The right way to evaluate Shopify WhatsApp integration is to start with the operating model, not the homepage feature list. ecommerce teams connecting store context to customer conversations usually reach this search because a simple inbox is no longer enough. The team may be handling campaign replies, support queues, lead qualification, order questions, Instagram DMs, website chat, and follow-up work at the same time. A good evaluation should show whether the platform keeps that work visible and manageable.
Build the evaluation around five workflows: new lead capture, first response, ownership, customer context, and follow-up. If a platform can send a message but cannot show who owns the reply, where the customer came from, what they bought, what they asked before, and what should happen next, the team will recreate the missing process in spreadsheets and manual notes.
For WhatsApp-led teams, pricing and setup also need careful attention. Template message categories, destination countries, provider terms, campaign volume, user seats, automation limits, API access, webhooks, support coverage, onboarding, and commerce add-ons can all affect total cost. A low entry plan can still be the wrong choice if your real workflow sits behind higher tiers or manual work.
AxoDesk should be evaluated as a customer conversation workspace. The goal is not only to connect WhatsApp. The goal is to help sales, support, marketing, and ecommerce teams work from one customer timeline with practical routing, team ownership, CRM context, Shopify context, AI assistance, and measurement.
If you are building this workflow for the first time, avoid choosing only for today's channel. The best platform should support today's WhatsApp use case and still make sense when Instagram, email, Shopify, Meta Ads, AI, reporting, and CRM sync become part of the same customer journey.