How to Drive Application Discovery: Tips for Guerilla and Paid Marketing
What separates an app rock star, from an app hobbyist? An app rock star understands the power of distribution, whereas, an app hobbyist creates an app based on personal preference, without a clear app distribution strategy.
Do you want to be an app rock star? If so, consider the following proven guerilla and paid application discovery tips when formulating your app marketing strategy:
Guerilla tactics: If you don’t have a revenue model, but want to get your cool consumer app widely discovered, here are a few tips on how you can get distribution:
- Search Engine Optimization (SEO)- Organic search engine marketing is competitive for blockbuster keyword terms. Focus on a wider, niche-buster strategy to break through the clutter
- PR/Social Media- Facebook and Twitter have millions of users. Make it easy for your apps biggest fans to start recommending your app to their friends
- Some good stuff came out of VentureBeat’s DiscoveryBeat conference a week ago
- App Galleries/App Stores/Directories- Whether you have an iPhone app and are publishing it to their store, a Firefox add-on on AMO(http://addons.mozilla.org), or a Windows app and published on a download library like Download.com (see Upload.com to submit your app). There are many free sites where you can submit your app for a free listing.
The main limitation with guerilla marketing is the lack of predictability, and the lack of scale. Most app marketers cannot get to a meaningful scale through a purely guerilla model.
Paid tactics: If you have a revenue model, it is easier to get scale fast. There are a few additional options for you:
- Paid Search Advertising: By far the most dominant way to market an application. Watch out though, keyword prices can be very competitive these days. Make sure you have a good landing page so your quality score is high.
- OEM/Bundle Marketing Partnerships: There are bundle network solutions like the W3i Application Network that can get you very wide distribution fast. If you have a large budget, you can try cutting a direct deal with hardware manufacturers.
- Wildtangent
- Yahoo, Microsoft Bing, HP/Ace
- Hard drive/back-up drives and back-up software
- Cisco thought so much about consumer app Network Magic that they bought out its parent company Pure Digital for many millions of dollars
- Display Ads: Not as effective as they once were, but may be an opportunity. For display ads to be effective, your app needs to be supported by most platforms, otherwise you’ll end up with a bunch of users who can’t use your app anyway.
- Pay-per-download (PPD) advertising: Many of the download libraries, like CNET’s Upload.com service that manages listings on Download.com, provide pay-per-download advertising.
- Television & Radio Advertising: It might sound a little odd to many of you online marketers, but I have heard many consumer app marketers say that television and radio spots were very effective at driving web traffic.
- Ascentive, Xeriton, and Carbonite all do radio and/or television
- Television
- Carbonite
- Ascentive’s FinallyFast.com
- Norton 360
- Windows I’m a PC
- Apple series of “App For Everything” ads
- I can’t confirm this one, but I heard at a recent conference that Apple maintains a schedule for the apps it will feature in its “App for Everything” television campaign, and they provide placement in the commercial as an extra incentive for certain iPhone app developers to meet their target release date
- Parody- Florida/Key West travel bureau spoofed it
- Radio
- Retail
- I would say don’t even bother with brick and mortar retail, but in certain app categories, you can probably get some traction.
- Television
- Ascentive, Xeriton, and Carbonite all do radio and/or television
Pick your partners wisely when it comes to paid advertising to support your application discovery. Most good channels allow you to try their model with low minimum commitments, and potentially work on a performance based pricing model.
Rob Weber, Vice President of Business Development and Co-Founder, W3i, LLC
Rob is an Internet marketing pioneer with over ten, profitable years evolving W3i in the consumer application industry.
