11th April 2022

Tricia Morris explores if hypercommunication will lead to the death of email.
According to a SuperOffice customer service study, the average time it takes companies to respond to a customer email is 12 hours and 10 minutes, with slower responses taking longer than eight days.
Sixty-two percent (62%) of companies don’t even respond to all customer emails, according to the study. Meanwhile, one-third of customers are expecting an email response from a brand within one hour.
It’s no wonder more and more people are choosing, checking, and responding to messages before email. Why wait for hours when you can get a response in minutes or seconds? I see no good reason for that. And I’m not alone.
In a Yotpo Shoppers Tell All Consumer survey, 55% of consumers said they prefer text messaging over other communication channels because it’s immediate, convenient, and allows them to quickly get updates.
And 43% are willing to opt in to receive messages because they want the ability to quickly communicate with a brand one-on-one through two-way text conversations.
We predict that by 2025, more than 50% of all brands will be using SMS not only as a reactive communication vehicle but as a proactive customer support and engagement channel, amplifying the competitive focus around both speed and brand trust as companies battle for opt-ins and the ensuing engagement possibilities.
Many brands are already delighting customers with the speed of response via messaging over email.
In 8×8’s 2022 Business Communications Trends, industry analyst Sheila McGee-Smith highlights her recent experience with Lands’ End and heralds hypercommunication as an expectation you’ll see more of in 2022 and beyond.