visit
Photo by on
Users have high expectations from their mobile apps, like stability, speed, and availability of new capabilities and content.
To help you understand how your app compares to other leading mobile apps, Bugsnag has compiled benchmarks including an analysis on how stability impacts app store ratings, and industry trends for stability and release frequency.
Mobile app stability can be impacted by factors such as the value and volume of user interactions.
Stability is a percentage of app sessions that are crash-free. Stability scores are used to gauge app health and user experience.
For mobile apps to lead the market and stand at the forefront of business growth, companies should execute on the following insights.
The more 9s in an app’s stability score, the higher the app store ratings.
The nines of stability are similar to the five-nines that infrastructure and operational teams use to measure uptime and availability. More nines in a stability score indicate more stable app experiences.
This demonstrates how apps that are more stable drive more exceptional user experiences, maximize retention, and build competitive advantage.
Trailblazers: For just one important task, you need this app.
It is costlier to attract customers and thus more important to retain them with stable app experiences.
eCommerce, Travel & Hospitality, and Finance & Banking apps, whose users open the app with the intention to spend or manage money, need to maintain a higher stability because crashes directly impact revenue.
Old Faithfuls: It does the job, but there’s room for improvement.
These apps can afford to balance stability initiatives with other customer-centric initiatives.
A Dime a Dozen: If you don’t like it, there are plenty of others.
Frequent code changes can introduce more bugs, explaining the lower median stability score and wider spread of scores for the gaming industry.
Understanding how frequently high stability apps release a new version can help development teams benchmark their app’s release cadence and decide if it needs to be adjusted to boost retention.
Our research shows that leading mobile apps have shifted to a 1x per week release cadence compared to a previously popular trend of 1x per two weeks.
Release frequency measures the number of times an app updates to a new version within a 30-day time span.