The Good Tech Companies - How To Measure The Results Of In-App Events When Onelinks Don’t Work
Episode Date: July 29, 2024This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-to-measure-the-results-of-in-app-events-when-onelinks-dont-work. How To Measure The Resu...lts Of In-App Events When Onelinks Don’t Work Check more stories related to data-science at: https://hackernoon.com/c/data-science. You can also check exclusive content about #analytics, #onelink, #inapp-events, #marketing, #app-store, #mobile-apps, #digital-marketing, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @socialdiscoverygroup. Learn more about this writer by checking @socialdiscoverygroup's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Many app developers and marketing managers face the challenge of accurately measuring the impact of In-App Events (IAEs) on the App Store. While IAEs have proven effective for re-engaging users, attracting new downloads, and increasing revenue, traditional tracking methods like OneLink don’t actually include IAEs. Major mobile attribution platforms confirm that currently there is no way to track IAEs properly. At Social Discovery Group, our portfolio of 60+ dating and entertainment brands is supported by a team of over 100 marketers dedicated to app growth and development. We’re used to measuring all our marketing efforts in terms of financial value. Eventually, we’ve managed to develop our own composite way to evaluate IAEs, and are going to share it with you.
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How to measure the results of in-app events when one links don't work,
by Social Discovery Group. You run in-app events and don't know if your efforts bring any value.
Many app developers and marketing managers face the challenge of accurately measuring
the impact of in-app events, IAEs, on the App Store. While IAEs have proven effective for
re-engaging users,
attracting new downloads, and increasing revenue, traditional tracking methods like
OneLink don't actually include IAEs. Major mobile attribution platforms confirm that currently,
there is no way to track IAEs properly. At Social Discovery Group, our portfolio of 60-plus dating
and entertainment brands is supported by a team of over 100 marketers dedicated to app growth and development. We're used to measuring all
our marketing efforts in terms of financial value. Eventually, we've managed to develop
our own composite way to evaluate IAEs, and are going to share it with you. Normally,
all digital marketers track their marketing activities using an attribution provider to understand how each UA channel performs.
At SDG, we love to measure all our marketing efforts in terms of financial value, and IAEs
are no exception.
When creating IAEs, we should upload a one link leading to the event itself.
However, it turned out that when you want to see the results of the IAE through one
link, there is no accurate information. At best, there will be some data about the returning users who
were previously attributed by the tracker. At worst, you will not even be able to find
your IAE in the list of attributions. By the way, we spoke with representatives of all major mobile
attribution platforms, and all of them confirmed that currently there is no way to track IAEs
properly, and any data we could see on their platforms wasn't comprehensive. This means that
it would be wrong to use their data for proper valuation. At first, we tried to measure the
results of IAEs by one links only and were somewhat satisfied seeing some returning clients
and the revenue generated by them. This approach broke down when one day we couldn't find our IAE on the
attribution platform at all. This was a sign for us to dig deeper and find a proper way of
measuring IAEs. So, now our reports on IAEs contain data from three sources. The first one
is App Store Connect, of course. Under Analytics to Metrics to In-App Events, we can see the number
of impressions of the IAE, both unique and total, and its views, also both unique and total, as well as app opens,
without a division between unique and total. There are also two more parameters that are
always null for our apps, reminders and notification tabs. But that is not all.
If we choose, buy in-app event, in the second filter, the following data will be
available. Downloads, total, first time, re-downloads, sales, sales, proceeds, sales minus Apple's
commission, number of in-app purchases, and paying users, usage, opt-in only, installations, sessions,
active devices, active last 30 days, crashes, and deletions. Other metrics we can track about IAEs include installations, sessions, active
devices, active users in the last 30 days, crashes, and deletions.
We can evaluate IAEs on the App Store side in the Metrics section, including downloads,
sales, usage, opt-in, and in-app events, data analogous to the App Store section.
We don't use all the above-mentioned parameters for our IAE reports, only the scions, impressions,
page views, app opens, number of in-app purchases, and sales. The above-mentioned information might
seem enough to draw conclusions about IAEs, but it doesn't give us the full picture.
It could be sufficient if an app or a game
gets only organic traffic. But if there is also paid user acquisition, we should take paid users
into consideration as they also visit the app page and see the IAE. Our second source is the
information about IAEs on our attribution platform provided by OneLynx. Users here are attributed to
retargeting, re-attribution and re-engagements, so we choose
view type equals retargeting in the settings and we'll see our IAE one link name in the list of
media sources. The most interesting data for us here are the number of re-engagements and revenue.
Depending on your settings, you can also see clicks, ARPU, sessions, etc. The third and final
step of our IAE evaluation is to compare the total
number of registrations, sales, revenue, advertising costs, and advertising installs across all paid
traffic sources before and during the IAE. For such a report, we have developed our own reporting
system. If paid marketing activity, in terms of costs and installs, was more or less at the same
level before and during the IAE,
or even decreased, and there is an uplift in metrics such as registrations, sales, and revenue,
we conclude that the IAE drove these improvements and was a success.
Summing up, despite the fact that OneLynx doesn't track in-app events directly,
you can still evaluate their effectiveness. To do this, you need to combine three types of data,
from App Store Connect, at least impressions, page views, app opens, and in-app purchases with sales,
retargeting data from the attribution platform where the one link was created to evaluate
returned users, re-engagements and revenue, and a general uplift in registrations, sales,
and revenue for all paid traffic sources considering marketing
spends, since the in-app event is viewed not only by organic users but also by paid ones.
This approach allows you to comprehensively evaluate the results of in-app events and
determine whether it is worth the effort to launch them. According to our reports, it is
NN wishing you profitable in-app events. Please, share in the comments how you track their results.
Written by Elena Alexeva, Team Lead ASO at Social Discovery Group
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