Friday 6 March 2015

6 Conversion Optimization Tips For App Sites

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Many app creators are faced with a challenge. They have two places that they need to market their app — in the app store, and on the web.

For the app store, they implement App Store Optimization (ASO), and for the online marketing, they use the typical marketer’s bag of tricks, including SEO, content marketing, and conversion rate optimization.

App creators have a single conversion goal: Get the user to click on the App Store or Google Play link.

And that’s where things get tricky. How do you design a conversion-centric website with an off site conversion goal?

Create a normal site.

You don’t have to do anything different to develop a great app store site.

What’s the main difference between an app site and some other ecommerce site that is selling a product? The primary difference is that the point of sale for the conversion site happens on a different platform. That’s it.

It only makes sense, then, to develop a normal site. Even though your focus product is an app, that doesn’t mean you should structure the main site any differently.

One of the major problems that I see with app websites is the development of a limited site. There’s very little content, few (if any) screenshots, a truncated FAQ, and a lack of contact information.

This is a mistake. The goal with an app site, as with any other site, is to create a normal site, and enjoy all the benefits that come with it.


Focus on SEO and ASO.

ASO, or app store optimization, is the sine qua non of app sales. If you want people to buy your app, you need to get it optimized in its natural habitat.

But does this mean you can afford to neglect SEO? Absolutely not. Many of your potential customers aren’t browsing in the app store. They are browsing on their desktop devices or searching via a mobile browser. They may not know that an app like yours exists.

Traditional search engine optimization is crucial even for an app. Make it easy for users to find you both in the app store environment, and in the search-driven environment of a web browser.

If a user finds your site through conventional search queries, it’s not an obstacle to her downloading it.

If you place all your effort into ASO and neglect SEO, then you are losing a huge percentage of potential customers.

Create lots of pages.

Many of the most notable apps completely neglect one of the core strategies of online marketing: creating plenty of website pages.

A truly robust website does more than this:

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This is a single-page website. It drives users to its purchase source on Google Play, but it has only one page on the actual website.

More pages translate into better SEO, more indexation, higher dwell time, more conversion funnel entrances, tactical keyword focus, and a host of other benefits. Just because you’re selling an app doesn’t mean you should cut off a major source of digital marketing.

Social signals.

One of the best sources of proof for app purchases is social signals. If a customer knows that there is an active community of users, along with social buzz, it increases the likelihood of a purchase.

Make sure you’re fully utilizing all the social channels, and connecting them with the website. Users will want to gain entrance to whatever social community surrounds your app.

Create content.

Don’t miss out on the power of content marketing in your app sales. Content marketing is effective for all kinds of products, apps included.

Apps, like any digital product, deserves its share of content. You can produce articles, how-tos, discussion, videos, infographics, arguments, Q&As, interviews, tutorials, and other information that users may want.

Create it! Any site that has conversions as its goal deserves content that backs up those conversions. The more content you create, the higher your chance of gaining valuable search traffic and converting users to your app.


Amplify your call to action.

Let’s just be honest. The standard buttons for driving traffic to the Google Play and App Store aren’t the most compelling.

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They are typically small, dull, and clearly unaltered by a conversion optimization expert.

Don’t settle for these buttons. I recommend, of course, that you keep them on the site. They are an easily-recognizable symbol for an app purchase. However, they are not psychologically compelling.

Depending on the nature of your landing page or website, you will want to create a more engaging conversion funnel. Strategically use large headlines, strong images, and evocative CTA buttons in order to increase the likelihood of a conversion.

Conclusion


Just because you’re selling an app doesn’t mean that you should do anything differently with your website. A conversion is a conversion, whether it happens on a checkout page or the app store. Use these conversion optimization tips, to improve your sales.

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