Appboy Study Finds Android Apps Have Higher Retention Rates than iOS Apps

Posted on Friday, May 20, 2016 by RICHARD HARRIS, Executive Editor

Appboy has released its latest data report, Spring 2016 Mobile Customer Retention,covering user retention rates by day (also known as Day N, N-Day, or classic retention numbers). The report offers a comprehensive examination of mobile app retention, analyzing data from more than 300 apps globally and over 300 million user profiles to provide detailed day by day retention data for both iOS and Android apps, broken down by app vertical.

Using Day N retention rates, app publishers can determine how many new users return on a particular day following their first session. This makes it possible to pinpoint important inflection points in user activity, providing insight into opportunities for engagement. In addition, when used in conjunction with other retention metrics, such as three-month return retention, Day N retention statistics can provide insight into when customers are most likely to return.

Overall, the Appboy report shows that retention rates are higher on Android than iOS. During the first week after first use, users of Android apps show higher retention rates day by day, declining from a high of 27% on Day 1 to 13% on Day 7; in comparison, only 23% of new iOS app users log a session on Day 1 and only 11% do so on Day 7.

While Android apps have higher retention rates than their iOS equivalent across many app verticals, the exceptions are social and messaging apps, where iOS consistently outperforms Android, and media and entertainment apps, where iOS overtakes Android after Day 7.

Other findings available in the report include:


- Fewer than 25% of users who first used an app on a given day logged a session with that app the day after. The Day N retention rate continues to trend downward over the three months after first use, hitting 4.1% on Day 90.

- Mobile gaming is the strongest vertical when it comes to Day 1 retention, with nearly 40% of new users returning the day after first use.

- Food and beverage apps experienced the lowest retention rates during the first week after first use, but saw a unique uptick in engagement on Day 6 and 7, suggesting that a subset of customers could be repeating their behavior with that app on a weekly basis.


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