In the TikTok video posted late last monthwhich has since gone viral with over 2 million views@hznrzli asks recipientsparticularly those paying via online transfer (non-cash on delivery)to at least reply to delivery notifications with a "thank you"a stickeror even a single dot.
He says that leaving the riders' messages on 'read' or 'seen' could lead WhatsApp to flag the riders' interactions as spampotentially restricting or banning their account and making it harder for them to communicate about parcel deliveries.
Here is the English translation of his request:
QUOTE
"Assalamualaikum. I am representing all couriersespecially J&T.
"I really want to ask for a favourpleasefrom the customers who are non-CODthe ones who pay via online transfer.
"You know how when a rider has delivered your itemthey will WhatsApp youright?
"Can I pleaseplease ask for a favour? At least reply with something. 'Thank you,' or if you don't reply'thank you,' just send a sticker. Even replying with just a 'period' (full stop) is enough. This is because we want to avoid… getting hit with this."
"I really want to ask for a favourpleasefrom the customers who are non-CODthe ones who pay via online transfer.
"You know how when a rider has delivered your itemthey will WhatsApp youright?
"Can I pleaseplease ask for a favour? At least reply with something. 'Thank you,' or if you don't reply'thank you,' just send a sticker. Even replying with just a 'period' (full stop) is enough. This is because we want to avoid… getting hit with this."
He then shows his phone screenwhich displays a WhatsApp alert stating: "Your account is restricted right now… Recent activity on your account may be a sign of spamautomated or bulk messaging."
The J&T Express rider showing his phone screenwhere a WhatsApp alert says his account has been restricted.
QUOTE
"Seewhen we get thiswe can't WhatsApp you all. We can't tell you where we've placed your parcel. So then you won't know. And if you're worried the parcel is lost or somethingit becomes difficult for both of us.
"So that's all. Just reply with anything. Reply 'K' or 'Q,'… as long as you reply. Because once you've repliedwe have established communication.
"Then WhatsApp won't flag us for 'spam'. We get this because customers don't reply 'thank you' or anything at all. So then we get banned for 'WhatsApp spam,' something like that.
"Okaythank you. Please spread this message to everyone. Muah."
"So that's all. Just reply with anything. Reply 'K' or 'Q,'… as long as you reply. Because once you've repliedwe have established communication.
"Then WhatsApp won't flag us for 'spam'. We get this because customers don't reply 'thank you' or anything at all. So then we get banned for 'WhatsApp spam,' something like that.
"Okaythank you. Please spread this message to everyone. Muah."
Sowhat's actually going on?
While it's true that WhatsApp can restrict or even ban accounts it thinks are sending spamthe situation isn't as simple as "don't reply = ban".
From what's publicly knownthe platform considers factors like whether messages get reportedblockedor ignored on a large scaleespecially if the sender is messaging lots of people they shouldn't.
For a courier sending normal delivery updatesthe risk is probably lowespecially if the messages are expected and customers haven't reported them as unwanted.
Replying to a message might help the delivery rider's account stay in good standingbut ignoring it won't automatically trigger a ban.
In shortthe TikTok video isn't entirely wrong; the rider's account could theoretically be restricted if WhatsApp flags itbut the idea that customers must reply to avoid this is a bit of an exaggeration.
A simple "thank you" might make things smootherbut the platform is looking at the bigger picturenot just whether a single message gets a response.
That saidreplying is courteousand you should ideally do it as it may help the sender avoid spam flagsbut it is not a guarantee.
Nov 12 202502:10 PMupdated 4w ago
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