The keys to App Store success, courtesy of Pinch Media
Just about every conversation I have with an iPhone developer who's had any level of App Store success eventually (usually sooner rather than later) includes the question, "what worked for you?" I've been trying to distill some kind of pattern -- a sure-fire marketing tactic -- but there are just too many variables. There are the ones which developers can control (to some extent): the general timing of a release (give or take a month), pricing, quality, external promotion, and certain aspects of the marketing process. There are also variables beyond the developer's control, such as the review process, being featured on an App Store list, the existence and tactics of competitors, duplication and an array of shifting circumstances and bad behavior. What we need is more data, right?
Pinch Media's Jesse Rohland & Greg Yardley, the gracious providers of some great App Store RSS feeds and developers of tools for iPhone app metrics, just published a slideshow (you can see it in the 2nd half of this post) which was presented at the New York iPhone Developers Meetup, sharing analysis of the data and trends they've been observing.
Snazzy charts? Witty banter? Sound advice? Check, check and check. Whether you're curious about the effects of price drops, various usage stats for free versus paid apps or the mathematics of breaking even (maybe turning a profit?), statistical analysis could be your friend. I know, real friends are nicer and more helpful on moving day, but that's what you get for spending all your time writing iPhone applications in dimly-lit rooms. I kid, of course: enjoy the show ...
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Just about every conversation I have with an iPhone developer who's had any level of App Store success eventually (usually sooner rather...
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We get data from our apps. Our apps send us information when they are 1st opened, opened 3 times, opened 5 times. Its very simple and lets us gauge how many people actually use the app more than once. I would have thought all developers would be implementing similar systems.
February 21 2009 at 6:36 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyInteresting article. Only thing I wonder is how many sales do you need to make the list as a free app...
To get promo codes for legal paid iPhone apps like iShoot, check out this cool twitter profile I found: www.Twitter.com/FreeiPhoneApps
How are they collecting this data, especially if how long apps are open? Are they data mining? Are apps phoning home?
February 20 2009 at 12:17 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyOf course... read slide 28...
Quote
"Install analytics in your application and watch your sessions per user over time."
The iPhone/iPod Touch are perfect devices for data mining. It has a always on connection as long as there is a signal. It's a good thing that Apple limited the iPhone SDK to prevent applications from accessing important/confidential information (unless you are using a jailbroken iPhone with non-App Store programs).
I honestly would not be surprised to find out that many iPhone applications are tracking usage.
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