So App Annie’s ad analytics platform creates one central dashboard where developers can see all their networks and all their stats and compare them to find the best ones.
The challenge for App Annie, of course, is that while it currently supports “20+” ad networks, there are many more in existence. In fact, there are at least 85 that we gathered significant amounts of data on. And as we found, it’s the little guys that often bring in the bigger dollars — not the Googles of the ad world. So while 20+ is significant, it may not be enough for every developer.
The good news? Some of the top-monetizing networks on the planet are on the list, including Ad Colony and InMobi.
App Annie’s other announcement today is a new product for app store optimization: “ASO,” the new SEO.
That’s ensuring that your keywords, your description, your icon, and all your metadata makes your app as discoverable via the app store search engines as possible, helping app developers get more native downloads (as opposed to paying for installs via advertising, incentivized downloads, and other costly methods.)
With more than two million apps on Google Play and iOS, and 82 percent of users never searching past the first 25 apps, developers have a problem, App Annie says. In fact, according to its competitor Flurry, 60 percent of apps are never downloaded at all.
So App Annie’s new ASO tool analyzes your competitors as well as your own apps, discovers what you rank for and what you don’t, and makes suggestions for improvement. It can also provide an ordered list of apps that rank for a certain keyword, so you can see how far down the list you are.
The battle for app analytics is a fierce one, with competitors like Flurry, Distimo, and Localytics fighting App Annie and others for developer mindshare and the big data fruits of having their SDKs integrated into hundreds of thousands of apps living on hundreds of millions of devices, not to mention more private analytics and monetization suites such as that from Swrve.
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