When Chris launched Bickster, the company relied on subscriptions and in-app purchases for revenue. But that paid-only model created barriers to broad adoption and made it tough to compete against free apps. "For so long," Chris says, "we were focused on the 5% of people who were interested in paying for our apps, and not the 95% who are interested in the app but not ready to pay." So, the Bickster team decided to start testing an ad revenue stream and ran A/B tests with Firebase to understand the impact of paid apps vs. freemium ad-supported apps with AdMob. Though in-app purchase revenue decreased slightly with ads, they found that overall revenue per app increased, giving the team the confidence to pursue a freemium, ad-supported model across all of their apps.
About the Publisher
Chris Bick launched his FitBit-finder as a paid app in the App Store and Play Store in 2016. The product's robust adoption led to the founding of Bickster, which quickly expanded to offering twelve apps.