What To Look For When Choosing a Messaging Channel?
Anandhi Moorthy
Senior Content Marketer
June 11, 2025
In our previous post, we analyzed RCS, SMS, and WhatsApp to identify which channel would fit your marketing strategy like Cinderella’s glass slipper.
So, you know your options, but now the big question is what factors to consider when choosing a messaging channel.
Of course, we’re not gonna leave you in the dark. Let’s break it down
The Reality of D2C Messaging
When was the last time you eagerly waited for messages from a brand?
Your customers aren't either. They're juggling work calls, scrolling through social media, and managing their daily routine. Your message needs to reach them where they already are, not where you think they should be.
And the competition for attention is fiercer than ever, inboxes are overflowing, privacy regulations (like GDPR and TCPA) limit what you can send and when, and customers expect only relevant, personalized communication.
A generic message on the wrong channel will be ignored, or worse, prompt an unsubscribe.
The brands crushing it in the D2C space understand this. That’s why they strategically choose channels that match their customers' habits, preferences, and locations. Here are some basics you need to get right first.
Know Which Communication Channel is Popular Where
When choosing the right mix of communication channels, one key factor that often gets overlooked is where your customers are. Messaging habits vary wildly by region; picking the right channel for the right geography can determine the success or failure of your campaign.
United States & Canada
Go-to Channel: SMS & RCS
Thanks to unlimited texting plans, consumers in North America still rely heavily on native messaging apps. That’s why SMS works well here, especially for time-sensitive updates.
RCS is steadily gaining traction in the US with rich, interactive features like buttons, images, and real-time updates.
In Canada, RCS adoption is still gaining traction, so SMS might be your best bet.
A multi-channel strategy would ensure your marketing communication remains uninterrupted, despite platform updates.
Latin America
Go-to Channel: WhatsApp
WhatsApp is deeply integrated into everyday communication across Latin America.
In countries like Brazil and Mexico, over 90% of the population actively uses the platform, not only for chatting but also for shopping, payments, and customer service.
Its widespread usage makes WhatsApp an ideal channel for both transactional and promotional messaging.
Europe
Go to Channel: SMS, RCS, and WhatsApp
Europe has a diverse messaging landscape:
Northern European countries like Sweden tend to favor SMS and RCS, while Southern Europe prefers WhatsApp.
The United Kingdom uses a combination of both SMS/RCS and WhatsApp, depending on audience segments.
Eastern Europe, especially Russia, sees strong usage of Viber and Telegram.
Middle East
Go to Channel: WhatsApp
WhatsApp is a dominant communication platform across the Middle East. It is widely used for personal and professional communication. This makes it highly effective for delivering marketing messages, support notifications, and transactional updates.
Regions like the UAE and Saudi Arabia see particularly high WhatsApp engagement.
Asia Pacific
Go to Channel: Depends on the country
The Asia Pacific region is also fragmented in terms of messaging platform usage.
In India and Singapore, WhatsApp is the most commonly used platform.
Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand prefer LINE
In South Korea, KakaoTalk is the market leader.
Australia and New Zealand
SMS continues to be widely used, as RCS is not yet fully supported by carriers in these markets.
To ensure effective communication in APAC, it’s essential to tailor your strategy based on country-specific trends and channel adoption.
Africa
Go to Channel: WhatsApp & SMS
WhatsApp is widely used in most African countries, while SMS also remains a reliable messaging medium.
Use Different Channels for Different Stages of the Customer Journey
Your customers’ needs and expectations change at every stage of their journey. The smartest D2C brands match the channel to the moment, not the other way around.
Think about it: the urgency of a shipping notification isn’t the same as a heartfelt thank-you message. A flash sale countdown is way more thrilling than a product care tutorial.
Implement different channels at different stages of the customer journey to create a stronger relationship with your customers.
Acquisition
SMS - Welcome offers and promotional notifications
WhatsApp - Pre-purchase FAQs and customer inquiries
RCS - Product catalogs with rich media content
Push Notifications - App-based promotional alerts and personalized product recommendations
Email - Newsletter signups, welcome series, and detailed product information
Purchase
SMS - Cart abandonment reminders and payment confirmations
WhatsApp - Guided purchase experience and real-time assistance
RCS - Complementary product suggestions and upselling opportunities
Email - Loyalty program updates, seasonal collections, and comprehensive product catalogs
Understand Customer Behavior Data
Micro-Moments Analysis: Look for patterns in immediate post-message behavior. If customers consistently visit your website within 10 minutes of receiving WhatsApp messages but take hours after SMS, that's behavioral intelligence you can act on.
Purchase Journey Mapping: Track which channels customers used in the 30 days before their last purchase. You might discover that your highest-value customers consistently engage with email content even if they ultimately purchase through SMS links.
Lifecycle Behavior Changes: New customers might prefer detailed email onboarding, but loyal customers want quick SMS updates. Behavioral preferences often evolve with the relationship.
How to Combine All the Channels Effectively?
Most successful D2C brands use a multichannel approach to create a seamless customer journey. Wondering how to do it? Here’s a quick breakdown.
The Channel Coordination Framework
Master Your Primary Channel First: Choose one channel based on your customer demographics and perfect it. Get your messaging tone, frequency, and automation right before adding complexity.
Add Complementary Channels: Once you're seeing consistent results from your primary channel, add one that serves a different purpose. If SMS is your primary for urgency, email might be your secondary for detailed content.
Integrate, Don't Duplicate: Your channels should feel like one cohesive experience, not five separate campaigns. Use consistent branding, tone, and customer data across all touchpoints.
Timing is Everything: Don't bombard customers with simultaneous notifications across all channels. Space them strategically based on urgency and importance.
Sequential Messaging: Use channels in a logical order. For example, send a cart abandonment SMS first (immediate attention), follow up with an email (detailed product info), and finish with a push notification if they have your app installed.
Complementary Content: Don't send identical messages across all channels. Use SMS for urgency ("Flash sale ends in 2 hours!"), email for details (full product catalog with images), and WhatsApp for personal touches (customer service follow-up).
Channel Handoffs: When a customer engages on one channel, be ready to continue the conversation seamlessly on another. If they click a link in your SMS, make sure your website experience acknowledges their journey.
Automate & Optimize Cross-Channel Engagement
Customer Journey Triggers: Set up automated workflows that respond to customer behavior, not arbitrary timelines. When someone abandons their cart, trigger your SMS immediately, email after 2 hours, and push notification after 24 hours. Depending on how 'involved' the product or service is, be sure to change accordingly, for instance, abandoned carts reminders for slippers can be within an hour, but much longer for a $2000 TV.
Cross-Channel Data: Use data from one channel to improve others. If someone frequently opens your emails but never responds to SMS, adjust your strategy accordingly. A unified customer data platform can work wonders for your brand.
The Biggest Mistakes D2C Brands Make
Platform Dependency
Putting all your eggs in one basket is dangerous. Remember WhatsApp's recent US restriction? Brands that relied solely on WhatsApp for US customers suddenly found themselves scrambling for alternatives.
Ignoring Cultural Nuances
Sending the same message style across all regions is not going to give you results. What works in Brazil might not in Japan. So, understand your customer’s language, culture, and preferences to personalize your campaigns.
Channel Cannibalization
Sending the same promotional message via SMS, WhatsApp, and RCS to the same customer could lead to fatigue, annoyance, or worse, opt-outs.
The Bottom Line
The messaging landscape changes fast. Platforms update policies, new channels emerge, and customer preferences evolve.
An effective multichannel strategy is all about understanding your customers and meeting them where they are, with the right message, at the right time, through the right channel.
Start with the fundamentals we've outlined, but remember, your perfect channel mix will be as unique as your brand. The key is to start somewhere, measure everything, and iterate based on real customer behavior, not assumptions.
Your customers are already having conversations. Make sure your brand is part of them. An e-commerce marketing automation platform like ZEPIC can make your life easier by helping you create a cohesive experience across the board.
Desperate times call for desperate Google/Chat GPT searches, right? "Best Shopify apps for sales." "How to increase online sales fast." "AI tools for ecommerce growth."
Been there. Done that. Installed way too many apps. But here's what nobody tells you while you're doom-scrolling through Shopify app reviews at 2 AM—that magical online sales-boosting app you're searching for? It doesn't exist. Because if it did, Jeff Bezos would've bought (or built!) it yesterday, and we (fellow eCommerce store owners) would all be retired in Bali by now. Growing a Shopify store and increasing online sales isn’t easy—we get it. While everyone’s out chasing the next “revolutionary” tool/trend (looking at you, DeepSeek), the real revenue drivers are probably hiding in plain sight—right there inside your customer data. After working with Shopify stores like yours (shoutout to Cybele, who recovered almost 25% of their abandoned carts with WhatsApp automation), we’ve cracked the code on what actually moves the needle. Ready to stop app-hopping and start actually growing your sales by using what you already have? Here are four fixes that will get you there!
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.
Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can: Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!) Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa) Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences Track and optimize everything from one dashboard
Fix #2: Reactivate past customers today
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.
Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can: Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!) Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa) Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences Track and optimize everything from one dashboard
Offering light at the end of the tunnel is Google’s Privacy Sandbox which seeks to ‘create a thriving web ecosystem that is respectful of users and private by default’. Like the name suggests, your Chrome browser will take the role of a ‘privacy sandbox’ that holds all your data (visits, interests, actions etc) disclosing these to other websites and platforms only with your explicit permission. If not yet, we recommend testing your websites, audience relevance and advertising attribution with Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox.
Top 3 impacts of the third-party cookie phase-out
Who’s impacted
How
What next
Digital advertising and acquisition teams
Lack of cookie data results in drastic fall in website traffic and conversion rate
Review all cookie-based audience acquisition. Sign up for Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox
Digital Customer Experience
Customers are not served relevant, personalised experiences: on the web, over social channels and communication media
Multiply efforts to collect first-party customer data. Implement a Customer Data Platform
Security, Privacy and Compliance teams
Increased scrutiny from regulators and questions from customers about data storage and usage
Review current cookie and communication consent management, ensure to align with latest privacy regulations