Jun 21, 2017
Ahmad
Digital Marketing
2 Minutes Read
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The marketing / UX overlap
 
The overlap between marketing and UX is a hotly debated subject! As recognition for the importance of the users’ experience has steadily grown and gained momentum over the last decade, so too has the need to differentiate your offering and get creative with marketing efforts when most channels are increasingly saturated.
 
It’s quite common for the crossover to be the source of a rift between departments or staff within a business where there may not be a clear differentiation or assignment of tasks. This results in people stepping on each others toes or even worse, the opposite – where no one tackles what needs to be done for fear of overstepping their bounds and ruffling someone else’s feathers.
 
Then there’s the issue in cases of a disagreement of who actually gets the final say?! If the marketing department want to implement some form of pop up to capture prospect data but the people over in UX say that’s a no go from their perspective… what happens then?
 
The marketing / UX conflict
 
There’ll always be those that say that UX and marketing serve completely different purposes, are totally separate entities and represent stand alone disciplines. Marketing’s purpose is to sell and UX is about how to serve the user and meet their needs… So let’s delve a little deeper into that because admittedly, at first glance, that view makes them sound pretty rigidly incompatible!
 
Selling
 
There’s a well worn quote you may have come across before: “Marketing is a question of persuading, seducing and attempting to manipulate people into buying products and services.” – Wally Olins who was an expert in the field of branding and corporate identity. If this is true, (and let’s face it, it’s how a lot of people see it!) you could say that marketing is about triggering people into taking action.
 
It’s about getting people to buy your share product or subscribe to your mailing list etc and not at all about creating a better more streamlined and pleasurable experiences.
 
Marketing in this context serves the needs of a company in generating more business, revenue or hype – and this undeniably serves a very important purpose.
 
Serving
 
So why is UX important? UX is about creating seamless, pleasing and memorable experiences for the user. How a user interacts with a product or service is crucial, craft that wrong and even if the product, service or marketing is great, poor experience when encountering it will put people off big time.
 
Users want and (quite rightfully!) have come to expect that experiences should benefit them, not overload or confuse them, but instead ease them into something that returns them value.