Skip to main content
All CollectionsCommunicationsCampaigns
Best practices for sending SMS campaigns
Best practices for sending SMS campaigns

How to send effective campaigns

Updated over a month ago

Send campaigns to your patients to communicate weather-related closures, new providers, or special promotions.

Many patients report marketing over SMS feels intrusive and distracting. We recommend you save SMS campaigns for emergent, time-sensitive information like weather closures or insurance deductible resets.

Fortunately, healthcare emails have an average open rate of 41%, significantly surpassing many other marketing channels. This means your marketing messages are still likely to be seen by patients via email.

SMS Campaign considerations

Be mindful of the length

We recommend limiting SMS campaign messages to 425 characters or fewer. It's tempting to copy an email campaign directly into a text message, but these don't usually perform the way you might expect. There are a few reasons for this:

  • Phone screens are not optimized for reading long messages. Because of this, you have less control over the formatting of these messages. Customizations like bold text or italics don't transfer, which can make messages hard to read.

  • Long messages and messages with lots of emojis are more likely to be flagged by carriers as spam, creating deliverability concerns.

Do not include images in SMS Campaigns

Due to CAN-SPAM regulations, images attached to SMS campaigns will not be sent.

Always include a call to action

Campaigns are most effective when you ask your patient to take action. Most likely, this will be booking an appointment. Use Smart Commands like INSERTBOOKINGLINK, which will add a link to your booking page, to make it easy for patients to take action.

Ensure patients know the text is from you

Include your practice name in the copy (use the LOCATIONNAME Smart Command to do this automatically). This ensures patients have full context and can take action without needing to reply to check. For example, instead of “we have availability after 7 pm now”, write: LOCATIONNAME now offers appointments after 7pm!

Did this answer your question?