pymnts.com
At the dawn
of 2016, mobile app developers have a problem that from the outside may not
seem like much of a problem. A little under a decade after the iPhone hit the
market and kicked off the smartphone revolution, there are an ever increasing
number of consumers spending an ever expanding amount of time using mobile
phone apps. And those consumers are reachable on a consistently expanding
number of social, search and commerce platforms.
Admittedly,
a pile of potential customers hungry for content and reachable at an infinitude
of digital nodes sounds like a high class problems for app developers to have.
And it would, but for two issues.
The first
is app discovery. Customers may spend a lot of time looking at their phone
apps, but they don’t really diversify that time all that much.
“Discovery
remains a major issue for app developers. We found that consumers spend an
estimated 80 percent of their mobile time in apps, but 75 percent of that time
is spent in the Top 4 apps,” Anthony Chavez, group product manager of mobile
ads at Google, told PYMNTS in an interview.
And
reaching those consumers — and convincing them to promote an app into the elite
Top 4 where users spend the bulk of their mobile minutes — is always made
easier by the proliferation of available digital channels for promotion,
because with all those options, come lots of choices.
Choices
that app developers (particularly small ones that have a much stronger
background in technology innovation and marketing strategy) are not exactly
ideally suited to make out of the gate. One option is the sawed-off shotgun
approach where lots of channels are tried and effects are measured, but such an
exercise can be costly both in terms of time and the employees who have to
monitor the channels and dollars.
Google
decided it could streamline this process for developers listing apps in the
Play Store through the introduction of Universal App Campaigns (UAC), a program
designed to allow developers to leverage Google to connect their apps to the
right users, essentially by empowering Google to create their app campaigns
end-to-end.
So what
does it mean for Google to generate a developer’s entire campaign, and how well
does it work?
POPULATING
A CAMPAIGN ACROSS THE GOOGLE ECOSYSTEM
At base,
UAC offers app developers with limited marketing time and a limited budget to
created a targeted, customized campaign in a fairly plug and play way.
“With
Universal App Campaigns, we wanted to harness Google’s power to match intent
and context, and deliver that capability to developers,” Chavez explained.
“Just provide a link to your Play Store listing, some creative and a budget,
and we will automatically generate your entire campaign.”
Once
developers have entered in that data, the magic of Google’s learning algorithms
takes over.
“Universal
app ads are generated on the fly by our system to fit the most relevant ad
inventory and placements available,” Google’s website notes.
And those
placements can be across the Google properties, including the Search Network
(search, play store, search partners), YouTube and The Google display network.
The system then decides how and when to place ads based on where its data
indicates the app will maximize the app’s downloads. Changes to display
location and content are made in real time as the algorithms respond to data
about clicks and downloads.
AdWords can
use your app’s listing in Google Play, any of the four lines of text that you
provide, images and an optional YouTube video to build your ads. The system
rotates your ads and adjusts bids automatically to get the most downloads for
your app. For example, if one line of text is performing better than another,
the system will show the better text more often.
The system
has been online for a little over 7 months, which means the obvious question
merits asking.
Does it
work?
ACORNS AND
UAC: A MATCH MADE IN (DIGITAL) HEAVEN
“We’ve seen
extremely good performance and been very pleasantly surprised out how quickly
it started showing results,” Sami Khan, Head of Marketing at Acorns, told
PYMNTS.
Acorns is a
small firm with a big idea about how it can change the face of investing for
the everyday.
The
problem, Khan notes, is most people treat investing as something to be done
after they’ve amassed a large quantity of disposable income, meaning that most
people either get started investing very late in life — or never really get
started at all.
Acorns
wants to make getting started easier by automating it. The app ties into a
user’s bank account and essentially collects the “spare change” in their debit
or credit transactions, meaning it would round a $17.77 purchase to an even $18
and drop the 33 cents into a consumer investment account.
Spare
change may not seem like the best way for someone to become the next Warren
Buffett — but, Khan noted, the funny thing about investing is that time can
make all the difference in the outcome.
“We don’t
believe anyone can beat the market, the key here is to track the market and
invest regularly,” Khan noted, saying if the team at Acorns knew how to beat
the market, they would close up shop and live off their extreme wealth. But, he
said, the point is that one doesn’t actually have to beat the market to profit
from investing in it.
“From
acorns do grow mighty oaks. These old-school investment companies have these
major sounding names, so we figured start small and grow steadily, and someday
you become an oak. When money is tied to the market there potential risks, but
there is also a potential gain. The money you put in a saving account won’t
really go anywhere, but with investing you give it a chance to grow over time,
especially over the long run.”
However,
getting customers to the long run is tough when one is a new financial services
company where getting to scale is a more immediate priority. From the word “go”
in 2014, when the firm launched its iOS and Android apps, the marketing team
was a small and lean part of the business.
This meant
that like many startups with an app to market, it turned to social media
channels, which in its earlier days was a fine strategy.
“What we
did like on the social channels is that people were vetting it out with each
other,” Kahn noted. “They used the comment section pretty heavily, and if they
had questions we could answer them.”
However, as
the firm is moving out its early startup phase, it was looking for more — and
also how to do more without necessarily working a whole lot more, since the
marketing department was still pretty lean and not looking to spend a lot of
time doing AB testing to check which digital channels were providing them the
best bang for their buck.
But after
signing up for UAC, they were pleasantly surprised to find out they didn’t have
to — the service did most of that work for them.
“IT was as
close to plug and play as I can imagine,” Kahn noted. “We’ve also seen
extremely good performance, there are days that UAC does half the cost per
install when compared to social channels; it’s a very large difference.”
Kahn also noted
that the use of UAC had caused Acorns to take a second look at a platform that
it had previously written off: YouTube. Google’s efforts placing their content
on YouTube did much better.
So what’s
next?
For Acorns,
the goal is to continue building out — and creating a content platform on
financial responsibility.
For Google,
the hope for UAC includes increased granularity in their partner’s view of the
result for their content — with an eye toward keeping the system plug and play.
And, of
course, improving their search algorithms so that content is best matched
across the platform — but if it is a day
that ends in a “y,” we probably could have assumed Google was working on the
search algorithms.
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