Technology & Innovation

Trigger ‘Appy

June 01, 2015

Global

June 01, 2015

Global
James Chambers

Former senior editor

James is Bureau Chief for Monocle, Hong Kong. Prior to this he worked as a Senior Editor with The EIU's Thought Leadership team for over three years researching business, technology and cities. He has also written about business and technology for The World In 2015 and economist.com. James has previous experience from IR magazine, a finance publication, where he was research editor in London and Shanghai. Additionally he contributed to Legal Week, a weekly legal magazine, and worked on the FT Innovative Lawyers Awards in the US and Europe. James is an English law-qualified solicitor (currently non-practising) and holds post-graduate legal qualifications from BPP Law School and an LLP in Law from the London School of Economics.

Why the end of mobile apps will be good for business

Apps are coming under attack—and it’s about time too.

Google is promising a return to the freedom and openness of the traditional internet, only this time with a personal assistant thrown in.  Google Now gathers all the information its knows you  want—from news stories to weather forecasts and flight information—onto a single smartphone screen, a bit like a personal webpage.

But let’s be honest; the end of apps has been on the cards for a while. Now that websites are being either optimised for mobile—or punished by Google’s search engine algorithm for non-compliance—there is less need for standalone apps.

Longer term, the maturation of voice recognition software, virtual reality and wearable technology will all marginalise the touch screen interface.

Few of us should mourn this demise. Apps were never meant to be more than just a stepping stone in the evolution of the mobile internet.

Yes, on the user side, they made the mobile internet easier to navigate. Yet these Apple-like walled gardens, where the creator controls everything, now appear increasingly restrictive and demanding.

Most apps are greedy. Access to personal information is requested well in excess of the usefulness returned to the user. Apps also take up a lot of smartphone storage space.

The ‘app arc’ for a typical smartphone owner is buy phone, download loads of apps, run out of space, delete non-essential apps, upgrade phone with more storage, then repeat.

Tedium runs throughout the entire app experience. There may well be an app for almost everything, but that does not mean the App Store or Google Play are the online equivalent of Harrods.

In fact, the bricks-and-mortar equivalent is more akin to a high street catalogue store, such as Argos: an Aladdin’s Cave of hidden-from-view Tupperware and mid-tier electronics are only accessible via a cumbersome catalogue, best avoided unless an exact product is precisely known and absolutely needed.

Little wonder, then, that apps are not exactly popular. The CEO of Shazam recently put the number of apps that an average person uses every month at 25. Personally I’ve gone as low as five before.

Admittedly this drew howls of derision from friends. But Google Now means I can subsequently revise this down to four, having been freed from weather forecasts, calendars, flights and the other similarly low hanging fruit of the app world.  

What’s in store for business?
Quickly acknowledging this reality and planning for the end of apps can be good for business.

Low costs and lower barriers to entry have caused a proliferation of apps. Nike has eight in the App Store. BMW and AXA Insurance have over 10 each. The Economist has 12. BASF—a German chemicals company—appears to have over 20 separate apps. Different markets account for some but not all of these.

What were once simple business propositions have turned into sprawling online conglomerates with confusing and often competing products, alienating loyal customers who are forced to download multiple apps from the same company.

A pause is required. Senior managers should become as enthusiastic about online consolidation as they are about physical “rightsizing”.

Others stand to gain from the end of apps, too. Employees are meant to have benefited from an explosion of so-called productivity apps—multiplying the number of shared documents, methods of communication and modes of storing information at their fingertips.

Little wonder, then, that actual productivity in some economies has stalled. Some workers must surely yearn for a return to a simpler time, when the email pop-up box was the only distraction to contend with.

Would-be entrepreneurs, meanwhile, would do well to remember that apps are a channel to market, not a product—and certainly not synonymous with innovation. Waiting for a real business idea before quitting Goldman Sachs is no bad thing for the next generation of bright young things.

Alas, peak app will be a long way off, given the power of the vested interests in play. Apple is sneaking apps onto our phones under the guise of a software update—I didn’t want the Watch app for the same reason I didn’t want the latest U2 album in my iTunes: I’m not an old man yet.

But Google is perhaps the worst offender. It has more apps on the App Store than Apple, it stops users deleting its apps from Android phones and it launched a new photo app at the very time it was charting the destruction of the whole platform. 

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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