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How ESM Shatters Corporate Silos: 5 Real-World Examples of Cross-Departmental Teamwork

28 November 2025

updated at: 28 November 2025

Disconnected corporate systems and closed-off departments slow down response times for internal clients and block efficient business operations. Yet, research shows that 67.6% of organizations worldwide are already using Enterprise Service Management (ESM) strategies. Their goal? To bring processes from different departments together into one smooth value stream and finally get rid of those departmental walls.

Using five scenarios of departmental interaction — from managing equipment to legal approvals — we'll look at how implementing a single ESM platform transforms workflows, eliminates task duplication, and unites employees from different teams to achieve common company goals.

Why Do Departments Work in "Isolation"?

In large organizations, changes in how employees think and act are often the result of outdated corporate management styles. "Silos" start to form — closed-off groups within the company — creating a "silo mentality." You end up with scattered, isolated pockets: individual employees, teams, departments, and even entire divisions lock themselves inside their own processes. They focus on hitting their own local targets and lose sight of the organization's bigger goals.

These closed-off departments use their own isolated systems: accounting has its software, HR has its HRM, and facilities has its own tracking tools.

Here’s what happens when a silo mentality takes over:

  • Operational tasks get solved much slower;
  • Work and effort get duplicated;
  • Approval processes drag on forever;
  • Data gets lost between different systems;
  • The quality of work drops because no one can see the full picture.

«When departments work "on their own," they use separate tools that don't connect. If employees need to solve an issue that touches multiple departments, requests get passed around via email, Excel spreadsheets, or chat apps. In this chaotic flow, tickets often vanish or get processed at random speeds. It gets even messier with cross-functional processes. For example, hiring a new employee requires coordination between HR, IT, facilities, and security. Without a unified system, this process is like a game of "telephone" — information gets distorted, lost, or delayed at every handoff»

vishnyakov_andrey_5bddb8427a
Andrey Vishnyakov

Companies that want to break free from this bunker culture are turning to Enterprise Service Management (ESM). This is a fundamentally different way of organizing work. It creates a shared space for all the company's service processes, where every department can act (often at the same time) as both a consumer and a provider of services. ESM tears down the traditional walls between departments, makes processes transparent, and makes working together much easier.

5 Examples of How ESM Breaks Down Walls Between Departments

ESM doesn't just automate what you're already doing; it changes the whole way departments interact. Divisions stop being isolated islands and become parts of a single service system.

By transforming into service departments — or simply, service providers — teams start doing more than just completing tasks. They start delivering a service that brings real value to the end consumer.

HR + IT: Automating the New Hire Onboarding

The problem

In a corporate world, bringing on a new employee touches several departments at once. HR handles the paperwork and orientation, while IT is responsible for setting up the desk, granting access, and issuing equipment.

Without an ESM system, these processes live in separate worlds:

  • The HR manager hires a candidate and sends an email to IT;
  • That email gets buried under dozens of other requests or filed away for "later";
  • The day before the new hire starts, there's a mad scramble to get ready;
  • On day one, the newcomer has no system access, no proper workspace, or no necessary equipment;
  • Instead of diving into work, they're stuck waiting for tech support to set up their accounts.

This lack of sync between HR and IT means new employees waste most of their first day dealing with administrative headaches. It leaves a bad first impression of the company and delays the moment they actually start contributing value.

How ESM solves it

ESM transforms onboarding from a scattered mess into a single, coordinated flow:

  • IT, HR, and other support units become "service providers" that fulfill specific requests, like setting up a new employee, issuing equipment, or granting access rights;
  • These providers get their own service catalog;
  • An authorized user (the "consumer," like a hiring manager) creates a request on the portal for onboarding, putting in the start date, role, and needed access rights;
  • The system automatically creates linked tasks for every department involved — IT, facilities, finance, security;
  • Each department sees its specific tasks in one interface with clear deadlines;
  • Managers can track the overall progress of getting everything ready for the employee's arrival;
  • If there are delays, the system automatically escalates the issue.

The process is transparent for everyone: HR sees the status of the workspace setup, and IT gets all the info they need about the new hire upfront.

The IT company Servionica chose the SimpleOne platform to automate recruitment and other service processes.

In their unified system, any authorized employee can create a request to find a specialist and send it for approval in just a couple of clicks. HR staff can fill out candidate profiles and send them for review just as fast. Notifications, along with simple and visual candidate profiles, help reduce the time it takes to get feedback. Even interview scheduling happens in the system. The platform manages the entire internal approval process.

The platform has brought control and transparency to recruitment, benefiting everyone: department heads, HR teams, and security staff.

Facilities + IT: Managing Equipment and Space

The problem

Getting IT and Facilities to work together is traditionally tough, especially when it comes to managing physical assets. They have to coordinate constantly, but they work in different systems with different rules:

  • IT buys the computer equipment (laptops, monitors, phones), but Facilities often handles their physical distribution and tracking;
  • IT uses its own system for tech inventory;
  • Facilities tracks furniture, rooms, and other equipment in separate spreadsheets;
  • When an employee moves, these two systems don't sync up;
  • The result is confusion: equipment is listed in one place but is actually somewhere else.

IT usually uses a CMDB (Configuration Management Database) which contains information about all IT components, their relationships, and attributes. Facilities has its own inventory of material assets in separate systems, which are not integrated with the CMDB.

This disconnect leads to duplicate data and inconsistent records. For example, when equipment moves, it might be assigned to one person in the Facilities system and another in the IT system, creating a nightmare for audits.

How ESM solves It

ESM creates a single ecosystem for managing physical resources:

  • Facilities becomes a service provider, able to send and receive requests from other departments;
  • A common CMDB is implemented, combining data on equipment, furniture, and rooms;
  • A single accounting process covers the whole asset lifecycle, from purchase to disposal;
  • IT and Facilities share an interface for working with assets, adapted to their specific needs (thanks to flexible data models like REM);
  • Regular inventory checks are done simultaneously for all asset types.

Instead of disjointed systems, you get one transparent process with clear distribution of responsibility at every stage.

Budgeting becomes transparent — thanks to a shared accounting system, management gets a clear picture of current equipment expenses and upgrade needs. IT and Facilities can plan purchases together based on real usage data. ESM turns two separate services into one unified mechanism for managing corporate resources.

Legal + Procurement: Streamlining Contract Approvals

The problem

Approving contracts and agreements is one of the most complex processes in a company, especially when Legal and Procurement are involved:

  • Buyers find a supplier and negotiate;
  • Once terms are agreed, the draft goes to Legal;
  • Legal makes edits and sends it back;
  • The supplier disagrees and makes their own changes;
  • The new version goes back to Legal;
  • You end up with a chain of dozens of emails with different file versions;
  • No one knows which version is current or where the approval stands.

This unstructured mess means approvals drag on for weeks or even months. Business units wait, work stops, and the company misses opportunities due to administrative delays.

How ESM solves it

Using the ESM approach, you can automate the contract approval process:

  • Legal and Procurement act as service providers — other departments can contact legal for help with documents and approvals, and procurement for acquiring assets or resources;
  • A single digital process guides the document through every approval stage;
  • All document versions are stored in one place with a history of changes;
  • The system tracks deadlines and reminds people to do their task;
  • Managers can see instantly where a document is stuck and who is causing the delay;
  • All communication happens inside the system, not in email.

ESM formalizes approvals and sets clear deadlines. Lawyers get structured requests with the necessary context, and buyers get a transparent progress tracker.

Crucially, you can set different approval routes based on contract type, its value, or other parameters. Standard, low-risk contracts can be fast-tracked, while major deals get extra scrutiny. ESM also keeps things moving when people are away — if a lawyer is on vacation, the system redirects the task to their backup. Additionally, the system supports splitting approvers into mandatory and optional categories, creating a more flexible approval process.

This approach cuts approval times, reduces errors, lets the company react faster to the market changes and sign contracts with suppliers in optimal timeframes.

Uralsib Bank chose the SimpleOne ESM platform for its "Single Window" corporate portal. The system helped speed up decision-making and approvals, and even reduced labor costs for paperwork by setting up a digital signature workflow based on SimpleOne's processes.

Development + Support

ESM isn't just for admin departments. It can also unite specialized units like Software Development (SDLC) and IT Service Management (ITSM). This is huge for product IT companies where quality depends on development and support working together.

The problem

In many tech companies, the situation looks like this:

  • The development team is focused on creating new functionality and improving the product, working in their own development management system (SDLC) dealing with epics, features, etc.;
  • Support handles user issues in an ITSM system, dealing with incidents and tickets;
  • These two groups work in isolation, using different tools and languages;
  • Feedback from real users often gets lost or passed to developers in a messy, unstructured way;
  • Developers don't see the full user experience picture and build features based on their own vision, not real needs.

This disconnect leads to technical debt, recurring incidents, slow responses, and ultimately, lower product quality.

How ESM solves it

In ESM, the development team becomes a service provider too, alongside the IT service provider (ITSM), HR service provider, and other departments.

When you combine development and support processes:

  • Development acts as a service unit that others contact to fix incidents;
  • Incidents in support are automatically analyzed and turned into tasks for developers;
  • Known problems are documented in a shared database (KEDB) accessible to both teams;
  • Technical debt becomes visible — developers can add tasks to fix the root causes of frequent issues to their backlog;
  • Developers get involved in solving complex incidents, seeing real user problems firsthand;
  • Support can track progress in one interface and keep clients updated.

A unified ESM platform links ITSM and SDLC, creating a loop of continuous improvement. Instead of just tossing tasks over the wall, the two teams collaborate to improve product quality and satisfaction. Management gets a full view of technical debt and how it's being paid down, which enables more balanced product development planning.

An example of how a product becomes a service
An example of how a product becomes a service

Employee Support: A Single Portal Instead of a Dozen Interfaces

The problem

Employees reach out to different departments every day. Without a unified system, this just wastes time. Each department has its own door:

  • For IT access, talk to the chatbot;
  • For vacation, email HR;
  • For office supplies, call Facilities.

Employees often don't know where to turn for a specific question. They waste time finding contacts, send requests to the wrong place, and ask the same questions in chat groups. Problems get solved slower, and support staff waste time redirecting tickets.

The SimpleOne Service Portal
The SimpleOne Service Portal

How ESM solves It

ESM completely changes the employee experience:

  • A single corporate service portal becomes the universal entry point for everything;
  • The employee doesn't need to know which department handles what — the system knows and determines the responsible unit;
  • Requests go through smart routing directly to the right specialists;
  • A knowledge base answers common questions, cutting down on tickets;
  • Employees track all their requests in a single interface.

ESM turns a scattered support structure into a coherent system focused on rapid problem resolution and improving the user experience.

A great example is Auchan Retail. They moved to an ESM platform that became the single entry point for employees contacting different services. First IT, then logistics.

As a result, Auchan employees say requests are resolved faster, and surveys show higher employee satisfaction with internal services.

Summary: Why Companies Are Moving to ESM

Adopting ESM benefits the business at every level. Instead of a mess of disconnected systems, you get a unified digital environment where every department is part of a shared service landscape. The walls come down, and the whole company starts working as one coordinated machine.

SimpleOne: All-in-One Low-Code & GenAI Platform for Enterprise Service Automation 

The main payoff is a huge boost in service speed and quality. Employees spend less time on routine tasks and more on creating value. Managers get full process transparency and the ability to make decisions based on real data. The company optimizes costs by identifying inefficient resource use and becomes more agile in responding to market changes. ESM isn't just a new automation tool; it's a strategic shift that helps businesses reach their goals faster and at lower cost.

To successfully roll out an ESM approach across your entire organization, you need technology that can bring disconnected processes and departments together. That’s exactly what the SimpleOne ESM platform does. At its core is a complete toolkit for managing corporate services — from building unified service portals to keeping a close eye on service quality.

Built on a Low-code platform, it lets you create this unified environment with minimal coding. Its flexible architecture means you can quickly adapt the system to your specific business needs, while ready-made modules for different departments help you get up and running faster.