Launch Day Can Be Difficult To Prepare For. An app’s most critical time of growth starts on its launch date and continues up until the next three days that proceed it.
The initial quantity and velocity of an app’s download count will dictate how highly it’ll rank on both the App Store and the Play Store:
The best way to ensure that your downloads will hit some impressive heights at launch is by generating a user base well in advance. First, you’ll need a plan. The goal of the plan is this: create a launch date, and collect as many interested users as you can pre-launch.
Start Early
The earlier your landing page is developed, the greater your chances for user acquisition will be. This way, if your landing page isn’t promoting enough attention, you’ll still have plenty of time to generate fans. An early start will give you enough room to locate and reformat the least-most inspiring aspects of your app/website.
Take Users Behind the Scenes
On your landing page, create and maintain a developer’s log. Keep your users in the loop by being transparent about your goals: write blogs about what you’re building, how you’re building it, and about some of the problems you’ve encountered along the way. Blogs are also helpful for post-release: incorporate change logs, announcements, future updates, promotional codes, etc.
Beta Testing/Soft Launch
The point of a soft launch is to uncover which parts of the app need improvement. Launching your app to a select group of people can offer you insight on where your app is both the weakest and the strongest. Quality testing should be iterated several times throughout development to ensure that the changes made to your app meets user expectations.
Delay Your Launch
There’s time between when Google and Apple approves your app and when you can actually release it, so time your release wisely and finish any promotions you’ve neglected to deploy – take your time, there’s no rush. Resisting the urge to launch a fully developed app takes willpower, but the end product will be worth it:
If your launch doesn’t seem promising, then you should wait. You’ll have nothing to lose, and only more to gain.
Most Importantly, Listen to Your Users
In the end, your opinion as the developer might be interesting, but it’s actually the least important. You’re building an app for others to use, and its implementations should be driven by both data collected about and from the app’s users – we always suggest turning to App Analytics! Be prepared to take your app in different directions both before and after development, or whenever it’s necessary.