According to ABI research, Total
mobile app store revenues from pay-per-download, in-app purchase,
subscriptions, and in-app advertising will rise over the next five years,
growing from $8.5 billion in 2011 to $46 billion in 2016. Pay-per-download
dominates the category but in-app purchase is also rising. ABI Research estimates that 29 billion apps were
downloaded worldwide in 2011; up from 9 billion in 2010, the market growing at
12% month-on-month with nearly 36 billion apps downloaded in 2012 to smartphones
and tablets. According to Strategy Analytics, 2012 Global
mobile media revenues will be $150 billion, which will be 17% rise from $128
billion in 2011 and consumer spend will increase from $121.8 in 2011 to $138.2
billion in 2012 and advertiser spend will almost double from $6.3 billion in
2011 to $11.6 billion in 2012. Applications are forecasted to account for 19%
of global consumer spend, or $26.1 billion in 2012, rising 30.7% from 2011. Revenues
will remain relatively flat, music will continue to be a strong category,
accounting for 11.6% of consumer spend, or $16 billion and video will account
for just 2% of consumer spend globally. Apple’s App Store and Android’s Google
Play are now big business with 32 billion apps expected to be downloaded in
2012 compared with 23 billion last year.
According to
Juniper Research, more than 31
billion apps downloaded to mobile devices in 2011 and estimates consumer app
downloads are expected to reach more than 66 billion per annum by 2016. Annual
revenues from consumer mobile applications will approach $52 billion by 2016 as
consumer smartphone adoption accelerates along with the emergence of tablet
market. According to International Data Corporation (IDC), the global mobile
app downloads are forecast to soar to 182.7 billion in 2015. By the end
of 2014, Gartner forecast over 185 billion applications will have been
downloaded from mobile app stores, since the launch of the first one in July
2008. According to May 2011 IHS Screen Digest, combined revenues from the four
major mobile application stores run by Apple Inc., Google Inc., Nokia Corp. and
Research In Motion Ltd. will leap 77.7 %in 2011 to $3.8 billion from $2.1
billion in 2010 and revenues will continue rising in the next few years,
jumping to $5.6 billion in 2012, $6.9 billion in 2013 and $8.3 billion in 2014.
The total number of downloaded applications in 2011 is expected to reach 18.1
billion by year-end, compared to 9.5 billion last year, 3.1 billion in 2009 and
by 2014, downloaded applications will top some 33 billion.
Mobile Applications or Apps are
specialized software that run on a mobile device such as mobile phone, MP3
Player, Tablet that performs or executes a specific task and the apps have been
existed for several years on personal computers, but real fame for mobile apps
is because of Apple Inc.’s App Store that has revolutionized the mobile apps
world through its App Store on iTunes, a unique monetization model, that encouraged
developers develop apps that educate, entertain and assist the mobile users in
their day to day lives. Today there are many different apps like games, music,
social networking, photo/video, productivity, entertainment, etc and there are
more than million applications that are downloaded close to 20 billion times
onto smartphones, feature phones, Mp3 players and tablets. Apple Inc’s App
Store, Google Inc.’s Google Play (Merged Android Market & Music Service),
RIM’s Blackberry App World, Nokia Ovi Store, Microsoft Windows Marketplace,
Samsung Apps are the most popular apps stores. In fact availability of millions
of apps has fueled the sales of smartphones and feature phones and developers
are making money through a 70/30 revenue split where in developers get 70% of
revenues & rest to app store owners. Mobile device makers too are including
powerful chips, advanced software and hardware like advanced display screens,
long battery life, etc so that apps can run smoothly and customers can easily
access, install and use them easily.
App Stores are
critical for smartphones and tablets success and developers need to be
attracted and encouraged to develop applications that are bought and downloaded
by consumers. Developers need to be provided with necessary software
development toolkits, constantly be informed various updates being made to the
core software code, favorable revenue splits and conferences have to be
organized regularly so as to keep the interaction going and since past couple
of years many application stores have been set up by various players, which
also created a tough competition among the various stores to attract and retain
their developers. Developers have to constantly develop and innovate new applications,
work to add new features, improve app users experience, localize the app
according to user’s regional background, culture, language and make the apps
more users friendly to survive in the highly competitive market. App Store
owners too have to tightly control the content, organize the store properly and
the quality of applications on the stores has to be maintained to attract
consumers and earn revenues. Since consumers are looking for accessing the
various products and services they use through their mobiles and tablets,
businesses are forced to include apps as part of their integrated multi channel
distribution systems and apps help businesses to engage and retain consumers
which are also fueling the mobile applications market.
Developers and
Content providers are actively looking for other storefronts other than the
current App Store fronts and with development of technologies like HTML5 will
allow them opportunity to offer apps that consumers download directly and
install easily without the App Stores. The competition is further intensified
with mobile operators and telecom companies are offering their own app stores
for consumers and there is even more competition for attracting the developers.
But in near future Apple App Store will dominate the market distantly followed
by Android and the monetization of apps at stores other than Apple App Store is
a major concern and in fact slowing down the App Store revenues growth. Pay per
click and Pay per download models are loosing to In App Purchase models as
consumers are more interested in free apps and content and are not interested
in paying for apps upfront. Games dominate the market followed by music and
social networking apps, but photo/video sharing apps and productivity apps are
gaining prominence.
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing such an important information. This is very useful for us.
This is very useful to me...
Mobile Application
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