If your project requires a formal install (and most do), the .msi approach makes more sense. Users today expect a program to install itself and later uninstall itself completely. This requires more than what InstallUtil offers. That said, if you will be installing the program on the systems in your office, InstallUtil is an option worth considering for its simplicity.
On my project, we require a formal installer and use InstallShield. However, we leverage the InstallUtil program from InstallShield to actually install the service portion of the product. And we do this by having the Windows service install itself via the command line by leveraging the same InstallUtil internals directly within the service. The InstallShield program kicks off a .bat file that simply executes the Windows service from the command line with a -install argument (e.g., MyService.exe -install). For an example of how to do this, please see the step-by-step instructions here.