Distimo Publication - January 2013
Distimo Publication - January 2013
Distimo Publication - January 2013
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
me is my na Hello,
A brief introduction
Distimo has a very clear objective: to make the app market transparent. The company was born out of the frustration of a lack of insights into the performance of apps and the manual work needed to track important metrics.
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Founded in 2009, Distimo is a privately held company based in The Netherlands. Follow us on Twitter, read our blog or learn more at www.distimo.com.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
The effect of a price drop is more intensive in the Apple App Store for iPhone than it is in the Apple App Store for iPad. On average, cumulative downloads grow by 1665% five days after the price drop in the Apple App Store for iPhone, while the growth is 871% on the iPad. The effect on downloads of a lower price ends, when the price increases again. Download volumes in the Apple App Store for iPhone drop by -46%, aggregated over five days after a price raise. In the Apple App Store of iPad, the drop in downloads is somewhat higher, -57%. A price drop positively affects revenue in both stores. Revenue in the Apple App Store for iPhone increases by 95% three days after the price drop. This percentage was lower in the Apple App Store for iPad, where revenue grows by 51% because of a price drop.
The effect of a price drop on revenue is significant and becomes larger in the long run in both the Apple App Store for iPhone and iPad. Revenue from one-off fees and in-app purchases are both contributors to this increase in revenue in the long run.
The price elasticity on revenue in Apple App Store for iPhone is the lowest, which means that revenue reacts most heavily on any price change in this store. Here, a 1% price drop leads to a 1.2% revenue increase within five days. The price elasticity in the Apple App Store for iPad is -0.7, which indicates that a 1% price drop causes a 0.7% increase in revenue.
The effect of price events is similar to applications in Google Play. However, the effect in this store seems less powerful compared to the Apple App Store. The ranking effect seems to be an explanation for this difference.
Alongside this publication we host a free webinar on the subject of price events on Thursday 7th of February @ 5:00 PM (CET). Please register here to join the webinar.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Introduction
This months publication discusses the effects of price changes on download volumes and revenue. Many stories are told and some rumors go around whether price strategies do pay off. However, what can we learn from the data? Does it really pay off to develop a price strategy or do consumers not react much to price change if at all? We have received many questions over the years from our Distimo Analytics users about the impact of price drops or increments. We devoted our monthly publication a year ago to a related subject of being featured in the app store and the effect of putting an app on sale on an apps rank. We are able to study the effect of price changes in more detail with the introduction of AppIQ, which includes daily estimates of download volumes and revenue for each application. In theory, price drops and increases might both be beneficial for developers for different reasons. On the one hand, developers can put their apps on sale to achieve a higher rank. This would attract more attention, which generates more revenue in the long run. Additionally, the surge in paid downloads due to the lower price could make up for the loss in price. Alternatively, consumers might be eager to pay a higher price for popular applications, which would be an incentive for developers to raise the price of popular applications. These are just general thoughts about pricing strategies, but essentially developers develop and engage in pricing strategies in order to boost revenue. All data included in this months publication covers the Apple App Store for iPhone and the Apple App Store for iPad during December 2012 in the 10 largest countries, which are in alphabetical order: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Russia, United Kingdom and United States. Moreover, this analysis is only based on applications that have reached the Top 400 Overall and had at least one price change in December. Please keep this mind, because these Top applications have reached some degree of popularity, which could bias this analysis towards higher growth figures.
8% 9% 7% 9% 25% 42%
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The graphs above provide insights about the size of price change events and include both price increases and price drops. The size of price events differs from event to event. Some prices changed less than one dollar, while other changes were more significant. Forty-two percent of price changes was in the range of $1.00 to $2.00 in the Apple App Store for iPhone, one-third of the changes on the iPad fitted in this range. Prices in the Apple App Store for iPad had the largest fluctuation when we look at the tiers that indicate large price changes. Twenty percent of all price events involved a change larger than $4.00, while in the Apple App Store for iPhone this percentage was 15%. The largest price change that we found was a $200.00 price change for Add2Cart Amana by Data Driven Decisions on the iPad.
1800% 1600% 1400% 1200% 1000% 800% 600% 400% 200% 0% 871%
1665%
The effects of price raises are depicted in the figure above. A price raise often marked the end of a sales period. However, some developers raise prices without having put their application on sale. The outcome of a price raise is that it negatively affects download volumes. However, the extension of the effect is lower for price raises compared to price drops. Downloads decreased by 46% in the Apple App Store for iPhone and by 57% in the Apple App Store for iPad. We can conclude from this that applications do not maintain the download level that is reached by a price drop once the price increased again.
Please note that in general download volumes and revenue went up in December by 25% to 40% compared to November. This could have a significant effect on the outcome of this analysis and could explain the extreme growth rate as result of a price drop compared to the less extreme drops for price increases.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Effect on Revenue
The graph below shows the average revenue growth three, five and seven days after a price drop in both Apple App Stores. The graph supports the notion that the surge of downloads caused by the price drop, compensated the lower charged price during the sales period. This effect becomes already visible three days after the event took place. Revenue in the Apple App Store for iPhone went up by 95% within three days after the price drop. The revenue boost for applications on the iPad is significantly lower, revenue increased by 51% three days after the price drop.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
product (in this case the store) is relatively inelastic, which means that a price drop of 1% results in revenue growth of less than 1%. This was the case for revenue in the Apple App Store for iPad, where a 1% drop in the selling price of an iPad application resulted in a 0.7% increase in revenue aggregated over five days. The price elasticity on revenue for applications on the iPhone is lower than -1, which suggests that the revenue in this store are relatively elastic: a 1% price drop in the Apple App Store for iPhone led to a 1.2% increase in revenue
Price Elasticity: -1
Price Elasticity: -1
The relative high price elasticity in Apple App Store for iPhone compared to the lower price elasticity in the Apple App Store for iPad suggests that consumers in Apple App Store for iPhone are more sensitive to price changes compared to the consumers in the Apple App Store for iPad.
Recap
Based on our analysis, we can draw the conclusion that price drops pay out in terms of downloads and revenue in the Apple App Store. The effect on revenue became even more intense in the long run, which is caused by an increase of revenue from one-off fees and in-app purchases. Moreover, the relative high price elasticity in Apple App Store for iPhone compared to the lower price elasticity in the Apple App Store for iPad suggests that consumers in Apple App Store for iPhone are more sensitive to price changes compared to the consumers in the Apple App Store for iPad. Next week on Thursday 7 February, we will host a free webinar about price strategies where we discuss this months publication in even more detail. Aside from presenting the main findings from the publication, we will also show a case study about what happens when a paid application becomes free. Register for free here to join us for the webinar.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
App publisher
Bladeslinger Ep.1 [adult swim] Loud Crow Interactive Inc. Defiant Development Iddiction CAPCOM CAPCOM Capybara Games Inc. SQUARE ENIX Warner Bros.
Price Change
$2.99-->$0.99 $0.99-->$0.00 $4.99-->$2.99 $0.99-->$0.00 $1.99-->$0.00 $4.99-->$0.99 $4.99-->$0.99 $4.99-->$1.99 $8.99-->$3.99 $5.99-->$0.99
MEGA MAN X MARVEL VS. CAPCOM 2 Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP FINAL FANTASY I, II & III Batman Arkham City Lockdown
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
App name
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Snark Busters: High Society HD
A Witchs Curse: Princess Isabella HD
App publisher
Alawar Entertainment, Inc Big Fish Games, Inc Loud Crow Interactive Inc. A Tasty Pixel Audanika GmbH Oceanhouse Media Capybara Games Inc. Ledinsky Software GmbH Toy Studio LLC TRADEGAME Lab Inc.
Price Change
$3.99-->$0.99 $4.99-->$1.99 $4.99-->$2.99 $7.99-->$3.99 $15.99-->$7.99 $4.99-->$0.99 $4.99-->$1.99 $3.99-->$0.99 $2.99-->$0.00 $4.99-->$1.99
A Charlie Brown Christmas Loopy HD SoundPrism Pro The Lorax - Dr. Seuss
Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP F-Sim Space Shuttle
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Track daily downloads and revenues of any app with Distimo AppIQ
Distimo AppIQ allows users to:
Track and compare app downloads and competitor app downloads: Analyze an apps market share and compare download figures versus a competitors in one chart. The chart shows the daily downloads and can also be aggregated per week or month. Events such as price changes, featured listings and version updates are also included, and allow the user to analyze the influence of each event on downloads. Analyze competing app revenues including those from in-app purchases: View daily revenues from competing apps side-by-side with the their own app and get extensive insight into the revenue generation of different business models, revenue per country, and platform. Identify the most popular and upcoming new apps: The Leaderboard provides the daily rankings of all applications, and can be viewed by app store, country, category, device, and free/paid/gross. All of the major app stores are supported, and for iOS and Android, the daily volumes per individual app are also provided. AppIQ users see the daily downloads and revenue from in-app purchases and one-off fees. Developers can also use the Leaderboard to see how many downloads are needed to achieve a certain ranking on any given day.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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Disclaimer This work is licensed under Creative Commons License Attribution Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Netherlands. This license is available for download at http:/ /creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/nl/. This license ables you to use, copy, spread, and build upon this work non-commercially, as long as you credit Distimo and license your new creations under the identical terms.
Distimo 2013, some rights reserved. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.