Republic Of The Congo SMS Guide - sms-compliance -

Frequently Asked Questions

Use an SMS API provider like Twilio, Sinch, MessageBird, or Plivo. Implement their provided code examples, ensuring you use a registered alphanumeric sender ID and format recipient numbers with +242. Remember two-way SMS is not supported.
The Republic of the Congo has a growing mobile market, primarily using Android devices. SMS remains a key communication channel, especially for businesses, due to its reliability and broad reach. While OTT apps are gaining traction, SMS is still vital, particularly outside urban areas.
MMS is not directly supported. Instead, MMS messages are converted to SMS with a URL link to the media content. This ensures deliverability across all devices while still providing access to multimedia.
Send messages between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM local time (UTC+1), avoiding Sundays and religious holidays. Adhere to best practices by limiting messages to 2-3 per week per recipient and spacing out bulk sends.
No, short codes are not currently supported. Alphanumeric sender IDs and international long codes (with limitations) are the available options for sending SMS.
Concatenated messages are supported, but standard length limits apply: 160 characters for GSM-7 encoding and 70 for UCS-2. While both are supported, UCS-2 is recommended for special characters or non-Latin alphabets.
The ARPCE regulates the telecom sector. Businesses must secure explicit consent before sending marketing messages, honor opt-out requests (STOP, ARRET, ARRÊT, HELP, AIDE), and maintain clean contact lists.
All SMS campaigns must support opt-out keywords (STOP, ARRET, ARRÊT, HELP, AIDE) in both French and English. Confirmation messages are mandatory, and opt-out requests must be processed within 24 hours.
Gambling, adult content, unauthorized financial services, and political campaigns without authorization are restricted. Content filtering exists, so avoid URL shorteners, unclear language, and excessive punctuation.
Keep messages under 160 characters, include clear calls-to-action, maintain branding, and use personalization thoughtfully. Localize messages in French, or both French and English for international audiences.
The article provides code examples for Twilio, Sinch, MessageBird, and Plivo. Choose a provider and follow their specific integration instructions, ensuring you manage sender IDs and recipient number formatting correctly.
The default rate limit is 30 messages per second, with a batch limit of 500 recipients per request. Daily quotas may exist. Use queuing systems and batch APIs for large-scale sending.
Invalid number formats, network congestion, sender ID rejection, and content filtering are common issues. Implement thorough error logging, track delivery receipts, and set up alerts for high failure rates.
The article provides links to the ARPCE, telecommunications law, and GSMA guidelines. It also recommends consulting local legal counsel for compliance review.
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