TxtCart, an AI-powered SMS marketing platform built exclusively for Shopify, announced accelerated growth in February 2026, according to a company statement reported by Yahoo Finance. The platform, which remains bootstrapped, cited gains among direct-to-consumer merchants using SMS to drive repeat purchases, though it did not disclose revenue figures or customer counts.
The company positions itself as a retention tool for e-commerce operators who need a direct channel when email open rates fall below 15 percent and inbox competition intensifies. TxtCart's pitch: automate conversational SMS sequences that recover abandoned carts and prompt second orders without hiring a customer-service team. The platform integrates natively with Shopify, reading order history and inventory in real time to personalize outbound texts.
Why this works comes down to channel saturation and perceived urgency. Email has become a crowded, low-trust medium for transactional messages. SMS, by contrast, still commands open rates above 90 percent within three minutes of delivery, according to industry benchmarks published by Attentive and Postscript. When a text arrives with a customer's name, the product they left in cart, and a time-limited discount, the friction to click and complete checkout drops. TxtCart's AI layer attempts to automate the tone and timing that a human SMS manager would manually test, making the channel accessible to one-person brands that cannot staff live chat.
The broader mechanism: SMS marketing works best when the customer has already signaled intent. An abandoned cart, a first purchase, or a product page visit all qualify. The text becomes a nudge, not a cold pitch. TxtCart's growth suggests that more Shopify merchants are shifting retention budget from email service providers to SMS platforms, treating text as the high-intent follow-up and email as the awareness channel.
For a small physical-product brand, the steal is straightforward. Start with cart-abandonment SMS. Use a platform like Postscript, Attentive, or TxtCart if your Shopify plan supports app integrations. Set a single automated flow: if a customer adds a product and does not check out within one hour, send a plain-text message with their first name, the product name, and a direct checkout link. No discount in the first message. If they do not convert within 24 hours, send a second text offering 10 percent off with a 48-hour expiration. Keep the copy conversational and under 160 characters per message to avoid multi-part SMS fees. Monthly cost for a starter SMS plan runs $100 to $300 depending on message volume, plus one cent per text sent. Track attributed revenue in Shopify to confirm the channel pays for itself within the first month.
For an in-house growth lead with budget, layer a post-purchase SMS sequence on top of cart recovery. After a customer's first order ships, wait three days, then text a product-care tip or a complementary item suggestion. Use dynamic fields to pull the purchased SKU and recommend a logical next buy. A candle brand texts wick-trimming advice and links to a snuffer. A skincare brand texts application tips and suggests the matching serum. Conversion rate on the second text in a post-purchase series runs 8 to 12 percent when the recommendation is tight and the timing respects the use cycle. Budget $500 to $1,500 monthly for message volume and A/B test subject hooks, send times, and discount depths.
For a procurement or gifting buyer sourcing physical product at volume, SMS is less about your outbound campaign and more about vetting whether your supplier's brand has a retention channel in place. A supplier that uses SMS to drive repeat orders from individual customers is signaling higher lifetime value per SKU and better inventory turn. Ask your vendor if they run SMS flows and what their repeat-purchase rate looks like. Brands with strong SMS programs often have tighter forecasting and lower minimum-order quantities because they can move aged inventory through targeted text blasts. It is a proxy for operational maturity.
The pattern here is channel shift, not channel addition. E-commerce brands are not abandoning email; they are relegating it to awareness and using SMS for the high-intent, high-urgency moments. TxtCart's growth, even without hard numbers, reflects that reallocation. If your retention stack still leans entirely on email, test one SMS flow this quarter and measure attributed revenue. The open rate alone will justify the line item.
The takeaway
SMS beats email for high-intent follow-up; start with cart-abandonment texts and layer post-purchase flows once the first sequence pays for itself.
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