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Category: Blog

  • How to create an app press kit that journalists will love

    How to create an app press kit that journalists will love

    app-press-kit

    Whether you’re launching a new game or the latest Instagram-killing app, the press kit is one of the most important parts of your assets. The press kit helps show off your app to its full potential, and it also provides the reporters with one place where they can find everything they need. Unfortunately, the press kit is usually neglected altogether, or thrown together haphazardly and poorly.

    Why do I need a press kit?

    You want to make it easier to clue in journalists and bloggers about your app, right? Do you want to send an email out answering the same questions a hundred times, or have those questions already answered. If you said you want to have those questions already answered, then you already know why you need a press kit.

    The press kit makes everyone’s lives easier. The journalist can use it to find out more about your app before reaching out and waiting for you to reply. The editor can get a quick feel for your app and decide if someone should write about it. As for you, it will save you countless hours of replying to emails that end up all saying the same thing.

    Okay, I’m sold, so how do I create a press kit?

    A great press kit will have five key elements: a review guide, screenshots, lifestyle photos, icons, and video. If you manage to include all of these elements, your press kit is automatically better than the ones for about 99.9% of other apps out there (that might be a slight exaggeration, but you get the point.) Let’s take a look at these crucial elements.

    1. Review Guide

    Your review guide should present the reader with enough information that they can quickly get up to speed with what your app does and how to use it or play it. Think of it like a Getting Started guide, but tailored for journalists and bloggers.

    Put together a PDF outlining what your app does, how it works, and go into detail about the feature set. You should also include pricing, system requirements, release information, frequently asked questions, links, and your contact information. Apple’s Pages app is great for doing review guides, as is Google Docs.

    Here’s an example review guide that I created for oSnap which was featured on The Next Web.

    2. Screenshots

    Next, you should provide a collection of screenshots that are suitable for the publication to use in its coverage. Make your app look its best, and take your time getting it right. Some of the worst screenshots I’ve ever seen had misspelled words, typographical errors, or push notifications showing up at the top of the screen. If you show the status bar, make sure it shows a sensible time, a fully battery, and a good cellular or Wi-Fi connection.

    Whatever you do, don’t just use your promotional App Store screenshots. Journalists prefer raw shots of your app, either because they don’t want the marketing text that tend to be present on App Store apps or because the images are going to be comped into devices to produce lifestyle photos.

    3. Lifestyle photos

    run_playing

    Speaking of lifestyle photos, it’s a great idea to include some yourself. Some sites like raw screenshots, some prefer a natural type of shot, and others will use a combination of both. Providing the reporter with awesome photography of your app being used makes you look more professional, and it helps their site, too.

    I love using Placeit.net or Frame to create lifestyle photos.

    4. Icons, logos, and banners

    Next, you want to include your app icon. If you provide it in various sizes and formats, that saves the reporter from having to spend time converting it or resizing it. If you’re sending to an online publication, .PNG files are best because they’re lossless and support transparency. On the other hand, if you are sending your media kit to a print publication, they’ll probably want a .EPS file.

    If you have a company logo and/or any app branding, you should include that, too. A banner is nice, as well, but it isn’t essential. Still, it’s good practice to include a banner, and Apple will request one from you anyways if they want to possibly feature your app. You can get all the nitty gritty details about the App Store banner artwork from Apple’s Web page.

    5. Video

    Last, how about video? If you’ve produced a promotional video for your app, include a link to it in the press kit. Make sure you host your video on both YouTube and Vimeo, for increased exposure. YouTube makes it easy for the journalist to embed your video, as does Vimeo.

    Bonus: Make sure you’re telling your story

    When you start developing your press kit, make sure it’s telling a story. The most interesting people and apps have very deep, compelling stories behind them. You want to show your app to the world, but the best way to get their attention is to tell the story.

    Your press kit is important, to be sure, but make sure you pay close attention to what’s inside it. Does the review guide tell the story behind the app? Do the screenshots illustrate what problems the app can solve? If your answer to those questions is no, then you need to take a step back and figure out what you need to change to tell the story and let people know the problem you’re solving, and how your app is the best solution.

    Conclusion

    Just including a press kit at all is more than many apps even bother to do during their press outreach. But if you’re going to take the time to do it, why not do it right?

    Include all of the key elements we’ve discussed, and make sure your press kit tells your story. Do that, and you’ll really stand out from the crowd and excite the journalists so much they won’t be able to help but write about you.

  • Generate 100K Downloads With An Apps Gone Free Campaign

    Generate 100K Downloads With An Apps Gone Free Campaign

    How to Run an Apps Gone Free Campaign

    Want a quick and easy way to generate more than 100,000 downloads in a couple of days without spending a dime?

    Running a paid to free campaign for your app can drive huge numbers of downloads your way, generate thousands of new users, and even make you the #1 trending keyword in the App Store.

    In this post, I’ll outline the step-by-step guide to maximizing the “apps gone free” strategy.

    #1: Get Press Coverage

    Past guests used to tell me that running the paid to free campaign could drive millions and millions of downloads for your app.

    So I decided to test out this theory.

    I made my app, oSnap, free for a day and I gave the exclusive to AppAdvice just to see what would happen. That press coverage drove 38,000 downloads in just a couple of days.

    I thought to myself, “Wow! This strategy really does work.” So I said, “Hey, what would happen if I didn’t tell anybody?” So I waited about a month, and ran another paid to free campaign without telling anybody about it.

    Guess what happened?

    I only saw hundreds of downloads instead of tens of thousands of downloads.

    osnap-apps-gone-free

    So the number one thing that you have to do to make sure your paid-to-free campaign succeeds is get press coverage. This leads us to number two.

    #2: Give an Exclusive to a Big Site

    Giving an exclusive to a big site almost guarantees that you will get press. It’s a strategy I’ve used time and time again to get coverage on iMore, AppAdvice, TechCrunch, BGR and many more sites.

    Big sites want to cover things that are exclusive to them, because that means other sites will link to them. It’s a great way to get exposure and it almost guarantees that you will get coverage on this big site.

    My favorite sites for this campaign are BGR and AppAdvice. If you go to any of these paid to free blog posts, you will find that the same reporter writes about this campaign. So just give the exclusive to that reporter and tell them about your app.

    The one thing that you have to keep in mind is that they may want to see a good number of App Store reviews, so make sure you get a few 5-star reviews for your app before approaching these big sites.

    #3: Schedule the Free Dates

    After you secure the exclusive for the particular dates that you’re going to go free, what you want to do is then go into iTunes or Google Play and schedule the dates that you’re actually going to be free.

    Now, iTunes makes it really easy and I’m going to show you exactly how to do it. All you have to do, though, is log into iTunes, go into Pricing and then just select the dates that you want the free dates to run for. I generally select about three days for the free campaign. The first day is usually when the big site will cover it and then two days afterwards, to get any incremental traffic.

    itunes-free

    What I’ve seen from past campaigns is that the first two days are going to be the big wins for you. So you can leave it free for a couple of days and then you will get that trickle-down effect but the first two days are going to be the biggest days for the free campaign.

    #4: Spread the Word

    Once the post goes live on the big site, make sure you start spreading the word. One of my past clients, Sortly, got covered on BGR for a free in-app purchase.

    By spreading the word about the campaign, we also got featured on Slickdeals and that drove an enormous number of downloads.

    The first wave came with BGR and the second wave came from Slickdeals.

    So what you want to do is spread the word as much as you can, because you’re going to create more and more ways to drive more and more downloads.

    sortly-1

    The net result of this campaign was that Sortly became the number one trending keyword in the App Store for the day, which was amazing traction, we saw tens of thousands of downloads, and we gained thousands upon thousands of email subscribers and new users because of this campaign.

    #5: Collect Email Addresses

    Don’t just go free for the sake of free, but have a goal in mind.

    Collecting email addresses during this campaign is key, because email marketing is one of the best ways to drive user engagement and get more people to download future apps. It’s also a great way to get user feedback for new features.

    So, have a goal in mind. I think you should always collect email addresses but definitely have some sort of goal in mind for the paid to free campaign because the downloads are going to come. It’s just what you do with these downloads that will to determine your future success.

    #6: Rinse and Repeat

    You can use this strategy again and again and again. It’s a great way to drive downloads and we’ve done this in the past where we will give the exclusive to one big site. A month or two later, we will give another exclusive to another big site and it keeps driving more and more downloads.

    oSnap Free on AppAdvice
    oSnap Free on AppAdvice

     

    oSnap Free on BGR
    oSnap Free on BGR

    Bonus: Paid Acquisition

    This is more for those who have a little bit of budget. If you really want to hit the top charts, you use this strategy in conjunction with a paid user acquisition campaign.

    What you’re going to do is for day one and two, you’re going to let the paid to free campaign take its course and then for day three and four, you’re going to let the paid user acquisition further amplify the downloads. This drives huge numbers of downloads and what I would do is combine the efforts to really hit the top charts.

    Once you hit the top charts, especially the free charts in iTunes or Google Play, you’re more likely to stay there after a while.

    Apps Gone Free for Subscription Apps

    Apps Gone Free vs Apple Feature

    Conclusion

    Running a paid to free campaign can get your app huge numbers of downloads in a few days. For those who have a free app, you can make one of your in-app purchases free and still get the same results.

    Using the strategy outlined above, you’ll be able to maximize your downloads during the days that your app goes free.

    Will you run an apps gone free campaign? Let me know in the comments below.