App Expert Reveals How to Improve Conversion w/ Julie Tonna

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Kicking Off: Why Conversion Optimization Matters

Ariel welcomes everyone to a new live stream and introduces Julie Tona as today's expert guest. The topic is conversion optimization for apps, especially on the App Store.

Ariel is in New York City, already in winter mode, drinking peach ginger tea. Julie joins from the south of France, in Marseille, keeping it classic with water after a recent heat wave.

After a brief nod to the old "Zoom shuffle in" days and some quick chat about iced tea and espresso, Ariel shifts the focus to the main topic: how to turn all the traffic you work so hard to get—through App Store Optimization (ASO), Apple Search Ads, and other channels—into actual downloads and growth.

Why iOS and Apple Ads Are So Central

Ariel explains that a big theme across past live streams has been:

Julie introduces herself more formally:

"I'm a growth expert. I've been working within the app ecosystem for around five years, in both big and smaller companies. I have a pretty good idea of what's working and what's not, especially on iOS."

Julie used to work at Apple, specifically on Apple Search Ads. From that vantage point, she repeatedly saw:

Ariel reinforces this with data previously shared in his newsletter: iOS is where the money is for apps and games. He also notes that many apps are iOS-only, largely for revenue reasons, even though Google Play is improving and becoming more like the App Store.

The Core Problem: Impressions Without Conversions

Ariel frames the key question: once a user lands on your App Store product page, then what? Are you sure they'll download the app?

Julie sees this problem often:

"Most developers want scale and volume. They get all these impressions and then you look at the downloads and there's a massive drop. You paid for and managed to get all those impressions, but you're not managing to get the downloads. It's quite a shame—you should be able to convert."

The goal of the conversation is to:

Sometimes this means accepting fewer impressions at first but getting a much higher conversion rate, which still yields more installs and better ROI.

Custom Product Pages: A Huge Shift

Ariel has spent much of the year talking about:

He’s seen many viewers update screenshots after previous live streams and then report more downloads.

Then Apple introduced Custom Product Pages (CPPs):

Julie:

"I've seen custom product pages being used a lot for Apple ads because you could improve your conversion rates. It's insane. You can run on the same keywords and have a product page variation just to align with this keyword. It's amazing."

Previously, that power was limited to paid traffic. Now it’s being linked to organic search terms (with some constraints, which they later unpack).

Ariel’s team at Appfigures has been tracking CPPs for months:

Julie expects CPPs to:

A Powerful CPP Case Study

Julie shares a concrete example from her Apple Search Ads experience:

Result:

Julie calls it "insane" and a massive win, and she hopes that team is now also using CPPs for ASO.

What Custom Product Pages Actually Do

For anyone who missed Ariel’s prior walkthrough, he summarizes CPPs:

This is now available in iOS 16 (beta at the time of the conversation), and Ariel has already seen it live. His verdict: "wonderful."

Ariel wants to focus on:

  1. What a custom product page is
  2. How to set it up
  3. How to make it actually help with conversion

He sees this as the biggest actionable tip right now: build custom product pages before iOS 16 fully ships, so you’re ready.

But there is a twist: the way Apple implemented CPPs for organic introduces significant limitations for optimizers. Ariel and Julie come back to that later.

Step One for Conversion Optimization: Go Deep on Data

Ariel asks Julie: where does she start when optimizing conversion for an app?

Julie’s process is heavily data-driven:

  1. Look at actual conversion rate

  2. Prioritize by geo

  3. Within priority countries, analyze keyword performance

  4. Craft your product page around those keywords

This provides a roadmap: start with data, then focus your creative and copy around what users actually search for.

Ariel connects this to intent and segmentation:

At Appfigures, Ariel’s team even built an AI agent that:

It’s in beta, but has already made planning much simpler for their members.

Julie also uses AI for:

Grouping Keywords for CPPs: Use Cases First

Ariel asks how Julie segments keywords into groups for CPPs: by features, demographics, or use cases?

Julie generally groups by use case, though category and app type matter:

Users searching for "book flights" don’t necessarily care about car rentals at that moment, so showing a page focused on flights makes the app feel relevant and tailored.

Ariel adds another example:

Competitors who show the exact niche ("for plumbers") will win those users.

Julie emphasizes that Apple Search Ads are valuable not just for installs, but also for insights:

"You pay for installs, but you also pay for insights about what people are really looking for and where there is volume and impressions available."

Now that CPPs work for organic, the flow can be:

  1. Use Apple Search Ads and CPPs to test which angles and use cases convert best.
  2. Bring that learning back into your organic strategy.
  3. Update keywords, screenshots, and CPPs accordingly.

Testing and Product Page Optimization

A viewer (Leonardo) asks how to get A/B test results for low-install apps, and whether using Apple Search Ads with a default ad will trigger Store experiments.

Julie notes:

Ariel adds:

For most low-install apps, Ariel recommends:

He mentions a past live stream with an A/B testing expert (from companies like Google), who shared the same advice: big changes when traffic is limited; finer refinements only once you have real volume.

Apple Search Ads vs Meta Ads at Launch

Another viewer asks: during the first three months of an iOS app launch, which provides better conversion—Apple Search Ads or Meta ads?

Julie calls it a trick question but breaks it down:

Apple Search Ads

Meta Ads (Facebook/Instagram)

Julie’s guidance:

Ariel adds:

Julie elaborates on Apple Search Ads placements:

For launch:

Turning Keywords into High-Converting Screenshots

Once you know which keywords and geos to focus on, what’s next?

Julie’s approach:

  1. Audit your existing product page against target keywords:

  2. Recognize screenshot importance:

  3. Include keywords in screenshots:

  4. Test preview videos:

Ariel underscores the importance of placing search terms directly in screenshots:

Julie notes that at Apple, one of the top best practices they promoted was:

"If you want to do a custom product page, add the same keywords you’re bidding on in Apple Search Ads into your screenshots. It’s a no-brainer. You’re looking for something, you see it on your screen, you know it’s what you’re looking for, and you download."

Many teams still miss this because they focus primarily on branding and design instead of direct alignment with user intent.

Ariel adds another layer:

Learn from Competitors (Without Copying)

Julie recommends:

"It’s not copying, it’s just getting inspired."

Ariel strongly agrees. Whenever someone asks, "What do I do?", his default answer is:

Useful competitor signals include:

Ariel mentions he even built AI to analyze CPP strategies at scale and summarize them in simple, actionable insights.

Pitfalls of Audience Refinement in Apple Search Ads

They briefly dive into a more technical Apple Search Ads topic: audience refinement.

Julie cautions heavily:

This is particularly risky for keyword campaigns where volume is already limited.

Julie’s rule of thumb:

Ariel notes that this pattern—more performance by using less targeting—is similar to advice he’s heard in previous live streams about Meta ads: broad targeting often lets the algorithm do its job better.

Protecting and Targeting Brand Keywords

Julie also advises checking if competitors are:

If they’re not:

However, Ariel offers nuance:

Still, it’s worth testing—and the first step is always checking whether the competitor is actively protecting their brand with their own Apple Search Ads.

The Big Limitation: How Apple Tied CPPs to Keywords

A key constraint in Apple’s implementation of CPPs for organic:

Implications:

Julie’s current approach (still experimental):

But she’s clear: it’s early, and no one has definitive answers yet.

Ariel shares two strategic ideas he’s considering (also early-stage):

  1. Treat the default product page like just another CPP.

  2. Pack secondary use cases into the keyword field.

Both strategies must be tested, and Ariel notes that adoption isn’t yet broad enough to draw strong conclusions. Still, given that CPPs cost nothing to create, he encourages developers to set them up now:

"If it doesn’t do anything, okay. But if you get even a little bit, you did it. There’s no way to lose."

Deep Linking from CPPs to In-App Experiences

Julie brings up a crucial, often-overlooked tactic: deep links with CPPs.

Example:

This improves:

Julie also notes that you don’t always need completely new screenshot sets for tests:

Ariel backs that up from his own teardown experience: often there’s a strong screenshot hidden near the end that, if moved forward, significantly improves performance.

Do Preview Videos Help?

A viewer asks if preview videos help for a workout app.

Julie’s guidance:

Ariel adds:

Again, the theme returns: always test.

The Biggest Mistake: Misaligned Funnel Experiences

Ariel asks Julie the big question: what’s the one mistake that, if fixed, could change everything for conversion?

Julie’s answer:

"It’s really about aligning your full experience. Use your product page as a landing page. If you’re running ads, your ads and your product page need to make sense together. If a user clicks an ad, they need to see what they clicked on. Conversion will be better."

She expands the idea of alignment across the whole funnel:

If at any step users don’t see what they expected, they drop off.

Ariel breaks alignment down further:

He notes that hard paywalls complicate this even more, but that’s a topic for a separate deep dive.

How to Actually Fix Alignment

Julie’s first step:

She also recommends user testing:

Reviews and sentiment analysis are invaluable here:

Ariel reiterates:

Using Reviews and Reddit for Insight

Julie’s standard audit process includes:

She looks for:

"How you feel about a product is really important. That’s how people decide if they’re going to give you five stars or one star."

Ariel notes Reddit can be extremely useful, but also quirky—you may have to ignore some "Reddit-only" noise to get to real signal.

AI as a Selling Point: Use with Caution

A viewer asks whether to go all-in on "AI" keywords in screenshots, and what to do if some users are skeptical of AI.

Julie’s current position:

Her recommendation:

Ariel adds more nuance:

He shares an example of an "AI VPN" where AI quietly optimized for speeds and server switching. Useful, but not something most users explicitly search for.

Julie’s final advice on this:

"People don’t care if you use AI or not. They care what they’re going to get out of your app. Show what the AI does—that helps more than just saying you use some API."

The "Free" Keyword Trap

A question comes up about using the word "free" in CPPs.

Ariel notes:

Julie points out a bigger strategic issue:

Even if you monetize via ads, she reminds that many of those users want both "free" and "no ads".

In short:

Dark Mode vs Light Mode Screenshots

A viewer asks if there’s a difference between using light-mode versus dark-mode screenshots.

Julie:

Ariel’s take:

At present, there’s no universal rule—but testing is straightforward using Product Page Optimization and/or CPP variations.

In-App Events as a Next Step

Julie mentions In-App Events as a later-stage tactic, once your core product page and alignment are solid.

If done well, events can:

But she emphasizes: get your screenshot and CPP strategy aligned first; then layer in events.

What To Do After This Conversation

Ariel summarizes what he hopes viewers will do after watching:

  1. Open Appfigures (or your analytics stack).
  2. Analyze your keywords and your competitors’ keywords.
  3. Read your reviews and competitors’ reviews.
  4. Identify:
  5. Use that information to:

Julie adds that once you’re confident in your core funnel, you can explore:

But alignment remains the central theme.

Wrapping Up and Where to Find Julie

As the session ends, Ariel notes there were still more questions in the chat. He plans to answer additional questions later in the comments.

Julie and Ariel briefly discuss future ideas, like a teardown format focused on "Is your app aligned?", where they review real apps for funnel and messaging consistency.

Julie closes with a few resources:

Ariel promises to include links to:

He thanks Julie for joining and all viewers for their questions, and notes he’ll be back with another live stream in a few weeks, this time focused on open Q&A.

Julie thanks Ariel and the audience, and they sign off.

This transcript was generated and enhanced by AI and may differ from the original video.

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