Mumbai: Eight in ten WhatsApp orders placed during India’s festive season last year came from new customers, and brands deploying WhatsApp marketing through Kwik Engage recorded 2.25x higher median GMV growth than those not using it on the GoKwik network, according to the WhatsApp Commerce Intelligence Report 2026 released by GoKwik, which drew on an analysis of 26 billion messages sent by more than 1,800 direct-to-consumer brands across four quarters.
The report documents a widening performance divide that is reshaping revenue outcomes across India’s D2C sector. Brands using AI-triggered automations, including abandoned cart recovery, order updates, loyalty nudges and login prompts, outperformed those running mass broadcast campaigns by more than four times on click-through rates. Broadcast campaigns averaged a 2.6 percent CTR over the year, climbing to 3.04 percent at the October-December festive peak. Automated journeys delivered an average CTR of 11.12 percent, with open rates reaching as high as 73.9 percent.
The revenue consequence is measurable. Brands deploying WhatsApp marketing through Kwik Engage recorded 2.25x higher median GMV growth than those not using it on the GoKwik network. In Electronics, top-quartile brands achieved WhatsApp conversion rates of nearly 1.5 percent against a network average of 0.4 percent, a 3.8 times gap driven almost entirely by automation depth and audience segmentation rather than spend. A brand in the bottom quartile is, in effect, funding the growth of the brand above it.
“The brands seeing outsized growth on WhatsApp aren’t sending more messages. They are letting AI decide which message to send, to whom, and when. That shift from broadcast to AI-driven contextual commerce is what’s creating a structural performance gap. The data across 26 billion messages makes it clear: WhatsApp has evolved from a notification layer into a full-scale revenue engine, but only for brands that are using it that way,” said Chirag Taneja, Co-Founder and Chief Executive of GoKwik.
The festive quarter sharpened the picture. Between October and December 2025, 83 percent of all WhatsApp-driven orders came from first-time customers, a figure that challenges the conventional positioning of WhatsApp as a retention and re-engagement tool. The platform is functioning as a top-of-funnel acquisition engine, but most brands have yet to deploy it as one. Even as brands increased campaign frequency during the peak period, click-through and engagement rates continued to rise, suggesting that AI-determined message relevance suppresses audience fatigue that typically accompanies volume-led strategies.
The performance gap holds across categories. Fashion, the network’s largest WhatsApp revenue segment, saw top-performing brands convert at nearly 2.5 times the category average. Customer support showed a parallel shift: bot resolution rates rose from 67.1 percent to 73.4 percent across the year, with AI handling the majority of routine queries including order tracking, returns and FAQs. At network scale, that shift represents a structural reallocation of human capacity toward interactions that require judgment rather than information retrieval.
The findings arrive as Indian D2C brands face mounting pressure to improve marketing efficiency without expanding budgets. WhatsApp has already made the transition from notification channel to revenue infrastructure. The data suggests most brands have not.
The WhatsApp Commerce Intelligence Report 2026 covers quarter-wise benchmarks, category conversion data, automation frameworks and festive commerce trends across India’s D2C ecosystem.

















