TRANSCRIPTEnglish

Meet The Guy Dominating The App Store

54m 10s11,103 words1,559 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

0:00

How do you build a portfolio of 30 apps

0:02

with over 50 million downloads?

0:04

>> Yeah, probably more to be honest. I

0:05

haven't really kept count.

0:06

>> You build a factory. Ryan's team built a

0:08

system so effective it turned one of

0:10

their apps into the number one most

0:12

downloaded app in the US beating Tik Tok

0:14

and Google.

0:15

>> We heard of like Tik Tok at that time,

0:17

you know, Google, Chrome, all the other

0:19

apps that everyone downloads every day.

0:21

But seeing the number one downloaded app

0:23

on that day was just insane. But the

0:24

crazy part, even with the factory, they

0:26

still couldn't explain [music] their

0:27

biggest hit, a creator who repeatedly

0:30

got tens of millions of views for

0:31

reasons they still don't quite

0:32

understand. Top left one, 66.9 million.

0:35

It just went super viral. We tried to

0:37

replicate the same video across 20, 30,

0:40

40 different content creators. Didn't

0:41

work. She did another video back to

0:43

back, hit again. I don't know why. It's

0:46

just makes no sense to me.

0:47

>> So, how do they build a predictable

0:49

system around unpredictable results?

0:51

First, they built an in-house university

0:53

to train an army of 250 content [music]

0:55

creators and turn them from amateurs

0:57

into professionals who understand all

0:59

the relevant metrics.

1:01

>> We had a really large content creator

1:02

army that we built inhouse, effectively

1:04

created our own kind of university

1:06

teaching them how to make good ads, good

1:08

content [music] for us.

1:09

>> Second, they created a three tier ad

1:12

scaling system. Every video gets a $20

1:14

test. Winners graduate to a level two

1:16

campaign with a bigger budget. And the

1:18

top 1% of those become level three

1:20

evergreens that get 90% of the [music]

1:22

ad spend.

1:23

>> You might get to a point where you just

1:24

have the same video running at level

1:25

one, level two, and level three, just at

1:26

different scale spends. That was

1:28

effectively the model.

1:29

>> Third, they mastered seasonal ad buying

1:31

arbitrage, spending 75% of their entire

1:34

annual ad budget in January when the

1:36

cost to acquire a user is 50% cheaper.

1:39

The first week of January is effectively

1:41

the Super Bowl, the Black Friday of

1:43

results where you just have so many

1:44

market tailwind wins with you. We would

1:46

spend effectively like 75% of our ad

1:48

budget within the first month of the

1:50

year.

1:50

>> Ryan's whole approach was not based

1:52

around trying to find [music] a viral

1:54

trend or just ride waves of hype. It was

1:56

to build a machine that could test

1:57

thousands of videos, identify winners,

1:59

and scale [music] them systematically.

2:00

we could allocate certain amount of

2:02

content, maybe thousands of videos

2:04

across [music] the portfolio in as

2:06

profitable a way as we could based off

2:07

of the metrics that was coming off the

2:09

back of the the [music] ads that were

2:10

being created. And in this episode, Ryan

2:12

opens up the entire playbook. How to

2:14

build a creator army from scratch, his

2:16

[music] three tier system for scaling

2:18

ads from $20 to millions of dollars and

2:20

how he's now building an AI employees to

2:23

run his entire playbook for him. We are

2:25

creating AI employees for your mobile

2:27

app and then in the background while you

2:28

sleep, it's just going to grow your app.

2:30

It's going to find problems. It's going

2:31

to make sure that they're fixed. This is

2:33

a masterass in building an industrial

2:35

app growth factory. Let's get into it.

2:37

This is the Superall podcast and I'm

2:39

Joseph Choy, founder of Consumer Club.

2:41

The members in the Consumer Club Discord

2:42

and the founders I interview on the pod

2:44

build apps at a median of about a

2:46

million dollars ARR. In my conversations

2:48

with dozens of these founders every

2:50

week, one thing I've noticed is most of

2:52

them AB test their payw walls to

2:53

increase their conversion rates and make

2:55

more money. Now, most people know that

2:56

one of the best ways to AB test payw

2:58

walls is Superwall. But one thing you

3:00

might not know is Superwall has a lot of

3:02

data on the thousands of apps that use

3:04

their payw walls. So recently, they

3:06

actually put together a tool that takes

3:08

422 profitable paywall experiments and

3:10

put those into a paywall experiment

3:12

generator where you can upload a

3:14

screenshot of your own paywall and it'll

3:15

give you an experiment idea to increase

3:17

your revenue. You can use it for free at

3:19

paywallexperiments.com.

3:20

All right, let's get into the pod. So

3:22

you have 30 apps in your portfolio and a

3:25

few of them have 7 figure AR. It was

3:27

Reflectly your first app in the

3:30

portfolio?

3:30

>> Yes. So, Reflectly was the original app

3:33

that was built back in 2017 and then at

3:35

the time it was the AI journaling app

3:38

before AI was a thing. It was kind of

3:39

just a combination of machine learning

3:41

and then from 2017 to 2020 uh we scaled

3:45

that relatively large. Um mainly we had

3:48

just a really good arbitrage with

3:50

Facebook ads. Um we were doing micro

3:53

influencers at the time. So finding UGC

3:56

before it was a hot topic uh is one way

3:59

of doing it. Um, so we had influencers,

4:01

usually content creators in local

4:03

countries speaking like the local

4:05

dialect and getting them to convert

4:08

really well on Facebook ads.

4:10

>> Interesting. So you'd find micro

4:11

influencers, but you wouldn't have them

4:13

actually post their content organically.

4:16

You would just pay them to read a script

4:18

and then you'd use that as an ad.

4:20

>> Yeah, exactly. So um and and it became

4:23

got to the point where it was so uh we

4:25

couldn't predict the videos that were

4:26

going to win. Um, it was just a

4:28

combination of trust that they are going

4:30

to come up with, you know, how

4:32

influencers are, they come up with the

4:33

wildest videos of like babies crying in

4:35

the background, bad uh lighting, and

4:38

those were always the videos that seem

4:40

to catch and work.

4:41

>> How much revenue was Reflectly making at

4:43

its peak?

4:44

>> Uh, app its peak was probably doing

4:46

three 34 million AR.

4:48

>> Okay. Wow.

4:49

>> We were spending the exact same

4:51

effectively.

4:52

>> So, net net we were we weren't making

4:55

massive progress. Um the charts look

4:58

great but we were spending a lot of

4:59

money to maintain that level.

5:01

>> Interesting. Were you going for an exit

5:03

because you sold the company eventually?

5:06

Like were you okay with the kind of like

5:08

the break even profitability or did you

5:10

want to get to like profit eventually?

5:12

>> Yeah. Well, it's a it's a really good

5:13

question. It opens up a whole whole line

5:15

of discussion. Um so it was around 2020.

5:18

We were hitting these numbers. as we

5:20

were growing really fast and we had all

5:22

these uh different investors who are

5:24

curious and interested in kind of

5:26

scaling that and focusing on becoming

5:28

like the next calm or the next headsp

5:29

space. Um but to be honest we didn't

5:30

quite believe it ourselves. I think co

5:33

was about to start was happening was

5:35

sort of around that time. Um and we

5:37

didn't know how reliable Facebook ads

5:39

were going to be. iOS 14 just came in so

5:41

the tracking got worse. So the ability

5:43

to just scale it to 10 20 30 40 50

5:46

million AR just didn't seem realistic.

5:49

And I think that's kind of a case study

5:50

of how we've been over the years trying

5:52

to do what we think is realistically the

5:54

best idea. And what that led to was we

5:56

had another option. So we were able to

5:58

acquire a habit app called Done. It's

6:00

now called Do Habit. And we acquired

6:03

that and it came with a portfolio of

6:05

extra apps as well. Yeah. So we we

6:07

acquire we acquired this one. It came

6:08

with another five or six apps kind of

6:11

like as a bundle. And what was really

6:12

great about this is we paid uh a pretty

6:15

good price for it, but it was quite

6:18

undermonetized. Um there was room for

6:20

growth. We knew that there was

6:22

improvement in like pay walls and inapp

6:24

subscriptions that we could make. And so

UNLOCK MORE

Sign up free to access premium features

INTERACTIVE VIEWER

Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

AI SUMMARY

Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

TRANSLATE

Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

MIND MAP

Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT

Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS

Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.

    Meet The Guy Dominatin… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev