5 points that could derail your push notification campaign and cause people to uninstall your app.
1. Avoid the notification blasts at all costs
Sending notifications on a burst mode to all your users may sound tempting but it isn’t. It will overwhelm them. You may think they would remember your app or visit it more often but in actual they would remember to uninstall it as soon they get off duty and have some leisure time at hand. As I said earlier, 3-5 is notifications a day are more than enough.
Wunderlist, a to-do–list app, sends notifications about your due tasks. Imagine receiving butt-load of notifications. Not only does it hog all the space but is frustration taken to the next level.
2. Don’t add the non-juicy bits to the notifications
Remember, the primary purpose of a push notification is to encourage your app users to open and engage with it more often. Therefore, they aren’t an excellent place to introduce your users to the app’s particulars. Instead, you could try deep-linking to a News Feed Card or the section of your app where those particulars are discussed in detail. Or send out the details later on in the form of an email.
I often receive details from Duolingo in a separate email. Meanwhile, push notifications are usually brief reminders for me to continue my lessons.
Don’t forget, less is more and meaningful!
3. Whatever you do, don’t ask users to enable notifications right after your app’s launch
Users who have just installed your app do not have a decent knowledge of the benefits it offers. Let them experience your app’s value proposition. The app has yet to earn their confidence at this stage, but it is asking for their approval to even show up on their screens. Why on earth would any first-time user take this plunge and place their trust in it? The user would most likely tap on the decline and move on with their life.
There is a solution to this recurrent offense, however. Leveraging the principle of reciprocity you can offer something of value to users first. Let them explore the app a bit and get familiar before you ask them to accept any updates.
4. Don’t forget to tell users what info notifications contain
Providing your app users with information regarding the push notifications will help them decide if it’s something they need. Besides, being utmost honest and transparent about it could help add to the credibility and trust of your app.
One of my favorite apps, ‘Night Sky’, an AR planetarium app tells you about the nature of the notifications, so you can decide if you want to receive notifications or not.
5. Don’t complicate turning off notifications
Because it’s like offering a genuine reason to your user to uninstall your app. You don’t want an exasperated user searching google on how to turn off notifications.
There could be a number of reasons why a user may want to turn off notifications:
- For starters, they are receiving way too many notifications (not just from you
- Your content is hardly tailored to their interests
- They are distracting
Never attempt to yank the ‘turn off’ feature from your users, no matter the excuse. It is deceptive and discouraging and minimizes a user’s faith in the company and application.