It starts the same way for every egg producer. A cafe owner texts you. You reply with what you've got. They order ten dozen. Easy.
Then you pick up another account. Then three more. And now you're standing in the henhouse at 5am, scrolling through WhatsApp trying to work out how many trays to pack before the delivery round - while also trying to remember whether that message from the deli was the original order or the correction they sent at 10pm.
You know this is broken. You've just been too busy collecting eggs to fix it.
What goes wrong with WhatsApp orders
It's not one dramatic failure. It's a steady drip of small ones every week.
Orders get buried
A customer sends their order on Sunday evening. By Monday morning, you've got a dozen other messages across personal chats and group threads. The order is there - somewhere - but you're scanning conversations instead of packing the van.
Your phone never stops
Customers don't message a business line. They message you. Your phone buzzes during dinner, on your day off, and at 5am when someone realises they forgot to order. There's no boundary between your egg business and your personal life because the ordering system is your pocket.
No single list
One customer messages you directly. Another replies in a group chat. A third leaves a voice note. Where's the definitive list of what needs packing for tomorrow's round? It doesn't exist in one place. You're assembling it from scraps every single time.
You're never sure what's final
A customer says "fifteen dozen large." An hour later: "Actually, make it twelve." Did you see the second message? Did you already write fifteen on the packing list? With WhatsApp, there's no clear moment where an order becomes final. Everything's provisional until you hand over the trays.
You can't hand it off
If someone else helps with your round, they need your WhatsApp. Your personal WhatsApp. The ordering "system" is inseparable from you as a person.
Why you haven't switched yet
Probably one of these:
- "My customers are used to it"
They're used to it because you haven't offered anything else. Most will happily use a portal if tapping items on a screen is easier than typing out "10 dozen large, 5 dozen medium" from memory
- "I don't want to learn new software"
Fair. But you've already learned WhatsApp's workarounds - the pinned messages, the mental note to check three chats before packing, the screenshots of orders so you don't lose them. That's a system. It's just a bad one
- "It's free"
So is the time you spend re-reading message threads at 4am. The cost of WhatsApp isn't the subscription. It's the chaos
What the alternative actually looks like
Not an enterprise system designed for processors doing millions of eggs. Not farm ecommerce built for farmers markets. Just a customer portal where:
- Each customer logs in and picks from your product list (large, medium, mixed - whatever you sell)
- Orders land in one place, listed by delivery date
- You see exactly what's been ordered without assembling it from messages
- There's a cutoff time after which orders lock, so you know what's final before you start packing
That's it. No voice notes to transcribe. No scrolling through threads. No wondering if you missed a message.
How to actually make the switch
Tell your customers once
"From next Monday, please place orders through this link instead of WhatsApp." Send the link. Most will use it immediately because selecting items from a list is easier than typing out an order.
Expect a transition week
One or two customers will still message you on WhatsApp out of habit. Reply with the portal link. By week two, everyone's using it. You're not fighting behaviour change - you're offering a path of less resistance.
Don't keep WhatsApp as a backup
The moment you accept orders on WhatsApp "just this once," you're running two systems. Commit to the switch. WhatsApp stays for chatting. Orders go through the portal.
How Wholesale Handler solves this
Wholesale Handler is a customer portal for wholesale suppliers. Your customers get a login, see your products, and place orders. Orders land in one dashboard, organised by delivery date. There's a cutoff time that locks orders automatically, so you always know what's final before you start packing.
Packing slips generate from confirmed orders, so you're not writing lists by hand.
No payment processing fees, no route planning software, no egg grading modules. Just a clean list of who ordered what and when it needs delivering.
Wholesale Handler



