Would your favourite apps be as fun on a mobile responsive site?
Think about all your favourite and most used apps (Facebook, Instagram, MyFitnessPal, Uber, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Twitter to name a few) and ask yourself if they would be as much fun on a mobile responsive site as opposed to a mobile app? Probably not. Mobile apps are actually designed all around the core activities of engagement. Is your business model designed to offer your customer something to return for? Any business with an aim for high retention and engagement goals, such as the apps listed above, should and do consider a mobile app.
Analytics are key but are not the decision maker
A great way to visualise whether a mobile app is something you should expand towards is to look at your analytics, to see which customer demographics and device/technology leads are using to access your site. For Salon Tracker, we know that our mobile traffic has grown significantly in the last 4 years. In 2012, only 26.74% of people were landing on our page through mobile, whereas in 2015 we had a whopping 61% of clients' access our site through this platform. This means that for our business, mobile optimisation is essential (as it is for most of us as we move further into the 21st century). Do we need a web app? Probably not right now. We do not offer an online shop, booking area, discounts, a forum or gallery- simply because we do not need to do so at this moment in time for our total addressable market. Our aims are not built on engaging with the customers at this stage, it’s about offering them information that they can take away. Instead, we offer squeeze pages. Squeeze pages are our way of getting the potential client’s email, sending them our white papers and product brochures, in order to grow a relationship built on trust and transparency.
I think my business needs a mobile app- what now?
Mobile apps are great because they offer absolutely everything in one hit. Even if your website is optimised for use on a mobile, apps are undeniably more seamless and, accessible on the go. However, they aren’t easy or cheap to build. A great place to start is this article linked below by Joe Stangarone (MRC-Productivity 2012). Although this article was written now 4 years ago, it gives a great insight into the difference between native apps and mobile web apps, highlighting the pros and cons of offering access to a new platform at a less expensive cost.
I’d like to just finish by quoting Stangarone (MRC-Productivity 2012) “What will the mobile landscape look like in another 5 years? Maybe a new OS will take over. Maybe iOS and Android will lose popularity. Who knows? The one thing I do know: The web isn’t going anywhere. Mobile web apps offer the only way to protect your company from changes in the mobile landscape.”
Source: (MRC-Productivity 2012)
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