Key to mobile app marketing: ASO (App Store Optimization)

“How will user find it?”, is a fundamental question you should ask when designing a mobile app and plan its marketing. Forrester Research provides some guidelines here: 63% of users get new apps by searching form them in app stores. Opinions of family, friends or other customers are secondary factors.

In practice it means that marketers must focus on improving app’s visibility in the app stores and learning ASO.

 

What is App Store Optimization (ASO)?

 

ASO resembles SEO, but concerns mobile apps: it’s a set of tools and practices that increase app’s visibility in app stores searches (e.g. iTunes for iOS, Google Play for Android, or BlackBerry World for BlackBerry). The aim? To make it as easy as possible for user to find a given app. The term ASO was brought into use in 2009 by Johannes Borchardt.

 

Marketing and PR without ASO are not enough

 

If you believe that big marketing campaign and buzz will guarantee success, learn about Clik app failure. Giant marketing and PR efforts were lost, because although audience knew about app and wanted to dowload it, they failed to find it in app stores. Statistically user would drop off after reading 5 pages of search results.

But don’t worry – here we come to help you transform into ace of ASO!

 

Title

 

Title is a key factor in optimizing your app store presence. How to shape it?

  1. Keywords. Your title should include keywords after which users would search your app. Apps witch titles including keywords are 10,4% more likely to be found that ones that don’t, says Robi Ganguly,
  2. Concision. Max. 25 characters – or at least put crucial words in the beginning, so they are highly visible,
  3. Uniqueness. Your title must be original, so your app won’t land among dozens of similar apps. When crafting a title, stress app’s unique feature, something, that only it can do.
  4. Communicative. Don’t pick abstract, sophisticated, metaphorical name. If you create a culinary app, don’t call it “Taste deconstructed” or “Vanguard of the palate”. Title should give a clear idea of what the app does.

Description

 

ASO requires understanding your customers and knowing what they look for. Think of content marketing: you don’t write content to fulfil some SEO standards, but to address your human readers – and it naturally involves SEO practices. Optimization comes as a result of good writing for humans. You do the same with ASO. Writing a description, don’t stuff it with keywords beyond necessity, but deliver good, useful characterisation of your product, using terms your user would use.

  • Show off (a bit). If you have already created popular app or did something to be proud of, put that information in visible place to increase reader’s trust and likelihood that they download your app,
  • What it does? App by definition DOES something, e.g. in contrary to website, which by definition ism static and simply contains content. So when crafting a description go to the core of an app and ask about its primal function. What it does? Calculates? Counts? Transforms something into something else? Plans? Integrates?

Reviews and ratings

 

Encourage your users actively to rating and reviewing your app. Segment them according to their engagement and send email and push notifications to active ones, asking for sharing their opinion. Reviews and ratings as social proof have huge impact on your human users, but are secondary factor in ASO, as Neil Patel says. Care for users’ opinion, but don’t expect good reviews to do the work for you. The same situation with amount of downloads.

 

Number of downloads

 

Apple already in 2012 spotted frauds in App Store. On the forums, crooks offered increasing the number of downloads artificially by using bots.

Such practices are penalised severely and that’s why it’s not an i portent criterion for ASO.

ASO: how to find keywords

 

For the time being App Stores browsers are quite primitive and – as list above shows – the crucial factor are keywords in title and in description. But how to find them? Evade Rossi, one of the most recognized ASO experts, recommends the following:

1. Brainstorm yourself. Write down all the words that come to your mind when thinking about your app: its subject, aura, mechanics, purpose. List as many as you can.

2. Use Thesaurus. Admit that you don’t know all the words in the world and check for synonyms of the words you listed.

3. Use Google AdWords Keywords Planner. You will find it in Tools.

4. Research competition. Check out their keywords and get inspired.

5. Use Autocomplete. What Google suggests when you type in your keywords? It’s helpful because gives you insight in real people’s behaviour and search.

6. Ubersuggest and other tools for SEO specialists.

7. Monitor on regular basis. Remember that efficiency of once set keywords can change.

 

ASO Tools

 

Just as with SEO, you can find plenty of ASO tools that help you find and plan your keywords. We prepared such list for you – find it in our post 7 Must-Have Tools for Mobile Marketers.

 

To make your app easy to find, take care for keywords in title and in description, and then focus on getting reviews and ratings.

SALESmanago is a Customer Engagement Platform for impact-hungry eCommerce marketing teams who want to be lean yet powerful, trusted revenue growth partners for CEOs. Our AI-driven solutions have already been adopted by 2000+ mid-size businesses in 50 countries, as well as many well-known global brands such as Starbucks, Vodafone, Lacoste, KFC, New Balance and Victoria’s Secret.

SALESmanago delivers on its promise of maximizing revenue growth and improving eCommerce KPIs by leveraging three principles: (1) Customer Intimacy to create authentic customer relationships based on Zero and First Party Data; (2) Precision Execution to provide superior Omnichannel customer experience thanks to Hyperpersonalization; and (3) Growth Intelligence merging human and AI-based guidance enabling pragmatic and faster decision making for maximum impact.

More information: www.salesmanago.com

CMO Role Getting Too Tight? Try Being A Growth Hacker Instead
CMO Role Getting Too Tight? Try Being A Growth Hacker Instead

    by Katrin Lewandowski, Senior Marketing Director at SALESmanago   The year is 2024, and the traditional Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) role is experiencing a transformation. Prominent companies, including brands like UPS and Etsy, have moved to eliminate or repurpose the CMO position—redistributing its responsibilities to roles such as Chief Commercial or Strategy Officers. […]

Skeletons in the eCommerce closet. Which one is your worst nightmare?
Skeletons in the eCommerce closet. Which one is your worst nightmare?

    As Halloween draws near, the urgency to unveil and exorcise the lurking skeletons from eCommerce closets becomes increasingly palpable. Just as the haunted season prompts us to confront our fears, the digital landscape compels businesses to confront the formidable challenges that often remain concealed.   In 2024, the stakes for eCommerce companies have […]

eCommerce Booms and Stagnates
eCommerce Booms and Stagnates

    By Brian Plackis Cheng, CEO at SALESmanago   Commerce is fickle; it stagnates and booms. Customer journeys are non-linear. And these are the things we know for sure. Without actionable customer data and personalised journeys, eCommerce companies are losing customers and prospects, eroding their brand, and sacrificing their competitive edge.    Embracing zero-party […]

Plateau of Productivity – Business vs AI face off 2024
Plateau of Productivity – Business vs AI face off 2024

    YouTuber Tomasz Rożek’s channel, “Science. I like It,” recently featured a fascinating discussion on “Next Steps of AI Expansion” with Aleksandra Katarzyna Przegalińska-Skierkowska. While the lack of English subtitles remains a mystery, the conversation itself is a must-watch.   Plateau of productivity   Tomasz Rożek graduated in physics and journalism from the University […]

Are Your Marketing Strategies Future-Proof? A Mid-Year Check-In for CMOs
Are Your Marketing Strategies Future-Proof? A Mid-Year Check-In for CMOs

    As we have crossed the midpoint of 2024, it’s an opportune moment for Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs) to evaluate progress and ensure their strategies align with… the “dynamic landscape” would be an understatement, really. With Gartner identifying AI integration, evolving marketing roles, and cross-functional growth as top priorities for 2024, CMOs need to […]