[Estimated read time: 10 minutes]
App search is growing and changing, and there's more opportunity than ever to both draw customers in at the top of the funnel and retain them at the bottom. In today's special British Whiteboard Friday, Tom Anthony and Will Critchlow of Distilled dig into everything app search and highlight a future where Google may have some competition as the search engine giant.
Video Transcription
Tom: Howdy, and welcome to another British Whiteboard Friday. I'm Tom Anthony, head of the R&D Department here at Distilled. This is Will Critchlow, founder and CEO. Today we're going to be talking about app search. App search is really, really important at the moment because research shows that the average user is spending 85% of their time in apps on their mobile phone.
Will, tell us a bit about app search.
Will: When we say "app search," we could potentially mean three things. The first is App Store Optimization or ASO, which is not what we're going to be talking about today. It's an important area, and it's got its own quirks and intricacies, but it's pretty far down the funnel. Most of the searches in app stores are either branded or high-level category searches.
What we want to spend more of our time on today is...
App indexing
This is right at the top of the funnel typically, and it's taking over the opportunities to rank in long-tail search. So this gives you the opportunity to acquire new users via search really for the first time in app marketing.
The third element that we'll touch on later is the personal corpus, which is the idea right down at the bottom of the funnel and it's about retaining the users once you have them.
The critical thing is app indexing. That's what we want to spend most of our time on. What are the basics, Tom? What are the prerequisites for app indexing?
Tom: The first thing, the most important thing to understand is deep links.
Tom: People sometimes struggle to understand deep links, but it's a very simple concept. It's the parallel of what a normal URL is for a web page. A URL takes you to a specific web page rather than a website. Deep links allow you to open a specific screen in an app.
So you might click a deep link. It's just a form of a URL. It might be on a web page. It might be in another app. It can open you to a specific point in an app, for example the @Distilled page in the Twitter app.
There's been various competing standards for how deep links should work on different platforms. But what's important to understand is that everyone is converging on one format. So don't bother trying to learn all the intricacies of it.
The important format is what we call universal links. Will, tell us a bit about them.
Will: Universal links — this is actually Apple's terminology, but it is, as Tom said, spreading everywhere — which is the idea that you can take a URL just like we use to a regular HTTP or HTTPS URL and this URL would normally open up the web page on the desktop.
Will: Now if instead we were on a mobile device — and we've brought our mobile whiteboard again to demonstrate this concept — then if you clicked on this same link on your mobile device, same URL, it would open up the deep view within the app like Tom mentioned.
So the critical thing about the universal link is that the form of this link is the same, and it's shared across those different devices and platforms.
Now before that was the case, in the world where we had different kinds of links, different kinds of link formats for the different devices and platforms, it was important that we mapped our web pages to those mobile URLs. There were various ways of doing that. So you could use Schema.org markup on your web pages. You could use JSON-LD. You could match them all up in your robots.txt. Or you could use rel="alternate" links.
Tom: This is much like how you would've done the same thing for the mobile version of a desktop web page.
Will: Right. Yeah, if you had a different mobile website, an m-dot website for example, you would use rel="alternate" to match those two together. In the old world of deep links, where there were the application-specific links, you could use this rel="alternate" to map them together.
If you're using universal links, it's not so much about this mapping anymore. It's not about saying it's over there. But it's about advertising the fact that there is an app, that you have an app that can open this particular view or web page. That's kind of important obviously to get that indexed and to get that app ranking.
Tom: Google and Co. are encouraging you to have parity at the moment between your app. So you've got your desktop site, your mobile site, and then you've got the same screen in the mobile application.
Will: Absolutely, and they'd like that all to be on these universal URLs. Now all of this so far is pretty familiar to us as search marketers. We understand the concept of having these URLs, having them crawled, having them indexed. But in the app world there's more opportunity than just crawling because both Google and Apple on iOS have opened up APIs, which means that you can push information to the search engine about how the app is actually being used, which opens up all kinds of interesting possibilities.
Tom: Absolutely. The first one is new types of ranking factor, the big one being engagement. Apple have already confirmed that they're going to use engagement as a ranking factor. We anticipate that Google will do the same thing.
This is the idea that users opening your app, using your app, spending time in your app is a clue of the value of that app. So it's more likely to appear in search results. There are two layers to this. The first is appearing in personalized search results. If I use a specific app a lot, then I'll expect to see that more.
Then, there's the second level, which is the aggregated user statistics, which is where they see that most people like this app for this thing, so other people will see that in the search results.
The second point is taking us back to what Will mentioned at the start.
The personal corpus
This is the idea where you get search results specific to yourself coming from your data. So you might run a search and you'll see things such as your messages, entries in your calendar, photos from your gallery. I'd see different results to Will, and I'd see them all in the same interface as where I'd see the public search results.
So I might do a search for a restaurant. I might see a link to the restaurant's website in the public search results, but I might also see that Will sent me a message about going for dinner at that restaurant, and there might be an entry in my calendar, which other people wouldn't see. It's a really interesting way that we might start to appear in search results in a new format.
Then the third interesting thing here is the idea of app-only indexing.
With universal links, we talked about needing parity between the desktop site, the mobile site, the app. With app-only indexing, we could be looking at a model where there are screens in apps that don't have a web equivalent. So you might start to see search results where there's no possibility of a website actually appearing for that. That's also a fascinating new model. Apple already do this. Google have confirmed that they're going to be doing this. So it's definitely coming.
Then further out into the future one of the important things is going to be app streaming. So Will, are you going to tell us a bit about that?
Will: Right. App streaming, this is another thing that Google has announced. It's kind of available in limited trials, but we think it's going to be a bigger thing because they're trying to attack this core problem, which is that to use an app and for an app to appear in search results, if you haven't already got it, you have to download it and you have to install it. That's both a slow process and a data-hungry process. If you're just kicking the tires, if this is an app you've never seen before, it's a little bit too much to ask you to do this multi-megabyte download and then install this app, just to try it out.
So what they're trying with app streaming is saying, "We can simplify that process. This is an app you've not used before. Let's preview it for you." So you can use it. You can see it. You can certainly check out the public areas of the app and then install it if it's useful to you.
The current setup is a little bit of a kind of a kludge; they're running in a virtual machine in the cloud and streaming. It's all very weird. We think the details are going to change.
Tom: Yeah.
Will: Fundamentally, they're going to figure out a way to make this streamlined and smooth, and it will become much easier to use apps for the first time, making it possible to expose them in a much broader array of search results. Then there's all kinds of other things and stuff coming in the future. I mean, Tom's passionate about the personal assistant.
Tom: Yeah. The intelligent personal assistant thing is really, really exciting to me. By intelligent personal assistant, I mean things like Siri, Cortana, Google Now, and the up-and-coming ones — Facebook M and SoundHound's Hound app. What's fascinating about personal assistants is that when you do a search, you do a search for weather in Siri for example, you just get a card about the weather for where you are. You don't get taken to a list of results and taken elsewhere. You just get a direct answer.
Most of the personal assistants are already able to answer a lot of search queries using this direct answer methodology. But what we think is exciting about apps is that we anticipate a future where you can store an app and it allows the personal assistants to tap into that app's data to answer queries directly. So you can imagine I could do a search for "are the trains running on time." Siri taps into my train app, pulls that data, and just lets me know right there. So no longer am I opening the app. What's important is the app is actually sort of a gateway through to a data source in the backend. We start to get all this data pulled into a central place.
Will: It's fascinating. You mentioned a whole bunch of different tools, companies, platforms coming up there. The final thing that we want to point out is that this is a really interesting space because Google's had a lock on web search for what feels like forever.
App search is a whole new area. Obviously, Google has some advantages just through the fact that the Android devices and they've got the apps installed in so many places and it's part of people's habits. But there are certainly opportunities. It's the first crack. It's first chink in the armor that means that maybe there are some upcoming players who will be interesting to watch and interesting for us as marketers to pay attention to.
Thank you for joining us here in Distilled's London HQ. It's been great talking to you. Thank you for taking the time. Bye.
Tom: Bye.
Good morning Tom and Anthony,
I love how you've exposed the app issue. On one side, it's amazing than an app knows exacly what you want or where do you want to go, on the other side it still scares me a little bit hahaha but it's fascinating how it's all evolving. The App Streaming is going to be huge I think, cause what if you're searching for an app but there are similar ones and you don't know which one to get? Well, it's a nice way to try them all without running out of meegabytes. Honestly, I love this kind of posts about mobile, keep doing them please :D
Thanks! :)
Your point about app streaming is v. interesting - especially if a model is developed that allows streamed apps to run APIs that access things on your phone. It'll be interesting to see how the app streaming stuff develops.
That is really informative conversation I read. Thanks Will & Tom
Hi Tom and Will (not Anthony)
Thanks for a nice rundown on app search, do you think you will do a ASO video in the future?
Thanks
Thanks Jeremy! :)
Will and I probably aren't the right people to do it. You should check out anything from Cindy Krum and Emily Grossman who know that stuff really well. I vote we get them on here doing a video!
Hey guys,
App streaming is huge for app marketers! One of the biggest problems with App Indexing's content in apps is that people don't really want to download an entire app so quickly when they want a specific piece of information. Mobile data plans and speed is still an issue. And in our case that's why we see that the majority of our app indexing downloads come from the Install button next to the brand name.
This could really help reveal the app's capabilities to new potential users!
On a completely different note, while Google's App Indexing has been very successful for us with Android (with iOS it's simply isn't too interesting yet as long as it only works with installed apps), over 95% of our installs come directly from the Play store. I find it very strange that Google is still not using deep linking and their data from App Indexing for the Google play search algorithms.
In short, Google Play is still handling rankings in a similar way Google handled exact titles 6-10 years ago. For most long tail keywords, or even just secondary topics--the Play store still prefers lower rated apps with exact keyword data, and that's while they handle it pretty well on the search engine itself.
The challenge of app search hasn't been something I've had the opportunity to experience first hand yet! And to be honest, that worries me. There are so many companies that just don't have the resources or the need to have an app. So the early adopters really do have a competitive advantage for search, especially if engagement is a ranking factor.
The way the intelligent personal assistant works is so interesting to me. I love learning more about what makes them tick.
Great points - and I do agree about the resources issue. However, the barrier to entry will come down. Your complaint is not dissimilar to what people said about the web in the early days!
My next post here on Moz (next week) will be focusing more on intelligent personal assistants -- I agree they are v. interesting and I think will be a big factor in the future of marketing. :)
Hi! App indexing is a very interesting topic. Great video, thanks!
Thanks for the video. Strange to get British accent in a whiteboard friday!
I am not sure I understand the implications of what you describe, but if I got it right instead of opening up the world of search the "universe" you describe would narrow it down. It could open the players on the initial search, but if we think of the backend concept t sound to me a lot like a "monopoly" per main vertical, specially if the personal asistant decides to opt for apps and not the user (which in a way is what you would expect and want from a personal assistant in terms of easing one´s live). With Google there is today almost a monopoly on the first search, but then many results open up from multiple players...
Maybe I have not understood it correctly, but I´d appreciate your comments on this topic (does it open up really the search world or does it not)
Super informative man. Thanks for posting!
Thanks for app based post,
working in agencies means lot of learning and challenges.
Few days back SEO for ASO/Mobile search was given to our team which had no experience in the field.
I was not even aware what deep linking is ...only thing I knew about Apps search optimization was, keyword on title, description and reviews, hence we are teaming up with another agency to get it done, but i decided and told my senior that we can take guidance from them and we will be doing it in our agency(which is good for agency as it will be some experience and learning), now may be after approvals of costing and all we might be starting to work on it. This post is really something which I needed before I start.
Regards
Pulkit Thakur
Hi Tom & Will
Thank you very much for this mini guide on the search and indexing apps. really it can be very useful.
Awesome Post...:)
Hmmm. That deeplink part was a little confusing. I've been wondering about this recently, so would be awesome to get a clear answer for this scenario:
We always embed a google map with a businesses location on client websites but I think it'd be a good idea to put a button above/below the map that says "Open in Google Maps". So the question is, how do you create that deep link?
I just tried searching a location in maps.google.com, grabbing that url and running it through a link shortener, then typing that shortened url into chrome on my iPhone 6s. It opened the page in the browser (boo) but had a button at the bottom that said: "Open in Google Maps App?" (yay!). But, as far as I understand, that's not a true deep link as it didn't open the app right away, which brings me back to the original question: Can I create a deep link straight into a map listing within Google Apps?
Excelent post and great information for App indexing. I'll to take notes! :)
Say you have a high ranking site that's mobile friendly. Now you get a mobile app and it becomes a popular alternative. Now those juicy pages lose traffic because it's being deferred to the app. What are the implications to your ranking?
Here's to hoping we can get in-house changes made before the competition catches on to how powerful app indexing and deep links can be.
Actually, the really powerful part of deep links is that it can neutralize even our best mobile SEO efforts. We can imagine a scenario where we compete perfectly well against our standard competition within our vertical, but the consumer may have an app installed from a company that's only tangentially related to what we do (TripAdvisor, Yelp, rental car agencies, etc), click that link from SERP and then our ability to compete is greatly reduced once they're in the other company's app environment.
Great input, we'll use this immediately, many thx
)))strange
Hope it will works with as explained.
These factors make it generates even more the app search, ranking and different universal links Friday.
Yes! very useful post this is. Thanks for your update, i also prefer that kind of post.
Thanks for the video..very important..
good morning thanks and really this is a great tuto , i like to know more about seo and mobile app keep it up and i support you guys :)