sacchi vs Judge.me
Sacchi vs Judge.me — a WhatsApp voice-review alternative for Indian D2C brands
Judge.me is a solid, affordable email review app — this isn't about replacing your widget. It's about what happens before a review ever reaches Judge.me: how many customers actually reply, and in what language.
| Judge.me | Sacchi | |
|---|---|---|
| Review requests sent over WhatsApp | – | ✓ |
| Collected as a chat reply (not a form) | – | ✓ |
| Accepts voice notes | – | ✓ |
| Vernacular ASR + bilingual publishing | – | ✓ |
| Structured extraction from speech (verdict, use-case, cons) | – | ✓ |
| Shopify order verification (verified-buyer) | ✓ | ✓ |
| Receipt + duration-of-use verification | – | ✓ |
| Segment-level display (by skin type, use-case, variant) | – | ✓ |
| Private resolution loop before anything publishes | – | ✓ |
| Pooled verified corpus across brands | – | ✓ |
| Google review rich-snippet markup | ✓ | ✓ |
When Judge.me is the better fit
- You only need star ratings and photo reviews, and email reply rates are already working for you.
- You want the lowest possible cost per review and don't need voice or vernacular support.
- Your customers are comfortable replying in English, in writing.
When Sacchi is the better fit
- Your customers speak Hindi, Tamil, Kannada, or Hinglish more comfortably than they write in English.
- Email reply rates are in the low single digits and WhatsApp is where your customers actually are.
- You want structured detail (duration of use, price paid, would-rebuy) that a star rating alone doesn't capture.