KakaoTalk - Korean market

Home / Everything About / Everything About Social Media / KakaoTalk - Korean market

Ask a shopper in Seoul how a brand should reach them after a first purchase. Many will answer with one word: Kakao. Order updates, loyalty points, event invites, and customer service threads all land in the same app they use to chat with friends. Missing that channel can make even a strong website feel oddly out of touch.

KakaoTalk marketing is how businesses build an official channel inside that daily habit. It blends broadcast messages, one-to-one chat, coupons, and links to commerce or booking flows. This chapter explains what KakaoTalk is, why it dominates Korea, and how to launch without spamming the inbox people trust most. Let us get into it.

What is KakaoTalk for brands?

KakaoTalk is South Korea's leading messaging app, used for personal chats, groups, voice calls, and brand channels. A Kakao Channel functions like a business profile subscribers can follow for updates and message directly when they need help.

Brands send targeted messages, publish menu buttons, share coupons, and route users to web stores or forms. Because the app is already on nearly every smartphone in the country, you skip the hard step of convincing users to download something new.

Kakao extends into adjacent services such as maps, payments, and shopping in the broader Kakao ecosystem. Your channel works best when it connects cleanly to those real-world actions instead of ending in a dead link.

Why does KakaoTalk marketing matter in Korea?

Consumer behavior is channel-first. Koreans often discover a brand on social or search, then move the relationship into Kakao for repeat contact. Without a channel, you lose the thread after the first visit.

Promotions and alerts get opened. Kakao messages routinely outperform email open rates for local consumer offers when the content is relevant and properly timed. That attention is precious, which is why irrelevant blasting backfires quickly.

Local competitors already occupy this space. If your rival sends restock alerts and appointment confirmations through Kakao while you rely on generic email, you look slower and less convenient by comparison.

How do you build a KakaoTalk marketing strategy?

Create a verified channel with a recognizable name, icon, and description in Korean. Add menu buttons for the three actions customers request most: shop, book, or contact support.

Offer a clear subscribe incentive. A one-time discount, downloadable guide, or membership perk gives people a reason to opt in beyond generic follow requests. Track subscriber growth alongside redemption so you know the offer works.

Segment messages by behavior. Welcome series for new subscribers, restock notes for product buyers, and event invites for local followers perform better than one identical blast to everyone. Coordinate with other Asian messaging apps through Line marketing and regional planning in Localization strategy for social media if Korea is one of several markets you serve.

Frequently asked questions

Do foreign brands need KakaoTalk to sell in Korea?

Is KakaoTalk the same as a Kakao Channel?

How often should brands message Kakao subscribers?

Can KakaoTalk handle customer support?

What language should Kakao content use?

Where should Kakao coupons and alerts send users?