How Does TPG Design SMS Plays That Drive Conversations?
TPG designs SMS plays that drive conversations by combining clear buyer intent, single-purpose messaging, and CRM-based routing—so texts reliably generate replies, meeting bookings, or qualified next steps. The goal is not “send SMS”; it is to create two-way motion that advances lifecycle stages and pipeline outcomes.
Conversation-driven SMS is fundamentally different from broadcast messaging. A play must (1) arrive at a moment that makes sense, (2) give the recipient a frictionless way to respond, and (3) ensure the response is handled fast by the right owner. When any one of those breaks, “response rate” becomes noise and the channel becomes fatigue-prone. (This page is general guidance—not legal advice. SMS compliance requirements vary by jurisdiction and industry.)
What Makes an SMS Play “Conversation-First”
A Practical Conversation-Driven SMS Playbook
Use this sequence to design SMS plays that generate replies and convert engagement into measurable revenue outcomes.
Qualify → Design → Gate → Trigger → Route → Resolve → Learn
- Qualify the use case: SMS must reduce friction in a time-sensitive moment (speed-to-lead, confirmations, renewals, high-intent follow-up). If the message is not time-relevant, it should not be SMS.
- Design the conversation outcome: Define what “success” is: reply, meeting booked, confirmation completed, or decision support request. Write the SMS around that single outcome.
- Gate sends with eligibility rules: Enforce consent and preference logic, suppression lists, time-zone protection, and frequency caps. Conversation quality depends on trust.
- Trigger at the right moment: Use the buyer signal to send immediately (or within a defined timing window) and suppress the play if the contact already progressed.
- Route replies and actions instantly: Replies should attach to the CRM record and create owner tasks with SLA timing. High-intent responses can trigger escalation paths.
- Resolve with a defined next step: Ensure responders receive a clear action (schedule, confirm, provide detail) and the internal team has a consistent process for handling outcomes.
- Learn and version the play: Improve by cohort (stage, persona, region). Track fatigue signals (opt-outs, declining replies) and refine cadence before the channel degrades.
Conversation-Driven SMS Maturity Matrix
| Dimension | Stage 1 — Broadcast | Stage 2 — Semi-Interactive | Stage 3 — Conversation-Driven |
|---|---|---|---|
| Triggering | Batch sends on internal schedules. | Some triggers; many manual sends. | Intent-tier triggers with timing windows and suppression. |
| Message Design | Multi-offer, promotional copy. | Cleaner copy; mixed objectives persist. | Single-job messaging with explicit response paths. |
| Routing | Replies handled ad hoc; delays common. | Partial routing; SLAs inconsistent. | Workflow routing, ownership, and escalation are standard. |
| Guardrails | Few caps; fatigue grows. | Some controls; uneven enforcement. | Quiet hours, caps, suppression, and collision prevention enforced. |
| Measurement | Clicks and counts only. | Reply rate tracked; limited outcomes. | Closed-loop outcomes to meetings, pipeline, and velocity by cohort. |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most common reason SMS plays fail to generate conversations?
Poor fit and unclear “next step.” If the message is not tied to a real intent moment or asks for too much, recipients ignore it—or opt out.
How do you design an SMS message that gets replies?
Make it single-purpose and low-effort to respond: a yes/no, a 1–2 option choice, or a single next-step link. Then ensure replies are handled quickly by the correct owner.
How do you keep conversation-driven SMS from creating fatigue?
Use eligibility rules, frequency caps, quiet hours, and collision prevention. Conversation quality improves when you reduce unnecessary touches and focus on high-intent cohorts.
How should teams measure “conversation success” beyond reply rate?
Track downstream outcomes: meetings set and attended, opportunities created, stage progression, and cycle time—plus fatigue signals like opt-outs to ensure scale remains sustainable.
Build SMS Plays That Convert Replies Into Revenue
Design conversation-first triggers, routing, and guardrails so responses become meetings, pipeline, and faster deal progression—without increasing channel fatigue.
