Not applicable-you can't currently send campaign-based messages that use the voice channel. You must also lease at least one dedicated long code to get started. For more information, see Amazon Pinpoint voice message pricing and Amazon Pinpoint dedicated long code pricing. The price you pay is based on the length of each message that you deliver, the type of phone number, and on the recipient's country or region. See the SMS pricing tool in the next section for more information. A per-message price that varies based on the destination country or region.The price you pay for each message varies based on the country or region where the recipient is located. $0 for the first million notifications, and $1.00 per million notifications after that.You pay $0 for the first million notifications, and $1.00 per million notifications after that. $0 for the first 5,000 endpoints in your MTA, and $1.20 per 1,000 endpoints after that.$0 for the first 15,000 requests, and $1.10 per 10,000 requests after that.Not applicable – you can’t currently request in-app messages on a transactional basis. $0 for the first 5,000 endpoints in your monthly targeted audience (MTA), and $1.20 per 1,000 endpoints after that.Wight costs, of support costs of integration, cost of scale, costs of a volume.Campaign or journey-based message pricing Another option that is worth considering, not the most affordable, but have perhaps options that might be higher and the cost is relative. Bandwidth has more reliability but requires more engineering and more skillset. You ask for affordable, Twillio is an option, but front end costs v/s the costs of support you'll need to consider. It's not that Twillio is bad, it's about the volume, the use case, the liabiitlies you might have to your end-users if Twillio isn't the right choice. What redunancies do to they have, try their support. Is it a more friend UI to a combination of others. While their interface is friendly, their pricing suited for lower volume, you want to look at what they are using via an API, a contract, etc. That said from my understanding SendGrid leases the networks, channels, and lines. They are stronger at marketing to those that benefit them. It's good for basics, their acquisition of SendGrid gives them a bit more market share. Stackshare doesn't seem to have this in the stack list yet, but in my experience Twillio is attractive.
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