Why We Should All Be Showing More Love for SMS

Created: Monday, November 6, 2023, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 10:00 am



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By James Williams, Director of Programs, Mobile Ecosystem Forum (MEF)

SMS is in its thirties and is still going strong. It should be even stronger. I keep hearing that SMS is a commodity and when people refer to business SMS (Application-to-Person SMS, A2P) as ‘bulk messaging’ I really hate it. It’s doing a disservice to a mobile digital channel that requires zero introductions, that more than 5 billion people globally are completely comfortable with right now, and for which no internet connectivity or fancy smartphones are required. If you send an SMS right now to a friend or loved one, the chances are they will read its content within a handful of minutes, unless they’re driving, asleep, or in a meeting or a cinema … and even then, their first loo break will see them check their phone. Email just can’t compete with the “open rate” of SMS. This makes SMS very valuable.

Why We Should All Be Showing More Love for SMS
Image: Yay Images

We need to talk more about SMS

I know from experience that the world over there are many organizations using SMS to great effect, but there are many others not taking advantage of this incredible tool. I put this down to the business messaging industry doing a bad job of working together to publicize just how effective SMS is at getting eyes on content, ultimately driving real outcomes, i.e., conversions.

TV adverts for numerous goods and services (including those from mobile operators about mobile data, fancy new handsets, and other things) are easy to come across, but how many ads have you seen that push mobile business messaging, never mind any just focused on SMS. Very few if any is my confident prediction. I just don’t get it. The market is growing fast and will be worth around $78 billion come 2027 (source: Juniper Research) so why not shout about how powerful SMS can be if used properly, and how easy it is for even the smallest of organizations to hook up to it?

There’s a truckload of growth potential globally sitting there for the taking, particularly where small and medium sized businesses are concerned. With some collaboration and concerted efforts from multiple stakeholders, we could be doing a load more.

Money and SMS

The past couple of years have proven to be a real gut punch financially for billions of us around the world. Basic commodities have increased in price faster than in living memory for a plethora of reasons. In the UK, the cost of sugar, milk, pasta, and a host of other staples has skyrocketed. Globally the price of SMS is proving to be moving in a similar direction in many countries, even faster.

It is particularly noticeable where international A2P SMS is concerned, in other words, the SMS (typically larger) brands send to their stakeholders internationally. This trend has become particularly noticeable where two-factor authentication (2FA) use-cases are concerned since WhatsApp Business Messaging (SMS’s greatest single challenger) changed its commercial model on 1 June 2023.

Overnight WhatsApp became a far more attractive commercial proposition than SMS for 2FA use-cases in most countries around the world. This really helped to put the spotlight on the commercial models in play by many mobile network operators (MNOs) where international A2P is concerned.

At a crossroads

It is a free market and MNOs (just like most other organizations) can practically charge what they like, but the A2P SMS industry finds itself at a real crossroads: huge users of SMS for 2FA purposes (think the likes of Google, Meta, Amazon, and Apple) are making concerted efforts to find alternative channels that can deliver the same results. That is one tough ask given that SMS is both the first truly ubiquitous mobile engagement channel (that no internet being required, no smartphone etc. thing again) and – mark my words – it will prove to be the last ubiquitous channel.

SMS should be cherished, nurtured, and allowed to flourish. Left to its own devices it would grow nicely organically but think what extra marketing could achieve. But much of that growth potential is being stopped in its tracks by the challenging commercial models in play. Mobile network operators shouldn’t miss out on a nice little earner, or a revenue opportunity, but stretch things too far and the result might just prove to be sub-optimal with no point of return.


James Williams
    
James Williams is Director of Programs at MEF (Mobile Ecosystem Forum) a global trade body established in 2000 and headquartered in the UK with members across the world. As the voice of the mobile ecosystem, it focuses on cross-industry best practices, anti-fraud and monetization. The Forum provides its members with global and cross-sector platforms for networking, collaboration and advancing industry solutions.

The views and opinions expressed in this blog post or content are those of the authors or the interviewees and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company.


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