android

10 SEO Tips for Mobile Apps

30
Nov
app-store-android.png

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) has traditionally been applied to websites only, and mobile websites in a certain measure. However, talking about SEO for mobile apps is more seldom. Yet, having your mobile application visible online is actually crucial for your success. 

What is SEO for Apps?

As more and more people submit apps to the mobile application market places, notably Apple App Store and Android Market, the competition to rank high for application searches becomes even fiercer. 

Application marketplaces work similarly to simple search engines that only search a select inventory of mobile apps. Therefore all you know from SEO can be used when submitting an app.

When you think of SEO for mobile apps, keep in mind that you can actually talk about two things:

- Optimize your app rankings within mobile application marketplaces: key ranking factors include number of downloads, reviews, title, keywords, etc.

- Optimize your app rankings within search engines results pages (SERPs): traditional SEO ranking factors apply to app's download page.

Let me give you very specific SEO tips on how to optimize your app rankings both in Apple App Store and Android Market, as well as in search engines such as Google, Bing, and Baidu.

How to Optimize your App?

If your end goal is to increase downloads and installs of your app, you have to optimize it to make it more visible in app stores and SERPs.

Here are 10 SEO tips to optimize your app in both mobile marketplaces and SERPs

1. Define Target Audience Keywords

As for traditional SEO, you first have to define and understand your target market: who would be interested in downloading and using your app?

Following that, you must know what words and terms your audience search. You can use free SEO tools to see what keywords people use according to specific filters such as country, language, etc., and also get additional suggestions.

Of course, when you target a specific audience, it doesn’t exclude other users to find and use your app, you’re just more likely to attract the users who are most valuable to you.

2. Optimize App name

Having a good name for your App has positive impacts in terms of SEO, both in search engines and mobile app marketplaces.  

When I say a good name, I mean you should consider having relevant keywords in your app’s name that can include your brand name, but more importantly additional keywords that describe the app, and will be added to your keywords tag (see below).

Remember you have to think about character limits and ensure you follow the guidelines for each application store, especially if you use brand names (you may be requested to show licenses before your app can be approved).

3. Optimize App URL

As in “traditional” SEO, the URL of the app is also a ranking factor. You must ensure that the URL of your app contains your keywords. 

Note that the name of your app will automatically be used as your file name in the URL for your application.

If you don’t want to have an SEO-unfriendly auto-generated URL with numeric APP ID, it clearly means you should be sure to have the keywords you want in your file name (and avoid including special characters).

4. Create  Keyword Tag

After downloads, reviews, and name, keywords play an important role in promoting your app in Android Market and Apple App Store. 

For instance, in the Apple App Store, you should optimize all your keywords for 100 characters maximum, including spaces. You can separate your keywords with commas only.

Keep in mind that Apple App Store understands keywords one-at-a-time (rather than in phrases) unlike search engines. Therefore don’t forget to include plurals and synonyms to rank for those keywords. 

I’d recommend you to think about what people who don’t know your application may search if they're interested in an app like yours. 

And contrary to what you may read, spamming the keyword tag with un-related keywords or your competitor’s name won’t help you rank higher, and may even result in having your app rejected. 

5. Optimize App Description

When you write your app description, think about it in terms of potential users just scanning it. Most people won’t read your app description, especially if it’s free, so the vital information must be clearly highlighted.

What should you write in your app description? Share insight on what makes your app unique, without going overboard on features and specs. Focus on the main values your app offers.

Pay strong attention to how the text is formatted in the app, notably where line breaks since most of users will read your app description from their mobile phone.

For instance, in the Apple app store, each line can contain 120 characters, and  you only get three lines above the fold (before you have to click “more”), so that is a maximum of 360 characters including spaces.

A great tip is also to include user reviews directly in your app’s description, especially if your app doesn’t have many reviews in the store yet. This will encourage people to download your app, as well as add pertinent keywords in your download’s page, and therefore help you rank in search engines.

6. Choose Right App Category

Choosing the right category to submit your application to is actually crucial. 

Your app can be listed in multiple categories but you have to find the ones that both reach your target audience and have the least competition, notably in terms of apps and keyword search rankings.

MobClix is a very useful tool that can help you determine the level of competition between different categories of Apple apps. 

For example, you can divide the number of apps by free and paid, and then even sub-divide within the different categories. 

7. Display Screenshots and Icons

Don’t neglect your images as they may have a great influence on conversion for apps. Your application should display great images, especially good quality icons, as well as visual screenshots.

Pay attention to quality of images, as well as sizes that may differ from one mobile marketplace to another.  Besides, remember that large landscape images may be cropped.

8. Add Video Trailer

Another great feature of Android Market is video trailers that enable you to showcase your app. 

You simply need to add the URL of your video on YouTube. As text description, keep it short and highlight the top features of your app.

Video trailers clearly increase downloads and conversions for apps.

9. Get User Reviews

User reviews are taken into account by mobile marketplaces to rank your app. Of course, the more positive you have, the better.

If your app is new and doesn’t have many reviews, you can invite your users to leave positive feedbacks. However, make sure they like as reviews don’t expire. 

In addition, and as social media, interaction with the community is something vital. Try to spot top influencers among your users and interact directly with them. That is how you’ll satisfy them and get more and more users.

10. Promote App on Social Networks

Anything that is done online to promote your app is good for your SEO. From websites’ reviews to social networks, strive to promote your application online.

Use all your knowledge about SEO to optimize your pages to drive traffic to your app’s page.

For instance, the Android Market allows visitors mark apps as +1 and recommend them with their followers on Twitter. Those are simple but great ways to lead visitors to your app’s download page.

Feel free to share your other SEO tips for mobile apps!

Baidu Reveals New Mobile Software Platform

5
Sep
baidu-android

China’s top search company Baidu unveiled a new mobile software platform called Baidu Yi, compatible with Android phones.

 

Baidu uses Android to grow

The Baidu software platform will be preinstalled on compatible mobile phones and allow users to directly access Baidu services, such as the “click & search” feature: while reading an e-book on a smartphone, a user can click on a word in the book to perform a Baidu web search for it.

Baidu announced that the platform will be available on Android mobile phones first, but it is expected to be compatible with other OS in the future too. What happened to Symbian ? Last year, Baidu and Symbian teamed up on mobile box computing but Baidu appears to see more potential into Android. 

Baidu’s strategy consists of expanding its mobile service offerings as well as trying to attract more customers, especially Android phone users.

What is interesting here is that Baidu is trying to take advantage of Android's popularity. It is actually a way to compete more fiercely with Google while using its competitor's mobile OS.

Of course, this platform can be seen as a first step before Baidu releases its own mobile OS. Baidu never hid its intentions to develop its own mobile OS to compete with Android.

The release date of Baidu Yi was not publicly announced, nor the names of devices on which the platform will be pre-installed.

Baidu leads China’s search market

Baidu has gained much of Google's share of the Chinese search market  since the US company moved its China search engine to Hong Kong.

According to Beijing-based research firm Analysys International, Baidu has a 75.9% share of revenue in China's online-search market in Q2 2011 while Google’s share is 18.9%. In Q1, Baidu had 75.8% of the market and Google 19.2%.

Given the huge size of the market (more than 485 million Internet users in China as of June 2011), many search companies strives to get a slice of the cake.

In addition to Baidu and Google (and Baigoogledu that enables users to perform a web search on both search engines), other major competitors include Sogou, Soso and Bing (see the list of main search engines in China).

Baidu to compete with Google's mobile OS Android

30
Jul
baidu

The Chinese search engine Baidu considers to enter mobile OS market in order to compete with Google's Android.

Baidu to create mobile OS similar to Android

Baidu'd like to launch its own open source mobile OS. The Beijing-based company won't actually start from scratch since it hired former Google's employees who left the US company involved in a confrontation with the Chinese government.

They will work on the mobile OS project, so there are great chances that Baidu's mobile OS emulates Android in many ways.
 

Search engine war goes mobile

Baidu is leading China's search engine market with a 70% market share, far ahead of Google's 24%. However, when it comes to mobile search, both companies have about 26% of the market. 

The Chinese company has clearly to react if it wants to get a prominent position in the mobile search engine market. Creating its own mobile OS would help it to achieve this objective.

Moreover, Baidu is in talks with mobile handset makers that use Android about embedding a Baidu search box on their phones that are destined for the Chinese market.

Symbian leads China's mobile OS market

Android has made significant progress within the Chinese market. However, Android phones made up only 0.4% of the 7.25 million smartphones sold in China during Q4 2009 (according to technology research firm Analysys International), but they're now widely distributed by many of China’s largest wireless carriers.

The leader of the mobile OS market is Symbian, mainly used on Nokia phones. According to Analysys, Symbian-powered phones made up 72.1% of the smartphones sold in China during Q4 2009.
 
The Symbian foundation recently announced it would set up a joint lab along with Baidu to help integrate Baidu search functions onto Symbian.

Apple's App Store to face strong competition

26
Jul
App Store screenshot

Launched two years ago, Apple’s App Store has become the leading mobile application platform worldwide, but other players are seeking to emulate App Store’s success.  

App Store: 225,000 apps and still counting

The App Store enables iPhone, iPod Touch and now iPad users to download apps that take advantage of all the device features. The idea was to create a platform where developers could build web-based applications.

As of June 2010, there were more than 225,000 apps, 5 billion downloads, and 150 million active users of the service. The App Store launched in July 2008 with only 500 apps, but that number went up quickly: 10,000 by December 2008, 100,000 the following November and 225,000 latest June.
 
Despite accusations of having an inconsistent approval process, the App Store has been a tremendous success for Apple, independent developers and ordinary users. And it's clear that the App Store has largely contributed to iPhone’s success as many users actually buy an iPhone for the apps.
 

No App Store without developers

For every application, developers get a 70% cut of revenue, while Apple takes 30%. This revenue model has enabled developers to generate more than a billion dollars in App Store revenues. 
 
What is cool is that the App Store allows even the smallest development team to compete with the giants. However, it's hard to stand out from the crowd, so App Store millionaires are the minority.
 
According to a study by IT researcher Gartner, there will be 4.5 billion downloads of applications and 6.2 billion dollars will be sent on App Store in 2010.
 

App stores for other devices

The number of “consumer-oriented handset downloads” is expected to rise from less than 2.6 billion per year in 2009 to more than 25 billion in 2015, according to a Juniper Research report.

The application store trend seems inevitable since it is being driven by industry players who are seeking to emulate Apple’s success with the App Store. Competitors have indeed developed their own software stores.
 
Palm published an application store similar to the App Store for Palm devices and announced the App Catalog for webOS on the Palm Pre. RIM also launched its application store named "BlackBerry App World".
 
Microsoft has released Windows Marketplace for Mobile, an application store for their Windows Mobile platform while Nokia has launched the "Ovi Store" (which replaced its earlier "Download!" application). Moreover, the independent giant GetJar has recently passed 1 billion downloads.
 
Another platform, Android Market is used in conjunction with OHA's Android operating system. According to AndroLib, Android Market now has about 92,000 applications, and is on pace to surpass the 100,000 benchmark by the end of July 2010. It's the main threat for Apple's App Store.
 

Google's App Inventor will lead to an app explosion

Google has recently released a new product called "App Inventor" that will change the landscape for creating apps for smartphones. From a simple Web interface, App Inventor allows people who don't know how to code in Java (Android's app programming language) to create apps for their Android phones.

The App Inventor tool allows consumers to create their own applications rather than hope developers create what they need and get it into an app store.
 
By the way, if only 1% of Android phone buyers decide to create only one application, that means that 1,600 (Google says 160,000 Android devices activated/day) more Android apps will be created every day.  
 
That means that over half a million additional apps could be created every year. That is more than two times Apple's current total app count...

Google's loss is Baidu's gain

20
Jul
Baidu gains market share against Google

China's leading search engine Baidu has gained market share in the second quarter, at Google's expense.

Baidu leads China's search market

According to market researcher iResearch, China's search market by revenue grew 53.2% in Q2 to 2.64 billion yuan (approximatively $390 million).

Baidu's share of the market rose to 70.8% in the quarter ended in June from 67.8% in the first quarter, whereas Google’s market share fell to 27.3% in Q2, compared to 29.5% in Q1.

Baidu has therefore reinforced its leading position in China's search market. In the end of 2009, Google's market share was 32.8% versus Baidu's 64.8%. 

Google's incidents in China

Baidu's gain may be due to the several episodes between Google and the Chinese government.

Latest January, Google threatened Beijing to stop filtering its search results in China after a serious hacking episode. In March, Google decided to redirect all queries from its Chinese site to its Hongkongese site.

By doing so, Google was taking a risk to be kicked out of the country. Since Google's ICP was expiring end of June, the US search giant decided to stop automatically redirecting its Chinese users and created a dedicated page on google.cn in order to have more chances to get its license renewed.

The Chinese government gave Google the permission to continue its activities in China beginning of this month. But some damage has already been done as research data show. Baidu was actually already gaining market share in the beginning of the year at Google's expense.

Baidu to win the battle?

Local search giant Baidu will probably continue to win the battle over Google in China.

Google won't currently be able to be the default search provider on software and online products in China, which has been crucial in growing their market share in the US and other countries.

The question is now to see what Google's next move will be. They recently announced that they wanted to add other services to their Chinese page.

Following Google's lower-than-expected Q2 earnings, Baidu is expected to report robust Q2 results tomorrow. 

Mobile search war

The fierce competition between Google and Baidu isn't merely about regular search. It's also about mobile search.

Google’s mobile OS Android is becoming more and more popular in China. However, China’s officially sanctioned version of Android is using new local platforms, rather than Google applications for the phones. And Baidu is also leading the competition for new mobile Internet search platforms.

Anyway, there is still plenty of room for a share of the pie. According to a government report, China's online population, already the world's largest, has surged to 420 million by June. And the number of mobile Internet users in China has hitten 277 million and is expected to reach 957 million by 2014.