Mobile messaging apps present an interesting opportunity for marketers to become part of the consumer conversation, especially when it comes to mobile addicts, who use
messaging apps 556% more than the average consumer, according to recent data.
This market segment launches apps 60 times or more daily, said Simon Khalaf, SVP of publisher products at
Yahoo. From Flurry data, he estimates 89% of a consumer's time on a smartphone is spent in apps.
As consumers launch those apps, they increasingly look to conduct search within applications.
That's one reason Yahoo created Search in Apps, to help developers build in the ability for users to search results in the application.
Marketers also can link native advertisements
within the applications to search results. As in-app search becomes increasingly popular, marketers can leverage the native stream in apps to connect with other content.
Overall, the
total population of smart devices measured by Flurry from Q2 2014 to Q2 2015, grew 38% to 1.8 billion, compared with the prior year.
In fact, consumers who used apps between once and 16 times
daily grew 25% to 985 million in the same period. Consider what Flurry calls "Super Users," consumers who use apps between 16 and 60 times daily, grew from 440 million to 590 million during the same
time period.
When the analysis looks at mobile addicts the findings reveal growth at a much faster rate, up 59% to 280 million in Q2 2015.
Putting the data into perspective, if the
number of mobile addicts there were in 2014 had the population of the eighth-largest country in the world last year, slightly below Nigeria. In 2015, the growth of this specific population would have
propelled that country to the fourth spot, just below the United States and ahead of Indonesia.
The top five categories of applications driving the growth include Messaging & Social at
556%, followed by Utilities & Productivity at 427%; Games at 202%; Finance at 155%, and News & Magazines at 102%.
Khalaf seems most surprised by the finance category. It turns out
mobile Addicts use finance apps 2.5 times more than the average mobile consumer.