Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

The changing face of app stores

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

When applications first hit the headlines, there were many stories about developers making small fortunes just from selling applications. Now there’s much more focus on promoting the app.

To understand what’s changed - and to discover how developers get their apps noticed inside ever-expanding app stores - I spoke to Carsten Frien. He’s CEO & co-founder of mobile advertising marketplace madvertise, a company that’s based in Germany and has recently opened an office in the UK.

Carsten explained there was a very straightforward reason for this new focus on promotion.

“We believe that the focus has changed because the advertising-funded model is more sustainable and is generating higher revenues for the application developers, and so they have switched from a paid-for application model to the free-to-the-end-consumer ad-funded application model”.

But what about application stores themselves?  Will we see them change as well? 

Very probably, suggested Carsten.

“If we go back in time by about 12 to 24 months, the landscape looked significantly different - so I would assume over the next couple of years we’re seeing many changes how app distribution is working. There’s a number of companies who are already trying to cut out app stores and trying to distribute apps directly from their own web sites.”

madvertise brings together advertisers with mobile website owners and application developers. One of its services, KatAPPult, guarantees to get applications in the ‘top 25’ Apple App Store listing. Rather bluntly, I asked Carsten how consumers could trust app stores when the charts can be manipulated.

“If we draw a parallel to Google.com, you have two types of search results. You have the free listings which are driven by the Google index, and you have the paid search results at the top and on the right-hand corner. In the app store you don’t have this distinction between free links and paid-for links. There is no traditional paid-for search model in the app store yet, so the application developer who wants to be in the top 25 has to generate a large amount of downloads in a relatively short period of time. Whatever is popular and downloaded a lot makes it to the top 25 list. I wouldn’t say you can’t trust the top 25 listing; it’s a good reflection of what’s popular in general terms.”

My conversation with Carsten went on to cover the making of a ‘good app’ and the future of mobile advertising. Click here to listen using the built-in player on our website, find our podcasts via RSS or hear the show on iTunes.

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusivePodcast - 8th February 2012

We start this week's podcast with a conversation about Facebook before moving on to the legal battle between Motorola and Apple, some interesting quarterly results, Google's Android watchdog, jobs, ads... and much more.

ExclusivePodcast - 1st February 2012

Apple, Samsung and Motorola have all published their quarterly results. We talk about these differing figures before moving on to O2's privacy problem, T-Mobile's new unlimited tariff, HP's plans for webOS and last year's growth in tablet sales.

ExclusivePodcast - 27th January 2012

James Rosewell introduces the 51Degrees.mobi Mobile Trends 2011 white paper, explaining how Apple's share of mobile web browsing is apparently falling. We also discuss several other mobile web trends in the document, which covers Europe, the USA and India.

ExclusivePodcast - 25th January 2012

We start this week's show with news of RIM's new CEO before moving on to another big-name departure at Yahoo. Then it's time for some impressive financial results, a new m-commerce device and a mobile phone insurance fraudster.

RSS
First3839404143454647Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«June 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive