7 Smart SMS Strategies to Drive Retention and ROI in 2026

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SMS still works in 2026, but not for the same reasons it used to. Higher costs, lower tolerance, and smarter customers mean the brands winning with SMS are sending fewer messages, not more.

Today’s breakdown covers seven smart ways to use SMS as a high-signal retention channel without burning budget or goodwill.

Also inside:

✔️ Still running your email on a platform that can’t keep up?
✔️ Retention redefined: Email + SMS that actually works in 2026
✔️ Quick clips: This week's top eCom news stories

Let’s dive in.

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7 Smart SMS Strategies to Drive Retention and ROI in 2026

SMS is still one of the most effective channels in ecommerce; but in 2026, effectiveness looks different than it did a few years ago.

Yes, texts still get opened. Yes, they still drive clicks. But inbox tolerance is lower, costs are higher, and customers are far more selective about which brands they want texting them.

That means SMS success in 2026 isn’t about sending more messages. It’s about sending fewer, smarter ones with clear intent, tight targeting, and real measurement behind them.

Here’s how to make SMS work harder without letting costs spiral.

Why SMS still matters in 2026

SMS is arguably the most direct way to reach customers. Messages get seen quickly, engagement happens fast, and when done right, texts influence purchasing behavior in a way few channels can match.

But here’s the thing: Customers don’t want constant texts. They want useful texts.

The brands winning with SMS are the ones treating it like a high-signal channel, not a volume play.

1. Choose an SMS platform built for smarter sending, not cheaper sends

In 2026, platform choice matters more than ever. A lower cost per message means nothing if your targeting is sloppy or your sends aren’t coordinated with email.

Look for platforms that prioritize:

  • Advanced list controls so you can suppress unengaged users automatically

  • Behavioral segmentation based on purchases, browsing, and engagement

  • Send-time intelligence instead of fixed schedules

  • Clear email + SMS orchestration from one place

  • Incrementality and attribution support, not vanity metrics

The goal isn’t to send texts cheaply. It’s to send fewer texts that actually drive lift.

2. Segment aggressively to control costs and increase impact

Mass texting in 2026 is a fast way to burn budget and goodwill.

The strongest SMS programs segment by intent, not just demographics.

High-performing segments include:

  • Recent purchasers

  • Product viewers with no purchase

  • Loyalty or VIP members

  • Lapsed buyers showing renewed site activity

  • High-AOV or repeat customers

Better segmentation means:

  • Fewer texts sent

  • Lower costs

  • Higher engagement per message

SMS should feel targeted enough that recipients understand why they got it.

3. Keep texts short, intentional, and action-focused

Character limits still matter, and so does attention span.

In 2026, the best-performing texts:

  • Get to the point fast

  • Focus on one clear action

  • Spark interest instead of explaining everything

  • Link out for details instead of cramming copy

A good rule of thumb: If the message doesn’t clearly justify interrupting someone’s day, it doesn’t get sent.

Also be mindful of emojis and special characters; not just for cost reasons, but because overuse now signals “marketing message” instantly.

4. Use automation for timing, not just scale

Automation is no longer about “set it and forget it.” It’s about context.

The most effective SMS automations in 2026 are:

  • Cart and browse abandonment texts sent while intent is still high

  • Post-purchase messages that guide usage or set expectations

  • Back-in-stock alerts for products someone actually viewed

  • Replenishment reminders tied to realistic consumption timing

Automation works best when it feels reactive to customer behavior, not scheduled for convenience.

5. Personalize based on behavior, not just names

First-name personalization is table stakes. Real personalization in 2026 is about relevance.

Strong personalization pulls from:

  • Purchase history

  • Category interest

  • Browsing behavior

  • Loyalty status

  • Engagement patterns across email and SMS

Examples that still work:

  • Referencing a product they actually viewed

  • Acknowledging loyalty or tenure

  • Sending access-based perks instead of blanket discounts

If a text could apply to everyone, it probably shouldn’t be sent.

6. Measure incrementality, not just clicks

This is where SMS programs mature or stall.

Clicks don’t tell you if SMS is driving new revenue or just intercepting behavior that would’ve happened anyway.

Incrementality testing helps answer the real question: “What revenue did SMS actually create?”

Run controlled tests by:

  • Holding out a portion of your audience

  • Sending campaigns to one group but not the other

  • Comparing purchase behavior, AOV, and frequency

This allows you to:

  • Allocate budget with confidence

  • Cut low-impact sends

  • Double down on messages that drive true lift

In 2026, the best SMS programs are the ones that can prove their value, not just report engagement.

7. Treat opt-outs and replies as signals, not failures

In 2026, the smartest SMS programs pay close attention to what doesn’t happen, not just what does.

Unsubscribes, muted replies, and ignored messages are feedback. They tell you when frequency is too high, messaging is off, or the audience isn’t right for that send.

How to use those signals better:

  • Suppress fast opt-outs immediately to protect list health

  • Segment by response behavior, not just clicks or purchases

  • Adjust cadence for low-engagement subscribers instead of forcing more sends

  • Review replies regularly to spot patterns in objections or confusion

Some brands even treat “reply behavior” as a qualification layer, sending future SMS only to customers who’ve previously interacted.

Why this matters: SMS is a permission-based channel. The brands that last are the ones that respect that permission and adapt when customers signal they want less, not more.

SMS works best when you treat it like a privilege

SMS is powerful because it’s personal. That also means it’s easy to misuse.

When in doubt, remember:

  • Send fewer texts

  • Target more precisely

  • Personalize with intent

  • Measure what actually matters

The most expensive text isn’t the one you pay for.
It’s the one your customer ignores.

Send messages people are glad they received, and SMS will continue to be one of your highest-ROI channels.

Retention redefined: Email + SMS that actually works in 2026

Paid media is unpredictable. CAC keeps climbing. And sending more emails isn’t fixing retention.

This free guide breaks down a modern retention framework built for 2026: covering lifecycle progression, smarter segmentation, and how email + SMS should actually work together.

Packed with 8 practical systems and real examples you can apply to your brand immediately >> Access Free

Quick Clips:

  • Holiday shoppers leaned into eComm and electronics: U.S. holiday retail spending rose 4.2% YoY, with online sales up 7.8%. Electronics jumped 5.8% thanks to interest in AI-powered tech, and half of shoppers said they used AI to help find gifts, according to Visa.

  • Barebells drops high-protein milk drinks: The latest launch from Barebells packs 24g of protein and no added sugar into three flavors: Choco, Berry, and Vanilla. Available now at Walmart, TikTok Shop, and DTC.

  • FoodBev’s 2025 greatest hits: From Oatly’s protein rollout to Odd Burger’s expansion and Sprite’s label-free bottles, here are the top 15 food + beverage headlines of the year [FoodBev].

Annnnd that’s a wrap for this edition! 

Thanks for hanging with Chase and me. Always a pleasure to have you here.

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🤘 Jimmy Kim & Chase Dimond

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