TikTok is on fire for a whole bunch of reasons, and the one I see as being most important, revenue, is on the list. In this case, I'm referring to in-app revenue, meaning TikTok's internal currency users of the platform purchase so they can reward creators.
On the App Store, the app has been creeping up the top-grossing charts very aggressively over the last few months, which I covered a few times, but this week it finally broke the top 10.
That's a serious milestone!
The top 10 grossing apps in the App Store split into two segments. The apps and games that pop in for a day or two when something big happens within their ecosystems, and the incumbents. ESPN and a few games fall into the first category, while YouTube and Tinder fall into the latter.
Which will TikTok fall into? Looking at revenue growth in the U.S. App Store, the answer is very clear.
Between January and September of this year, TikTok's in-app revenue in the U.S. grew 232% to an estimated $20M of net revenue, that's after Apple and Google take their fees. We estimate that this month, October, will be TikTok's most massive to date, with a haul of more than $24M of net revenue.
That's great news for creators who are getting the lion's share of this total and bad news for YouTube, which hasn't left the top 5 list in too long to count. Those days might be coming to an end. At TikTok's current ~25% month-over-month growth rate, it'll outpace YouTube in just a few short months.
As we head into 2022, content is still king, which is why a large portion of the top-grossing apps are content apps. I don't expect that to change any time soon.
I'm going to start this in reverse because the thing we've been waiting to happen has finally happened. If you've been f...
October is behind us so we crunched the numbers and ranked the most downloaded mobile apps in the world. While I don't h...