Infobip has built an integration with CRM platform HubSpot to provide WhatsApp and SMS messaging for HubSpot’s clients. The integration, available in HubSpot’s App Marketplace, enables its clients to connect with customers using their preferred communication channel, to deliver a great customer experience and boost engagement and sales.
Numerous studies show that customers would rather message a business than call and many expect business messaging to become even more popular in the future. Responding to its client's needs, HubSpot wanted to offer the best omnichannel experience. Now HubSpot’s clients can access Infobip’s market-leading omnichannel communications platform, as ranked by tech analyst Omdia.
By syncing Infobip’s WhatsApp and SMS channels with HubSpot, businesses can send automated messages and updates to deliver faster and more efficient communication. Businesses can accelerate sales by automating the sharing of payment links and generating automated support messages to deliver faster customer support. They can also offer enhanced security by providing verification and authentication codes to customers during login via fast and secure WhatsApp or SMS.
“Our clients want to be able to interact with their customers on the right channel at the right time. With the Infobip integration, our customers now have access to market-leading customer communications over WhatsApp and SMS, helping them to enhance engagement, increase loyalty and ultimately drive sales,“ said Scott Brinker, VP of Platform Ecosystem at HubSpot.
“More and more customers want to message a business than make a call. Businesses need to be where their customers are, which is why we’ve built an integration with HubSpot to offer its customers access to our best-in-class communications platform that provides a comprehensive range of capabilities and features. Our integration with HubSpot demonstrates our commitment to building connected customer experiences,“ said Veselin Vukovic, VP of Strategic Partnerships at Infobip.
Lenovo no longer sees artificial intelligence merely as a software layer running in the background of a PC, but as an active collaborator capable of taking on parts of everyday work and linking the digital and physical worlds.
Ericsson Nikola Tesla’s cooperation with Hrvatski Telekom and Crnogorski Telekom shows how the telecom market is moving beyond the traditional focus on coverage and capacity and toward a much broader question: how to turn the network into a platform for new industrial services, critical infrastructure, and security use cases.
At this year’s Mobile World Congress, artificial intelligence was no longer just a major technology theme. It was presented as a concrete operational tool moving directly into the heart of the telecom industry.