Texts that send themselves — and arrive.

A text is the fastest way to reach a customer, and the easiest thing to forget. We set up a sending platform that holds your messages, sends them at the right moment, picks a route that actually delivers, and tells you what landed — so nobody on your team is pressing send at 9 p.m.

What changes.

[ BEFORE → AFTER ]
Before: Someone types each reminder text by handAfter: Texts go out at 09:00, every day
Before: Nobody knows which texts actually arrivedAfter: A morning report shows exactly what landed
Before: Stop requests sit in a notebook somewhereAfter: One STOP reply and the list updates itself

What we set up and run.

[ THE WORK ]
  • Routes that deliver

    Every text takes the path most likely to reach that particular phone, so fewer messages quietly disappear on the way.

  • Scheduled sending

    You decide when a message should go; it goes then — weekends and holidays included — with no one at a keyboard.

  • Delivery reports

    Each morning you can see what was sent, what arrived, and what bounced, in plain numbers instead of a guess.

  • Opt-out handling

    When someone replies STOP, they are off the list before the next send — automatically, and politely.

  • Message testing

    We try two sender names or wordings side by side, see which one lands better, and keep that one.

How it starts.

[ SMALL ]

Before any platform, we look at how your texts work today — who sends them, when, and what gets missed. Then we build the one piece that gives you hours back first. Often that's scheduled reminders; sometimes it's simply knowing what arrived. From there it grows one quiet piece at a time, until it runs without you.

See the five-step journey →

Common questions.

[ FAQ ]
How does automated SMS sending work for a small business?

You write the message once and decide who gets it and when. From then on, the platform sends it at that moment, checks that it arrived, and shows you the result. Your team only steps in when a reply needs a human.

Will my business texts get blocked or marked as spam?

Some texts do get blocked — that's exactly why routing and a clean opt-out list matter. We pick routes that carriers trust, remove anyone who asked to stop, and watch the delivery reports every day. If something dips, we see it and adjust before it becomes a pattern.

What happens when a customer replies to an automated text?

Stop requests are handled instantly and automatically — that part needs no human. Everything else lands in front of a person on your team, because a real question deserves a real answer. The platform sorts; people decide.

Next step

The first move is a conversation.

Tell us where your company stands and what eats your week. We'll tell you, plainly, what we would fix first — and what we'd leave alone for now.

or write to [email protected]