1 month is not that long. And also you need to expand your traction meaning: increase the number of downloads. So… marketing. You should try to find your main acquisition channels and focus on this for now, do not spend your time on trying to improve your product if you don’t have higher number of downloads. If it’s a b2c app then usually conversion rate (install-to-purchase) is around 1-4%.
Who is your customer? Each application solves particular problem for particular group of people. And you need to know as much as possible about them? Gender, age, working/non-working, kids, free time, what are their problems you are trying to solve, do they keep, focus, what colors do they prefer, what kind of subscriptions can they pay? etc, etc... Once you have this information, you know how to create a product that will be used, or at least the chances are bigger. If you do int differently, it can work, but it is a pure gamble how things will go on.
Usually, this is the beginning of everything, before you write any code. You make this for other people, you need to know what other people need and look for.
Talk to people, make interviews, do analysis of the results, see what's missing...
I searched for your product in Google Play but could not find it. I wanted to have a look and give honest opinion.
It probably wouldn't hurt to set up Microsoft Clarity - it's a free solution that lets you see how people actually use your product and identify bottlenecks and pain points. It also has a “copilot ai” feature that can offer some suggestions (though it's just a copilot, so don't expect too much). But I’m sure that as soon as you see exactly what users are doing, you’ll be able to spot the problem areas.
1 month is not that long. And also you need to expand your traction meaning: increase the number of downloads. So… marketing. You should try to find your main acquisition channels and focus on this for now, do not spend your time on trying to improve your product if you don’t have higher number of downloads. If it’s a b2c app then usually conversion rate (install-to-purchase) is around 1-4%.
Who is your customer? Each application solves particular problem for particular group of people. And you need to know as much as possible about them? Gender, age, working/non-working, kids, free time, what are their problems you are trying to solve, do they keep, focus, what colors do they prefer, what kind of subscriptions can they pay? etc, etc... Once you have this information, you know how to create a product that will be used, or at least the chances are bigger. If you do int differently, it can work, but it is a pure gamble how things will go on.
Usually, this is the beginning of everything, before you write any code. You make this for other people, you need to know what other people need and look for.
Talk to people, make interviews, do analysis of the results, see what's missing...
I searched for your product in Google Play but could not find it. I wanted to have a look and give honest opinion.
It probably wouldn't hurt to set up Microsoft Clarity - it's a free solution that lets you see how people actually use your product and identify bottlenecks and pain points. It also has a “copilot ai” feature that can offer some suggestions (though it's just a copilot, so don't expect too much). But I’m sure that as soon as you see exactly what users are doing, you’ll be able to spot the problem areas.
Have you tried reaching out to people who have installed your app and asking what they did and why they did it?
Honestly I haven't thought about that. Thanks for the tip! I'm doing it right now