EL SEGUNDO, USA: What’s the best way to make money in the smartphone apps market?
Surprisingly, the answer is to give away apps for free—and to generate revenue on subsequent sales of in-app purchases.
In-app purchases will rise to account for 64 percent of total market revenue in 2015, up from 39 percent in 2011. Revenue from in-app purchases will increase to $5.6 billion in 2015, up from $970 million in 2011, according to the IHS Screen Digest Mobile Media Intelligence Service.
“Smartphone users overwhelmingly prefer free apps to paid apps, as we estimate 96 percent of all smartphone apps were downloaded for free in 2011,” noted Jack Kent, senior analyst, mobile media for IHS. “In 2012, it will become increasingly difficult for app stores and developers to justify charging an upfront fee for their products when faced with competition from a plethora of free content. Instead, the apps industry must fully embrace the freemium model and monetize content through in-app purchases.”
The business model of offering apps for free, then charging for in-app content, is known as “freemium.” This app strategy represents the fastest-growing segment of the global smartphone apps business, and will soon dominate the market.
By the end of the third quarter of 2011, free-to-download applications already represented 45 percent of the top-grossing US iPhone applications as well as 31 percent of the highest-earning US Android market applications. IHS Screen Digest calculates that 68 percent of the top-grossing US applications featured some form of additional content or functionality available via an in-app purchase.
Mobile games led the market, other app categories must follow
“Games pioneered the in-app business model,” Kent observed. “Now the approach has proven so successful, companies building other types of smartphone app must adopt this strategy if they are to maximize their mobile app revenues.”
Most in-app purchases at the end of the third quarter of 2011 in the US and UK involved buys of virtual currencies, such as additional chips for poker, or redeemable points in games. Virtual currencies so far have been almost exclusively employed in games, with other types of apps using in-app purchases for more specific item buys. IHS Screen Digest estimates 63 percent of in-app purchases on the US iPhone App Store at the end of the third quarter were for virtual currency.
The next most popular category of in-app purchase was for specific in-game functions or features, rather than general currency, which accounted for 22 percent of the most popular U.S. in-app purchases. Other popular in-app purchases include time-limited navigation services, dating and premium social network access, as well as specific functions or features for photo and video apps.
Payments for additional media content via in-app purchase did not make much of an impact on the top-performing apps in the third quarter of 2011, with just 2 percent of the top US in-app purchases offering additional television or video content, and none doing so in the United Kingdom. Time-limited subscriptions or in-app purchases to newspaper/magazine content did make an impact, however, in the United Kingdom—accounting for 5 percent of the top iPhone in-app purchases during the third quarter.
Source: IHS iSuppli, USA.
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