How does your mobile app pull in $100,000 with a single in-app message?
Well naturally, it helps to have a massive audience. But increasingly, it also depends on being able to segment and target that massive audience in real time with relevant multichannel messaging and customized offers.
Not every app publisher will have the millions of users that it likely takes to pull of that feat.
But more and more developers are signing up for platforms that allow them to market to their users — and even personalize their apps, rewards, and offers for individual users — in just the same way that more traditional marketers have done for years with tools like CRM, marketing automation, and conversion-testing platforms such as Optimizely.
“About 50 percent of the top Asian apps use this kind of functionality,” a Nudge VP told me at GamesBeat 2014, stressing it was a rough estimate. “Perhaps only 10 percent of apps here do, however.”
The functionality goes by many different names: mobile marketing automation, live ops, engagement engines, and more. The key players include Upsight (formerly Kontagent), DeltaDNA, Kahuna, Appboy, Nudge, Urban Airship, and perhaps Playfab and Playnomics (now part of Unity).
It’s not just about push notifications sent to your phone.
Ghermezian isn’t impressed, for instance, with mobile push provider Urban Airship, saying that push is a commodity that anyone can do (although Urban Airship also offers audience segmentation and mobile marketing automation solutions).
Some marketing automation tools even add other out-of-app marketing options, in some cases, such as retargeted ads.
“For instance, we can create one segment, then test 18 different messages for it, and then layer retargeting options on top of that,” Ghermezian told me. “For any given segment, we can then retarget based on their behavior … for example whether they’ve opened your email or not.”
The multi-channel messaging is important, he says, because 50-70 percent of users are turning off push notifications on their phones. Using different channels and messaging allows app publishers to reach more of their base, potentially up to 100 percent.
Or, app makers can target users who have turned off push and reach them via other channels.
“Our premise is that we first build the most robust platform for the backend for marketers,” Ghermezian told me. “Then we allow them to create as many segments as they like, provide every channel that they need to talk to that customer, then layer over multivariate testing, and finally optimal time messaging … the most optimal time to communication across push, email, or in-app messaging.”
It’s a market the big boys of marketing automation haven’t really started to touch, and as mobile increasingly becomes the new normal in the tech world as well as everyday life, it reveals a big gap. I asked Ghermezian about potential acquisitions — the IBMs, Adobes, SAPs, and other giants of marketing clouds and marketing automation have been active in picking up companies over the past few years.
“I can’t comment on that,” he answered predictably. “The big players in the industry … don’t have a mobile product. They’ll try to build one, but just having a push product doesn’t work.”
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