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5 Things You Should Know About Mobile Advertising

5 Things You Should Know About Mobile Advertising

App install advertising is on fire. BI Intelligence predicts that US mobile app install ad revenues will top $4.6 billion this year and grow to $6.8 billion by the end of 2019, growing by 14% a year from 2014. Beyond quantity, there’s also quality with the best ROI of all mobile ad formats.
IMAGE: Business Insider
A key development driving the surge in app install budgets involves the ability to properly measure app install campaignsovercoming the lack of cookiesand the inherent fragmentation in the mobile ecosystem with its different environments (mobile web and in-app), different platforms (iOS, Android, Windows Phone), and different devices (smartphones and tablets).
Furthermore, advertising analytics enable marketers to move towards a pure performance model in which an install, important as it is, is only the first stepto success. What happens after the install is what matters. By connecting in-app actions to a network that drove an install, the marketer can pinpoint the networks that can deliver the specific type of users that drive value to his business.

1. Driving Installs

In order for your app to be noticed, and stand out from the other million apps in the mobile space, it’s essential to generate a volume of installs from bothorganic and non-organic sources. What’s the difference you ask?

I – Organic Installs

Well, organic installs are installs that are mainly the result of app store exploration and organic search.
This means an application is discovered and installed after a keyword or brand search i.e. after a recommendation from a friend, looking at top apps per category, or being exposed to an app through an app store’s own featured recommendations.

II – Non-Organic Installs

Non-organic installs, on the other hand, are driven to the app store by active promotions outside the app store whether via a paid advertising campaign, or any other marketing campaign on owned channels (such as email, push notification, SMS or QR code).

A Successful Mix

In mobile app install advertising, it’s essential to make the most out of both routes. Driving the highest number of organic installs involves using App Store Optimization (ASO) tactics (which is is basically the app world’s equivalent to Search Engine Optimization (SEO)).
There’s a short list of factors that can either make or break your ASO ranking, i.e. title, keywords, number of downloads, ratings and reviews, screenshots and icons, etc.
Since the number of installs is a major factor in ASO, paying for new users will not only increase the number of non-organic installs, but more importantly the number of organic installs. In fact, our research has found that 1 paid install drives 3 more organic installs.
Paid app install campaigns are also a way to stand out in a saturated marketplace (there are over 1.4 million apps on both Google Play and the App Store!). In its recent report, eMarketer went as far as saying that it is a must.

2. Business Models

Four business models should be considered for app install advertising: CPA, CPC, CPI, and CPM. Each has its advantages and disadvantages. Let’s explore this:

CPM (Cost per Thousand)

Payment Terms: Pre-determined price for every 1,000 impressions (cost per mille – mille being the Latin term for one thousand).
Pros: Maximal brand awareness, reach, lower cost
Cons: Non-performance model, greater chance of non-transparent networks sending low quality impressions.

CPC (Cost per Click)

Payment Terms: Paid every time a user clicks on an ad.
Pros: Easier to analyze user engagement through ad creative A/B testing.
Cons: Fat fingers phenomenon means you risk paying for unintended clicks and damaging your brand name with awful user experiences; Higher cost than CPI if you don’t have the resources to optimize click-to-conversion path, lack of robust analysis tools, vulnerable to fraud.

CPI (Cost per Impression)

Payment Terms: Pre-determined price paid every time a user installs the application.
Pros: Performance model, lower cost, low risk.
Cons: Risk of non-transparent networks driving a high volume of low quality or incentivized traffic to drive installs.

CPA (Cost per Action)

Payment Terms: Pre-determined price for every in-app action defined by advertiser (revenue or engagement related).
Pros: Pure performance model adopted by the savviest data-driven advertisers.
Cons: The cost is often higher but so is the value generated so ROI only grows with higher LTV of acquired users.

3. A Good Place to Start

If you’re working under a budget and you are aiming for maximum impact based on what you have to work with, here are a few big guns to start with:

Twitter/Facebook

If you’re trying to target specific user personas while maintaining a strict budgetTwitter and Facebook are great places to start for their almighty data and in-depth demographics information about their audiences.
With superior targeting capabilities and unrivaled scale, it is no wonder that these networks command such a large chunk of app install ad spend. However, know this: there are only two ways to get analytics on your app install campaigns running on Facebook and Twitter:
  • by adding their SDK to your app
  • by using the SDK of a certified measurement partner (a handful of tracking providers that have a Facebook and Twitter’s official stamp of approval)

Google AdWords

Google AdWords app install campaigns can also be great when working with a tight budget. Here you can focus on your keywords – tapping into user intent as a powerful indicator – and invest more incrementally until you’ve achieved optimal keyword optimization.
This is great for longer campaigns that are intended for a large audience.

YouTube TrueView Ads

If budgets are higher, YouTube features TrueView ads which can be a great option. Particularly if you have a video preview of your app that you’d like to expose to a targeted and engaged audience.

4. Spread Your Wings

To maximize reach and the ability to find the media sources that can deliver specific users you are interested in, adding other ad networks to the mix is an important step. But with hundreds and even thousands of them out there, how will you find the best network for your app?
At any given time a typical app could be working with anywhere from 5-10different mobile ad networks. Big apps work with dozens at the same time. It’s therefore essential that you allocate your budget responsibly so you don’t wind up wasting it on publishers that are unable to meet your acquisition goals.

How to Pick the Right Mobile Ad Network

With so many mobile ad networks working with different traffic types, unique verticals, and specialized clientele, you need better methods to avoid poor performing publishers.
When approaching a network, here’s what you should inquire about:
1. Experiential Questions
Ask for testimonials, case studies, and personally reach out to companies with similar target audiences to drill them on their experience with the network
2. Pain Questions
How are you different from your competitors?
Can you give us an example of what you’ve done for one of your advertisers in our particular vertical?
3. Questions to ask yourself
Where do you wish to be at the end of this process? What are your goals you want to achieve by working with this ad network?
Even though you’ve made an educated decision about which networks to run with, it goes without saying that you must monitor their performance at all times. You should feel comfortable saying to the network, "hey, publisher number 4 is operating poorly compared to number three, please allocate more budget to number 3."
The network doesn’t have the same level of data that you have as an advertiser so it’s important to help them complete the larger picture. Stay in the loop and inform them when you see something going the wrong way.

5. Measure, Measure, Then Measure Again

Measuring app install campaigns involves two critical and intertwined parts:attribution analytics and advertising analytics.

Attribution Analytics

Attribution analytics tell us the channel/source that delivered each app install, whether organic, social, paid or owned. The mechanism is mostly based on the last click model – the last touchpoint a user clicked on before installing (and launching) an app (within a grace window of 7 to 30 days).
This model dictates that the advertiser only pays the network that delivers the last click (if engagement with a another non-paid source like email or organic search follows, the ad network doesn’t get paid).
Unbiased attribution companies serve as an impartial judge – trusted by both advertisers and networks alike to make a ruling. The fact that they areintegrated with hundreds of networks means that they have a bird’s eye view of the entire conversion path.
As such, they can make a decision that sticks while preventing advertisers from being double or triple charged by networks a user clicked on but were not the last click.

Advertising Analytics

Advertising analytics takes it one step forward. By measuring what a user does after the install and connecting it to the acquiring source (paid, social, owned or organic), you can view aggregated data and pinpoint the networks that delivered the best users.
For example, if a gaming developer knows that passing level 10 is a strong indication of high lifetime value, he can measure this in-app event and find out which networks delivered the highest number of these players at the best rates, and which did not, then optimize accordingly.
In an app environment dominated by the freemium model, delivering quality users who drive real revenue is an absolute must. After all, you can’t go to the bank with installs.

The Bottom Line

The digital environment is not only mobile first – it is app first. However, its big numbers have also created a hyper competitive space in which few apps make it, and most break it.
To succeed, marketers must run app install campaigns and make smart, data-driven marketing decisions to break away from the crowd and ensure their budget is maximized to its full potential.
Editor’s noteThis guest post is written for Hongkiat.com by Ran Avrahamy. Ran is the Head of Marketing at AppsFlyer.com who is managing a complicated relationship with mobile. He also loves being an entrepreneur though he hates the word "entrepreneur". Find him on LinkedIn and Twitter.
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