lunes, 10 de mayo de 2010

Will Click-Through Rates Get Caught In the Web App? Does It Matter?

Native apps still hold many advantages over emerging web apps. Depending on publisher size and industry, native apps provide better bang for the click with greater monetization and value among smaller and pay-per-download providers. But according to findings in a new Global Intelligence Alliance (GIA) whitepaper, it’s only a matter of time before the native app gives way to the webbie.

The paper theorizes that web apps will become a superior publishing platform able to increase and improve developer attention. User tracking and engagement are its strengths. By 2013, web app functionality will rival that of native apps on multiple channels. GIA believes that its tracking and engagement advantages along with its versatile functionality will decrease the native apps mind-share by 1/5th, down to 24%. Large publishers are big fans of the web app. Web apps fit in nicely with their business philosophy – distribution and development cost control.

If the web app has an Achilles heel, it’s the click-through rate. By and large, native apps generate better CTRs. But in lieu of cross-channel attribution and the multi-channel effectiveness of the web app, does the native apps click-through advantage really matter? And when you throw the cost, speed and simplicity of the web app into the mix, those smaller and pay-per-download providers may get caught up in the web app sooner than expected.

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