Subscription-based mobile apps are taking over. In 2021, the revenue of the top 100 subscription apps increased by 41%, reaching $18.3 billion. To unleash the potential of subscription monetization, you should entice users with offers based on their behavior and segmentation. Keep reading to uncover how you can target high-value customers at the right time to increase app revenue.

Subscription-based apps: when value drives monetization

It is not only crucial to launch an app that users fall in love with but to choose a monetization strategy that better fits the type of your app. Game apps stimulate in-game purchases and implement pay-per-click (PPC) and cost-per-impression (CPI/CPM) advertising, while mobile commerces drive repeat purchases and special-occasion sales.

The subscription-based model generates money through recurring payments. To increase app revenue, it is crucial to detect the right moments when the user is willing to pay to enhance their experience. At these hotspots, you have the most chances to convert users into loyal, long-term-customers by offering:

  • Free trial;
  • Basic or short-term subscription;
  • Premium or long-term subscription.

This is basically your subscription funnel, where you should track users and encourage their transition to the next stage with timely automated messages. The most common scenarios include onboarding newcomers, offering subscription upgrades when users see the additional value in the app, stimulating purchases with special discounts, winning back churned users, and more.

Here is an example of a customer journey for new users of a health app, from onboarding to the premium subscription upgrade:

Customer journey for a subscription-based app
Open in a new tab to zoom in. This example is made with Pushwoosh Customer Journey Builder, a tool that helps you map out communication flows and send relevant event-triggered messages to customers at every stage of their lifecycle.
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Let your audience know there is a paid subscription

According to Sylvain Gauchet, Director of Revenue Strategy at Babbel, there are a number of ways to make the most of the subscription-based monetization model:

In-App Message

The most effective strategies when it comes to increasing revenue for subscription mobile apps depend on the growth stage of the company.

For most apps, small price optimizations are not going to be huge unlocks (although too many apps don’t charge enough), and what’s more important is to make sure people actually know there is a paid subscription. This means displaying your paywall early and often, especially if there is a free trial: commitment from users is minimal, so you should not feel bad about it.

Besides this, also work on everything that comes before the paywall is shown: the build-up.

You can’t overestimate the role of paywalls in a successful conversion. An effective paywall should demonstrate your subscription value proposition. Tell your users why they should purchase your subscription and give them information on how it will improve their experience instead of just providing the list of features that they’re buying.

What are the best ways to do this?

  1. Inside the app — by showing in-app messages.

In this example, Flo, a female health app, delivers a paywall in-app message with a special offer to a long-term free user. The paywall comes into play after the teaser has garnered the user’s interest. The teaser tells about the additional value a woman can get from a paid subscription — analyzing their cycle graph to get more health insights:

Special offer in-app from a health app

2. Outside the app — by showing push notifications.

Check out two examples of push notifications in the health app Lifesum. The second one urges users to complete the registration by promoting a special diet that is available only to premium subscribers. The message is not only in line with a user’s goal inside the app (becoming fit) but also with their life values, such as environmental awareness. By hitting the push, users get into the app, where they see an in-app message with more details on the special content and a call to action:

Special offer push-notification and in-app from a nutrition app

To effectively convert users, it’s always a good idea to use the combination “a push plus an in-app message”, where the push works as a hook while the in-app completes the conversion.

3. Outside the app — by sending emails.

In this example, the meditation app Calm uses email as a supporting channel to promote its full-access subscription with a 40% discount. The message highlights that the offer is limited to better motivate users to convert. To increase app subscriptions, we encourage you to go multichannel in your messaging and value delivery:

Special offer email from a meditation app


All of these channels are available in Pushwoosh Customer Journey Builder. There, you can set event-triggered omnichannel communication flows, sending messages to the highest-value users in the highest-conversion moments. Wonder how to detect such users and such moments? We’ll tell you further.

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Define a segment of users that are most likely to convert into paid subscribers

For subscription apps, the average purchase conversion rate is about 5 %. It means that, while acquisition is still important, converting users who are able to pay for long-term subscriptions is a core.

To boost the number, we suggest you start by segmenting your audience into groups according to their characteristics, behavior, and level of engagement. The second step is to present each group with an adapted customer journey that’s most likely to convert or upgrade them.

Ellie-Hines-Yodel-Mobile

Ellie Hines

Lead Product Growth Manager @ Yodel Mobile

Use in-app events and user journey data to identify patterns and clusters. This approach can reveal deeper insights into user behavior, such as which features are most popular among different user groups, or common pathways that lead to high-value actions like purchases or subscriptions. In-app analytics tools can help you track these events and analyze user journeys without requiring an extensive setup.

Upgrade your currently paying users

Your paying users are a highly engaged cohort. There are always possibilities to transfer their engagement into upgrade revenue. For example, you can increase your users’ LTV by offering a 6-month or 12-month subscription to those who have been continuously using a monthly plan.

Have a look at the example of VOS, a well-being app. Its push notifications and in-app messages incentivize short-term subscribers to make larger purchases:

Automated push-notification and in-app from a well-being app

Here are a few more ideas you can use to encourage your paid users to upgrade:

  • Offering exclusive value. Highlight your app improvements, latest features or content and offer your paid customers an exclusive trial. You can either send individual codes by email or embed a deep link to the push and take a user to the exact screen or in-app message with more details.
  • Providing customization. Give your customers the ability to change the app’s appearance through the use of colors or decorations without changing the app’s functionality.

Target the most engaged customers

Another strategy to increase app revenue is nudging your free users to their first-time subscription. This strategy may require more resources, but in the end, all efforts will pay off. After one purchase, customers are 27% likely to pay again, and for the second and third purchases, the chances double.

Here are some categories of highly engaged users you can segment out and target:

  • Users who have taken a trial version of your app (or, even, whose trial is about to expire);
  • Users who open the app daily;
  • Regular users of a specific feature.

Timely behavior-based communications can explain the extra value users will enjoy with a premium subscription or appeal to their fear of missing out. As a result, users may feel motivated to upgrade.

In this example, Lightroom prompts upgrading in a series of in-app messages highlighting the app’s premium features:

In-apps promoting premium features from Lightroom
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Are you struggling to engage your users, in the first place? Try some of our 22 ideas for customer engagement — get them in a pocket guide for free!

Detect a point when users are most likely to pay for a subscription

Know your hotspots

In game apps, there are hotspots — the moments when a player’s excitement peaks and they are prone to go in the direction where you lead. This is when you can influence user decisions, including their decision to pay.

Such moments (potentially) exist in any type of app; you may detect hotspots by analyzing your user behavior data. Some examples include:

  • When a user sees value in additional benefits;
  • When there is friction in experience (when a user can’t skip an ad or export a file).

Here is an example from the Instories app that allows free users to try a collage feature but not to export the final picture:

In-app example from Instories

Work with hesitations

Have a look at a Yazio example: the nutrition tracking app targets users who got stuck on a paid feature page. Yazio tries to motivate these users by dissolving their doubts: the subscription is not as expensive as it seems. Then, a call to action follows:

Automated messaging examples from a nutrition app


Capitalize on the seasonality for instant revenue growth

These are not only e-commerce apps that can strike it rich during the holiday season. Subscription-based apps can seize this wonderful moment to raise their revenues too! Indulge your audience’s appetite: tease them with a holiday discount and ensure the majority of your app users (=everyone who has opted in for notifications) receives your message.

At the same time, seasonal acquisition should be backed up by the users’ potential for retention.

Here is how Charles Boes, CEO at Foodvisor, sees it:

In-App Message

Pushing users to a yearly subscription with a big discount is great for cashflow, but for “motivation” apps (e.g. nutrition), it can also lead to a high seasonality and low retention rates (e.g. lots of subscriptions in January but users leaving before August).

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Adopt the tactics for app user retention

Make subscription offers that users can’t refuse

Use your killer (or any new) features as a bait

Even without a glance at your internal statistics, we can assume that your subscription-based app has a good share of users who have never paid. But what if your most recent feature will finally motivate them to convert?

Try sending a notification announcing new functionality to a broader audience. You may send a broadcast message, but we recommend using the Start Segment element in your customer journey. Target those who have added their payment methods or visited a specific page recently. This way, you will concentrate on the most motivated users.

Speak personally to your future paid subscribers

Be careful with the copy: you don’t want it to be too pushy. Remember to apply personalization and choose the best timing for your notification delivery. Also, apply Deep Linking to make your message hit the target.

Look at the example of the Adidas Runtastic fitness app. In its premium plan promotion, customers see personalized in-app messages depending on their user attributes (in this case, the gender selected during onboarding stage):

Premium subscription in-apps from a fitness app

Play a long-term strategy and gain more revenue with thoughtful user onboarding

Apps may earn 18% of their monthly revenue on the first day after installment. And for some types of apps, this number may be even higher. According to Charles Boes (CEO at Foodvisor), the moment when people have the highest purchase intent for a nutrition app is the very beginning — Foodvisor has 60–75% of users that purchase during onboarding. Have a look at the Foodvisor’s welcome in-app messages. They include a user’s questionnaire and a teaser of a custom program based on the obtained data:

Automated onboarding from a health app

A well-considered welcome flow can bring your new users to a hotspot or an AHA moment faster. Once they’ve realized your app’s value, they are more likely to pay for it. A carefully crafted user onboarding may then flourish into higher user engagement and in-app spending.

Here is how Jenny Pollock, Together Labs’ Lead Subscription Monetization Manager, explains the importance of making a great first impression:

In-App Message

Being reliant on cross-app tracking for remarketing is less relevant due to the wave of user privacy concerns. Corporate rules like Apple’s new IDFA and new laws like the European Union’s GDPR aim to give individuals more control over their data.

The reduction of tracking and remarketing for organizations means your product has to capture users the first time they enter the app. You may not get a second chance.

In the base scenario, your welcome messages are sent to all the registered users. But you may also apply segmentation:

  • Select those who have enabled a free trial or added their preferred payment method;
  • Distinguish those who haven’t done any of the above.

Differentiate your onboarding messages for these groups. Less engaged users may need a more inspiring walkthrough that will explain your value from their perspective. By contrast, those who consider a purchase in the near future will be more open to learning about your features and advantages:

Automated onboarding customer journey for a subscription-based app
Open in a new tab to zoom in. This example is made with Pushwoosh Customer Journey Builder, a tool that helps you map out communication flows and send relevant event-triggered messages to customers at every stage of their lifecycle.
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Keep engaging your paid subscribers so that they don’t churn

Even when you’ve enticed users for a paid subscription, the key to success is to automate users’ engagement to keep them using the app regularly. A paid subscriber can easily fade into a churned user in case they aren’t motivated to open the app.

To prevent churn, app marketers should be alert to the top three reasons for subscription cancellations:

âť—Perceived lack of value;

âť—Lack of new or fun products or experiences;

âť—Lack of offers within subscriptions or uninviting pricing.

Satisfied customers are less likely to churn. Thoughtful analysis of customer behavior will allow your business to focus every effort on giving your users what they need. Precise product recommendations, feature updates based on customer needs, and personalized communication are truly effective ways to prevent churn.

Take the wheel of the entire app user lifecycle

Recover churned users

To win back churned users, you need to re-ignite their interest and get them back to the app. This can be done by highlighting features and updates that the users have missed while they were away. Or you can ask your users for feedback and show them that you discover the improvement points.

In Pushwoosh Customer Journey Builder, you can target churned users by using Start Segment element and get them back to the app with a series of reactivation emails:

Automated messaging to recover churned users
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Let’s look at the example of the health app Lifesum. In its “We’ve missed you” push, the app motivates users to re-engage with the app by promising that getting back on track will be easy:

Re-engaging push-notification from a health app

Experiment with hybrid app monetization

Making a bet on both the subscription-based model and in-app purchases seems to be a smart strategy for boosting your app revenue. Here is how ​​Jenny Pollock, Together Labs’ Lead Subscription Monetization Manager, sees it:

In-App Message

A multifaceted monetization strategy is essential. Offer micro-transactions alongside subscriptions. Offer unique value that drives FOMO. Players don’t want to let their Fortnite Crew subscription lapse or they’ll miss the exclusive monthly outfit and accessory item.

Offering only subscriptions isn’t enough to help you navigate economic and app ecosystem changes. At the end of the day, the best way to be successful is to have a strong product offering supported by multiple monetization options.

Grow your subscription-based app revenue with Pushwoosh

For subscription-based apps, it is crucial to show the app’s value at each stage of the funnel, whether it’s when a user has just finished a free trial or is thinking about upgrading their paid subscription. Effective communications — pushes, in-app messages, and emails — make that value most apparent to your customer at each stage of the customer journey.

Automated messaging allows you to easily send subscription offers at just the right times. You can make it possible with Pushwoosh, and also get to accurately track the effectiveness of these communications.

Start sending relevant behavior-based messages to customers at every stage of their lifecycle. Sign up to Pushwoosh and get to try the platform's full functionality for free.

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