’re not the same. And treating them like they are is holding your business back.


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