The rise of the planet of the apps
Smartphone applications are putting convenience and connectivity into the consumer’s palm, creating a sense of power and individualism she would not want to trade
MUMBAI:
At a recent party, 40-something insurance manager Preeti Sinha
exclaimed at another attendee, “What? You’re not on WhatsApp?
Why not? It’s a great way to stay in touch!”
WhatsApp,
WeChat, Facebook, Google… today’s smartphone users have all
these apps and many more on their screens.
“App
is the new calling card,” said Siddhartha Roy, COO, Hungama
Digital Media Entertainment. “The growing use of smartphones –
125-130 million this year – in India, will see the app environment
expand.”
“For
consumers, especially youth, apps are creating huge exposure to the
various facets of their own lives,” said Rajiv Dingra, 29, founder
and CEO of digital media agency WAT Consult.
Atul
Hegde, CEO, Ignitee Digital Services, said, “The app story is not
a fad but here to stay. The mobile is your first point of call and
apps are riding that.”
There
are apps for communication, gaming, entertainment, fitness,
productivity, business, besides utility apps. “The app environment
is making us more responsive, more quickly,” Dingra said.
Nielsen
Informate’s research reveals that app choices are governed by
utility and popularity.
“Apps
like Whats App, Facebook, Candy Crush dominate their categories
because they provide repeated utility. Popular apps often reach
critical mass by word of mouth and then create a snowball effect.
This is why the top 20% apps account for 70% of the time spent,”
said Prashant Singh, MD, Nielsen India.
Chat
– driven by WhatsApp – is the most popular app category. “The
average chat user consumes 100 MB of data on chat alone. Games –
almost all free – account for one out of every two apps installed
and typically have retention of two months – Candy Crush has
lasted longer – compared to utility apps such as news, chat or
social networking that retain 50%-plus users for over six months,”
Singh said.
Nielsen
sees apps replacing traditional mobile browsing. “The popularity,
in reach, for shopping apps has doubled from 13% to 26 % from
January to June 2014, whereas shopping sites grew from 27% to 31%.
The reach for the Facebook app is 54% and the website, 46%,” Singh
said.
Nielsen
found that 15-24-yearolds spend the most time on apps, as do users
of expensive –over Rs
25,000
– smartphones. Males spend more time exploring app stores,
browsing, gaming and banking; females spend 45% more time on chat
apps. Tier I and II towns’ consumers are as app-hungry but do more
browsing and media viewing.
“There
will be an app for everything, enhancing one’s sense of
individualism and power, all in one’s palm. The kick of personal
space, a window to the world… no one will trade this off for
anything,” Dingra concluded.
- Anita Sharan HT140825
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