What you will work with if you want to do WhatsApp broadcasts
WhatsApp broadcasting always breaks down into 3 parts: 1. Registering accounts 2. Warming up accounts 3. The broadcast itself
WhatsApp broadcasting always breaks down into 3 parts:
- Registering accounts
- Warming up accounts
- The broadcast itself
Account registration
Registration is often done on mobile proxies or proxies from a pool, starting with small volumes. 1–2 emulators for registration, with the proxy set up through proxifier.
If out of 100 SMS you receive you manage to register 50 accounts, that's already good. If it's fewer, you can try changing the emulator identifiers, recreating the emulator (again to rotate identifiers), changing the SMS service, changing the country of the numbers, changing the proxy, and so on. Or you can simply wait until the SMS service rotates the batch of numbers.
Account warm-up
Warm-up is done via conversations — there's functionality for this in the program. Two emulators are enough; the proxies can also stay mobile, through proxifier. Warm-up is done with short dialogues of 5–10 messages. It can be done over 1 day or stretched out over a week or even a month. It's worth trying different approaches here. More in the guide: how to warm up accounts so they can send more messages and don't get banned.
Broadcasting
You can split broadcasting into 2 approaches:
- The common one: broadcast "to the bone" — after warm-up, set 50 messages per round from an account with 1 account in work at a time. Broadcast at maximum capacity until the account is banned.
- After warm-up you can also broadcast in small portions: 10 messages a day from an account, 20 a day, and so on, up to 100–300 a day. This approach works if the account always has activity (at least some dialogues), and users react well to the broadcast (don't hit spam), which usually happens when the broadcast goes to your own customers and not to a cold base.