Tag Archive: iPhone apps

What Type of Online Shopping Rose 460% Over Last Year?

TheFind, a comparison shopping engine, released some statistics on mobile shopping sessions for this past Thanksgiving weekend. TheFind offers a mobile site as well as iPhone and Android apps.

The highlights include:

  • 25% of its traffic came from mobile devices. That’s up 10 percentage points from 15% of all shopping visits for Thanksgiving weekend in 2009;
  • Total number of mobile shopping sessions increased 460% from Thanksgiving weekend last year;
  • Nearly half used the bar code scanner to scan a bar code of an item and search for prices across the web;
  • The items most frequently scanned in stores include electronics and video games; and
  • 300% more consumers use its iPhone app than its Android app.

Does your business offer your customers mobile apps and a mobile site?

Full story at Internet Retailer »

What Does A Week at No.1 In the App Store Look Like?

Have you ever wondered what a week as the number one free iPhone app in the App Store translates to in downloads and ad revenue?

I certainly have and this story gives valuable insight into what it really looks like to be number one in the App Store.

Air Horn, which simply makes a very loud horn noise, was at the top spot for 8 days. During that time, Air Horn has made $20,000 from ad banner advertising and in-app purchases.

Three days before the app hit the top spot, Air Horn had just 5,453 downloads a day, and was ranked 804 on the list.

On the app’s first day at number one, downloads grew to 173,002 that day. A week later, the app was still number one with 129,286 daily downloads.

As the downloads rose, daily ad impressions increased from 160,000 per day to more than two million per day at its peak.

A week after reaching number one, Air Horn had served a total of 4 million 3rd party ad network impressions. The average initial eCPM was $2.06 and increased to an average of $2.62 over eight days.

Are you convinced you can make money with free iPhone apps?

Full story at Techcrunch »

35% of Top Grossing iPhone Apps are Freemium

A year after Apple began allowing free apps to include in-app purchases, 34 of the top 100 grossing iPhone apps are free. They make their money through in-app purchases of mostly virtual currencies as well as other premium features.

In January, there were just two freemium iPhone apps in the App Store among the top 50. Now there are about 20 apps among the top 50 grossing apps with in-app purchases.

Freemium apps are still a small percentage of apps overall. The percentage of free apps with in-app purchases has increased from 1.10 percent in the second quarter to 1.34 percent in the third quarter.

The largest portion of in-app purchases are in games (3.8 percent) and social networking apps (4.3 percent).

The ten top-grossing iPhone apps include Restaurant Story (#3), Tap Zoo (#4), NBA Game Time 2010-2011 (#7), Haypi Kingdom (#9) and Kingdoms at War (#8).

But it’s not just gaming apps. The New York Road Runners Marathon App, which allowed real-time tracking of the marathon, went for $3.99, and shot to No. 1 during the race. The NBA Game Time app also hit No. 1 with its ability to receive videos, highlights, radio feeds advertising free.

Meanwhile, the iPad, with its generally higher price points for paid apps, isn’t as lucrative for freemium apps compared to paid apps. None of the top 100 apps on the top-grossing list are free.

Freemium has been popular in Asia for years with pioneers like Nexon leading the way, and has also been the model of choice for Facebook games, helping Zynga achieve a $5.5 billion valuation. IPhone games publisher Ngmoco switched early to a freemium model and hit No. 1 on the top-grossing chart with Eliminate Pro.

Are you considering switching to the freemium model for your next iPhone app?

Full story at GigaOM »

Meet the App that Orders Your Coffee

Urban Coffee Company, an independent coffee shop located in the heart of Birmingham’s business district, has launched the UK’s first iPhone app which allows customers to pre-order their drinks so they are ready when they arrive.

The app allows customers to spend more time enjoying their coffee and less time queuing for it. Busy professionals from the surrounding Colmore Row area can order a round of coffees for the whole office and have it ready to take away with much less waiting time.

Since the app launched on iTunes three weeks ago, 200 users have downloaded it and over 100 orders have been placed via the app.

Would your business benefit from a mobile app?

Full story at Mobile Marketing »