
You’re Leaving Money on the Table If You’re Only Using One Channel
Here’s a scenario that plays out every day: a customer abandons their cart, your email goes out, and it sits unread for three days. Meanwhile, your competitor sent a quick text message and closed the sale in under an hour. The difference wasn’t the offer — it was the channel. Businesses that treat email and SMS as competitors are missing the point entirely. The smartest brands in 2024 aren’t choosing between the two — they’re using both, strategically, to meet customers exactly where they are.
What’s the Real Difference Between Email and SMS?
Before diving into strategy, it’s worth getting clear on what each channel actually does well — because they are genuinely different tools, not interchangeable ones.
Email Marketing: Depth, Design, and Long-Term Relationship Building
Email is the workhorse of digital marketing. It gives you space — space to tell a story, showcase a product, segment your audience, and build a brand identity over time. With email, you can send beautifully designed newsletters, automated drip sequences, personalized product recommendations, and detailed promotional campaigns. The average return on investment for email marketing hovers around $36 for every $1 spent, making it one of the most cost-effective channels available.
Email is also where you build trust. A well-crafted welcome sequence, a thoughtful re-engagement campaign, or a helpful educational series — these are the kinds of touchpoints that turn one-time buyers into loyal customers.
SMS Marketing: Speed, Urgency, and Immediate Action
SMS is the sprint to email’s marathon. Text messages are opened at a rate of 98%, with most being read within three minutes of delivery. That’s an attention-grabbing stat — and it explains why SMS is so powerful for time-sensitive communication: flash sales, shipping updates, appointment reminders, and limited-time offers.
But SMS has its limits. There’s no room for lengthy storytelling or rich design. Send too many texts, and you’ll see opt-outs spike. The key is restraint and relevance.
“The brands winning in retention marketing aren’t picking a favorite channel — they’re orchestrating a conversation across multiple touchpoints. Email builds the relationship. SMS closes the loop.”
Why Combining Email and SMS Outperforms Either Channel Alone
The magic happens when these two channels work in concert. Here’s why a combined email and SMS strategy consistently outperforms single-channel approaches:
- Increased touchpoints without increased annoyance: Different people prefer different channels. Some customers check email religiously; others barely open their inbox but respond immediately to texts. Using both means you’re not gambling on one preference.
- Reinforcement without repetition: You can use SMS to tease what’s coming in email, or use email to follow up on a text offer with more detail. The channels complement each other rather than duplicating effort.
- Higher conversion rates on key moments: Abandoned cart sequences that include both an email and an SMS recover significantly more revenue than email alone. Studies show adding SMS to cart abandonment flows can increase recovery rates by up to 20-30%.
- Better segmentation and personalization: When you’re collecting data from both channels, you get a richer picture of your customer. Engagement signals from email and SMS together help you segment smarter and personalize more effectively.
How to Build a Smart Email + SMS Strategy
Step 1: Define the Role of Each Channel
Don’t just add SMS because it’s trendy. Start by mapping out your customer journey and asking: where does speed matter, and where does depth matter? Flash sales, shipping notifications, and urgent reminders belong in SMS. Welcome sequences, educational content, loyalty programs, and brand storytelling belong in email.
Step 2: Grow Both Lists Intentionally
Your email list and your SMS list are separate assets that require separate acquisition strategies. A pop-up that collects email addresses won’t automatically get you phone numbers. Consider dedicated SMS opt-in offers — exclusive discounts, early access, or VIP perks — that give customers a real reason to share their number.
Step 3: Coordinate Your Messaging Calendar
One of the most common mistakes businesses make is running email and SMS campaigns in silos. When your email team doesn’t know what the SMS team is sending (or vice versa), customers get a disjointed, sometimes contradictory experience. Map out a unified content calendar that shows how the two channels support each other week by week.
Step 4: Automate the High-Impact Moments
The biggest wins in multi-channel marketing come from automation. Set up flows that trigger across both channels based on customer behavior: welcome series, post-purchase follow-ups, win-back campaigns, and browse abandonment sequences. The digital marketing specialists at Rainboots Marketing build these kinds of integrated automation systems for clients who want results that compound over time — not just one-off campaign wins.
Step 5: Monitor, Test, and Optimize
What works for one audience won’t work for another. Test your send times, your messaging cadence, and the balance between email and SMS touchpoints. Watch your unsubscribe rates carefully — especially on SMS, where tolerance for over-messaging is low. Let the data guide your adjustments.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Treating SMS like a mini email: Long-form copy, multiple links, and heavy promotional language feel out of place in a text message. Keep it short, direct, and human.
- Ignoring compliance: Both email (CAN-SPAM, GDPR) and SMS (TCPA) have legal requirements around consent and opt-outs. Non-compliance isn’t just a reputational risk — it’s a legal one.
- Sending too frequently on SMS: Two to four SMS messages per month is a reasonable ceiling for most brands. More than that, and you’re eroding the goodwill you’ve built.
- Neglecting the post-purchase experience: Most brands focus heavily on acquisition and forget that the post-purchase window is one of the highest-engagement moments in the customer lifecycle. Use both channels to delight customers after they buy.
Is a Combined Email and SMS Strategy Right for Your Business?
The honest answer: almost certainly yes, but the specifics depend on your industry, your audience, and your current marketing maturity. E-commerce brands, service businesses, restaurants, healthcare providers, and retail companies all have strong use cases for multi-channel messaging. The question isn’t whether to use both — it’s how to use both intelligently.
If you’re already running email marketing but haven’t layered in SMS, that’s your lowest-hanging fruit. If you’re doing both but running them independently, integration is your next move. And if you’re starting from scratch, building a multi-channel strategy from day one puts you ahead of competitors who are still figuring it out. Our team at Rainboots Marketing in Seattle works with businesses at every stage of this journey — from first campaign to fully automated, revenue-generating lifecycle programs.




