Filter sales per paying users by source to learn the average spend per user from a particular campaign, app, or website. The Overview page shows the number of pre-orders, and breaks them down by territory, source type, and more. Download reports with additional data to conduct deeper analysis. View the number of active paid subscribers, subscribers that continue renewing, subscribers that convert to a standard price from each type of subscription offer, and more.
See how many new customers subscribe each day, as well as daily subscription sales, reasons a subscription has been cancelled including billing issues and price increases , and more. You can also filter this data by app, subscription, and other metrics to analyze performance. View data for downloads of your apps, initiated sales, initiated pre-orders, and estimated proceeds.
You can also filter data by date ranges, transaction types, subscription offerings, territories, and other metrics. View your final proceeds for each month, with earnings broken out by territory and currency. See the rates used to convert your earnings from local currencies when available and any taxes and adjustments applied.
You can also download more detailed reports of all transactions, including the number of units sold per app or in-app purchase, for the month. I've tested with my iPhone app and the result was not accurate. My app is ranked and I expected the result to be of about downloads a day, but it gave me Changing to - give the good result in my case.
Please consider that this formula is only for the "paid apps", according to the paper page. Another extension of this work is to estimate the demand for free apps, which attract over 10 times more the volume of downloads Martin Smith Martin Smith 3 3 silver badges 10 10 bronze badges. There was a time when there were apps in the AppStore that gave detailed metrics and graphics for all app sales.
In the mean time, most, if not all of them got pulled off the store, on reasons of non-compliance with Apple policy, that forbids such data from being made available. However, I'm interested in the actual sources these apps were accessing, for my own personal interest, not to make this data public through an app.
Many companies discuss their sales figures and revenue openly. Big companies and small. John Fricker I'm not in the habit of making unsupported claims. Take a look at cocoanetics. The Overflow Blog. Who owns this outage? Building intelligent escalation chains for modern SRE. Podcast Who is building clouds for the independent developer? Featured on Meta. Now live: A fully responsive profile. Reducing the weight of our footer. Linked Related However, the success of the platform leads one to believe that their data is not wide off the mark.
Note: Take notice of the icon next to the application names in the screenshot above. Those with the Android icon belong to the Google Play Store while the ones with the Apple icon are applications you can download in the Apple App Store.
On the top menu, click on the Products option. Now, select App Analysis from the pull-down menu. You can now search for an app in the search bar in the top-right corner of the page.
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