Apptimize
Feb 15, 2017
How much does it cost your company to acquire new users for your mobile app? And more importantly, is that cost worth the marketing budget you’re spending to get new users to install your app?
For the first question, there’s no right or wrong answer in absolute terms. Regardless of whether your cost per install (CPI) ends up being $1, $10, or even $100, you can’t know whether that’s good (i.e. profitable for your company) or bad (i.e. unprofitable) without also understanding your user’s lifetime value (LTV). As a metric, LTV tells you how much money each new user is spending in your app.
For the second question, anything other than a resounding “yes” can land you in hot water. If you’re spending more money on acquiring new users than those users are spending in your app, then you’re getting a negative return on investment.
The good news is that you don’t have to guess (or wonder) what your app’s ROI is—you can measure it precisely through some not-so-complicated calculations. And since anything that can be measured can be managed, the better news is that using the calculations we’ll go through below, you can boost your app’s ROI and increase your company’s profits. So let’s get started!
Your app’s ROI depends on your CPI and LTV. So first, we must understand these two numbers and determine what they currently are for your company.
To understand how much acquiring a new user truly costs your company, you can’t just look at the dollar amounts and metrics of an isolated ad campaign.
Instead, you need to take a more holistic view and calculate your entire marketing expenses over a certain period and then divide that number by the total number of new installations your app received during that same period.
CPI = Total Costs / # of Installs
Now you’ve got a number. Great!
Was the expense worth it? Let’s find your LTV to figure it out.
To calculate the lifetime value that each user brings in, you need to take an even wider look at your company numbers and find out the average amount of money each user spends in your app after installation and the average amount of time that each user remains active (and spending) in your app.
LTV = ARPU (Average Revenue per User) x customer lifetime
That’s going to give you a new number. Fantastic!
Now what? Now we compare the two numbers to see where you stand regarding ROI.
Getting a lot of installs can hide weaknesses in your product and in your path to positive ROI. As Spencer Skates, CEO of mobile analytics platform Amplitude, points out, “Companies overspend on marketing, without taking the time to recognize whether their gross increases in daily active users or downloads are actually turning a profit.”
For a positive ROI, you want your LTV to exceed your CPI. Put in simplistic terms, you want the number of dollars coming in from each customer to be greater than the number of dollars you dish out per customer.
If you’ve calculated your LTV of $6 and your CPI of $10, your ROI falls into the second equation—the negative one. That means that for every $10 you spend on getting a new user to your app, you’re only getting $6 back from that user. So you’re losing $4 per new user.
But if your calculations gave you the opposite numbers—so an LTV of $10 and a CPI of $6—then your ROI is positive. That means that for every $6 you’re spending getting a new user to install your app, you’re getting $10 back from that same user over the entire use of your app. So (roughly speaking) you have a $4 return on your investment. That’s $400 for every 100 new users.
If your ROI is negative, you need to take action to increase it right away. But even if your ROI is positive you should still check if you can improve it to increase company revenue.
There are two main ways to boost ROI: you can either lower your CPI or increase your LTV.
Reducing your CPI means increasing your marketing efficiency. Audit your marketing strategies, tactics, channels, and methods to see how you can acquire customers at a lower cost. Some of the improvements you can make include:
Another way to improve your ROI equation is getting users to spend more money in your app after installation. Increasing ARPU doesn’t necessarily mean that you make your in-app purchases more expensive, or that you push more purchase options onto your users. The problem usually stems from your funnel and can be fixed by increasing your user retention rates. To improve your funnel you can:
The truth is that your results will be a lot messier. That’s okay—they always are. The model above is just that: a model to help you get started with understanding the metrics that matter (namely, your CPI and LTV) for optimizing your mobile app marketing ROI.
The important takeaway to remember is that you don’t need to spend millions of dollars on a marketing budget, nor have millions of users flocking to your app to get a positive ROI. Instead, you simply need to monitor the right metrics, understand what those metrics mean, and know how to fix them.
Apptimize is the best-in-class mobile growth platform for Enterprise and SMBs, powering 1.2 billion app downloads across 75 countries.
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