Thursday, February 6, 2014

How Mobile Developers Can Win Customers' Trust

How Mobile Developers Can Win Customers" Trust
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CIO – Someone, somewhere, is about to install the mobile app that took you hundreds of hours and cost thousands to dollars to develop.
Just as he’s about to, though, he changes his mind – and you’ve just lost another potential user.


This scenario happens to developers every day. Often, it’s a matter of trust. Many apps request permissions to access private
data of many different types. Users – quite rightly – are often reluctant to grant those permissions to an app they have no
reason to trust. Do they really want the app to be able to post “on their behalf” on social networks?


“Some apps ask for access to your phone log or your photos, and you start scratching your head as to why,” says Olivier Amar,
CEO of MyPermissions, a company that has set up a free permissions certification process for developers. “Sometimes, developers really need those permissions, but they don’t have a way to explain that.”


Developers Must Meet ‘Clear Guidelines’ for MyPermissions Certification


MyPermissions’ certification program covers mobile apps as well as also websites and other applications that connect to online
services (such as Twitter or Instagram) or that allow users to authenticate themselves using services such as Facebook Connect.
That’s important because about 80 percent of the top 100 iOS apps, and almost two-thirds of the top 100 Android apps, use
Facebook Connect to let users sign in to the games or services they provide, Amar says.


To become MyPermisions Certified, developers must go through a form-filling process. This includes a review of the required
permissions and a privacy questionnaire that justifies the personal information that their apps access and details why they
need it. “We have guidelines, and they are very clear,” Amar says.


[ Read about app certification programs for Amazon Web Services, Google Apps and Twitter ]


Any developer asking for permissions that contravene these guidelines will have to make changes in order to become certified,
he explains. “We won’t certify author[s] if we can’t understand why they want certain types of information. Why do they want
to know your friends of your political views? An answer like ‘We might need it in the future’ is not acceptable.”


Amar says the certification process is fairly painless. If a developer’s well-organized, it can take as little as 20 minutes.
Otherwise, the process could very well last weeks.


Of course, this raises a key question for developers: Why bother? Why go through such an administrative process just to get
a certification that, let’s face it, most users have never heard of?


One answer is that it allows you to establish your trustworthiness. Users who are curious can click on the “MyPermissions
Certified” logo to bring up information about the certification, along with an explanation of why you needs each permission
and what you will do with the personal data your app can now access.


Perhaps a better answer is that it may bring more users to your apps. During testing, apps that displayed the MyPermissions
Certified mark saw conversion rates rise between 5 percent and 9 percent, Amar says. (In this case, “conversion rate” means
users actually ran the applications after downloading them or signed into them using a system such Facebook Connect, rather
than abandoning them.) That’s a significant amount of numbers users – and it could provide a useful increase in revenue as
well.




Netflash




Read more about How Mobile Developers Can Win Customers" Trust and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

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