
"What do you have right now?"
You get this message at least five times a day. And every time, it's the same routine: open your gallery, scroll through hundreds of plant photos, find the ones that are still available, and send them one by one.
By the time you've sent everything, the customer replies: "Thanks, I'll think about it."
Then another message pops up: "Is the snake plant easy to care for?"
You type the same answer you gave three hours ago.
Let's Be Honest — Waiting for Customers Is Exhausting
The same questions, day after day
"Does this one need sun?" "How often do I water it?" "Can it survive in the bathroom?" You answer them in the morning, you answer them at noon, you answer them again at night. By the end of the week, you've become a plant care hotline — except nobody's paying you for the advice.
Customers browse, take photos, and vanish
They walk in, snap pictures of everything, say "I'll think about it," and disappear. Next time they come back, they take photos all over again. Your plants haven't changed. Their phone gallery? Empty.
Sold plants are still haunting you
That beautiful fiddle leaf fig sold last week. But its photo is still in your gallery, still in your chat history. New customers message you about it, and you have to reply: "Sorry, it's gone." They say "Oh." Conversation over.
Another lead gone.
Foot traffic is unpredictable
Some days are busy. Most days are quiet. You sit among your plants, watching people walk by outside. A few come in. Most don't. The ones who don't? They'll never know about that rare variegated monstera you just got.
Imagine This Instead
All your plants — snake plants, fiddle leaf figs, succulents, monsteras, every single one — neatly displayed in one place. Photos, prices, sizes, care instructions. Everything clear. Everything updated.
Customers open it on their phone, browse like a catalog, and pick what they like. When they message you, it's not "What do you have?" It's "This one — can I pick it up tomorrow?"
No more sending photos. No more answering "How often do I water it?" No more explaining "This one likes shade" for the hundredth time.
That's What WhatsMenu Can Do for You
Your garden shop, now living in their phones
Put every plant online — snake plants, fiddle leaf figs, succulents, lucky bamboo, everything. Photos, prices, sizes, care instructions. Customers browse at midnight. They discover plants while eating lunch. Your shop never closes.
Care instructions? Written once. Read forever.
In each plant's description, write exactly how to care for it: "Likes bright indirect light, water when soil is dry" or "Low maintenance, water once a week." Customers read it themselves. Your thumbs finally get a break from typing the same advice.
Sold plants disappear — everywhere
That fiddle leaf fig sold? Remove it from your catalog. Gone from your link, gone from customer view. No more "Sorry, it's gone." Every inquiry you get is for something real, available, ready to leave your shop.
One link. Anywhere you want.
Drop it in Facebook groups. Post it on WhatsApp status. Pin it to your Instagram bio. Print the QR code on your business card. Customers click, browse, and come back to you when they're ready. You eat lunch without interruption.
Pickup or delivery? They choose
Set up pickup options, delivery zones, and fees in your dashboard. Customers select what works for them. You just check orders, prepare the plants, and wait for them to arrive — or arrange delivery.
Here's the Truth — You Started a Garden Shop for the Plants, Not the Endless Questions
You started because you love watching things grow. Because you love the look on someone's face when they find the perfect plant for their home. Because being surrounded by greenery just feels right.
Not the endless scrolling through photos. Not the repetitive answers. Not the "I'll think about it."
Let WhatsMenu handle the busywork. You focus on what you love: growing beautiful plants and running your shop.
Next Time Someone Asks "What Do You Have?"
Don't open your gallery. Don't start scrolling. Just send the link.
Let them browse. Let them choose. Let them come to you.