Those little ads on the side of Facebook? They're a big deal.
Users of the Facebook mobile app may have noticed that the app now features more ads prompting users to download certain apps. Whether they be ads in the news feed itself or placed on the sidebar, these ads are just a new little blip for Facebook users to contend with.
However, these little blips could be actually having a significant impact on the way that marketers try to sell apps to iOS users, according to ÂÂa company called Fiksu [1] that tracks app downloads and performance in the context of marketing.
What happened is that since Facebook launched these ads in May, there was an increase in the average number of daily downloads among the top 200 free apps (which are among the most-heavily marketed), from 5.61 million per day in April to 5.9 million per day. That might not sound like a lot, but think: plus an extra day in May, thatâs going from 168.3 million downloads to 182.9 million downloads. Thatâs more potential customers to spend money on the in-app purchases that help make these games so profitable. Thereâs a reason why thereâs so many free-to-play titles.
This has all come at a good cost to marketers, too. Despite the increase in downloads, the cost to get a loyal user, defined as someone who opens an app three or more times, dropped from $1.50 per user the month before to $1.33. If Facebook mobile ads and the increased inventory they offer are to thank for this, then expect more of them.
That little sidebar that features sponsored apps? Itâs staying, and could expand. Expect to see more apps advertised in the news feed. While Fiksu says that some of the increase could be related to changes in behind-the-scenes tracking, Facebook still likely plays a major role in it. Itâs still one of the most-downloaded and most-used apps out there, and it represents a big opportunity for Facebook to start making some actually money from mobile (where theyâve had trouble making money before), and for those developers that want to give you a new way to spend money on virtual coins and gems to break more blocks or build more buildings in their free-to-play games. Itâs a potential union that is all strengthened by your desire to keep seeing funny memes and have political arguments with people from high school.
Posted in: App Store Insiders , BlogReview disclosure: note that the product reviewed on this page may have been provided to us by the developer for the purposes of this review. Note that if the developer provides the product or not, this does not impact the review or score.
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