Stacking Your Tech Stack for Mobile App Growth
Giulia is the VP of Marketing at TelTech, part of IAC’s Mosaic Group. In her role, Giulia leads the marketing strategy for RoboKiller, the best-in-class robocall blocker app (yes!) that fights back against spam calls using robots and machine-learning. Her background is colorful with roles at Harvard, Deerwalk (healthcare and data analytics), and marketing automation giant, Hubspot. Giulia has a passion for automation, branding, and data science.
Learn more from her Mobile Hero profile.
If building a best-in-class mobile tech stack is a challenge for your organization, you are not alone. Many mobile marketers struggle to develop integrated data systems to support testing, user acquisition, and marketing automation at scale. Consequently, app marketers fail to capitalize on the competitive edge a strong tech stack can offer. When we were first getting started with RoboKiller, our team built a solid multi-channel marketing strategy but faced limitations because we had not yet built the necessary tech systems to support it. By leveling up the tools we were using to support our growth, we were able to drive a 40% increase in revenue year-over-year. So, whether you are just getting started with mobile app marketing or just looking to level-up marketing tools, I present to you… the four must-haves of your mobile tech stack. 1. A Solid Database of Your Own This may seem straightforward, but getting your app’s internal database up to snuff is critical to the success of your marketing strategy, and to any third-party technology you use to support it. What does this involve?
If building a best-in-class mobile tech stack is a challenge for your organization, you are not alone. Many mobile marketers struggle to develop integrated data systems to support testing, user acquisition, and marketing automation at scale. Consequently, app marketers fail to capitalize on the competitive edge a strong tech stack can offer. When we were first getting started with RoboKiller, our team built a solid multi-channel marketing strategy but faced limitations because we had not yet built the necessary tech systems to support it. By leveling up the tools we were using to support our growth, we were able to drive a 40% increase in revenue year-over-year. So, whether you are just getting started with mobile app marketing or just looking to level-up marketing tools, I present to you… the four must-haves of your mobile tech stack. 1. A Solid Database of Your Own This may seem straightforward, but getting your app’s internal database up to snuff is critical to the success of your marketing strategy, and to any third-party technology you use to support it. What does this involve?
- Developing a data taxonomy. Inventorying your app’s current events and data points that are and are not being collected and implementing a categorization and naming system for all teams to understand. Working with a data analyst and/or engineer for this exercise can be helpful to understand what can and can’t be tracked or analyzed.
- Addressing your database structure. Ask your team; Do your data tables make sense? Is the structure of your database making SQL queries slow? How can you make your database more user-analysis-friendly?
- Prioritizing data integrity. It’s not enough to implement events and start tracking. Ensuring that events are properly firing and the data that is collected by those events is accurate is critical to KPI tracking – especially for monetization events.
MMP partners such as AppsFlyer and Adjust offer a suite of attribution and measurement tools, primarily:
- Mobile marketing attribution: Attribution for app installs or post-install actions to the marketing campaign and media source responsible for it.
- Deep linking: Custom universal tracking links that reduce friction in the user experience by sending users directly to the place they need to be within your app.
- Fraud protection: A suite of tools designed to protect your marketing campaigns from known and emerging fraud trends.
- Seamless visibility into how your user base is retaining and responding to their customer experience post-install.
- The ability to reach and influence customer action via communication; push, email, interstitial.
- Can this platform support the primary KPI’s every team needs to measure success? What about leadership?
- Can this platform integrate with the platforms I need it to? If not, can it easily integrate with our database? How long will it take to integrate?
- Can a “non-data-person” use this tool? Will data experts like using it?