Applications Economy: Difference between revisions

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'''Report: WHERE THE JOBS ARE: The App Economy. Michael Mandel. TechNet, 2012'''
Detailed treatment at: the [[App Economy]]
 
'''Report: WHERE THE JOBS ARE: The [[App Economy]]. Michael Mandel. TechNet, 2012'''


URL = http://www.technet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/TechNet-App-Economy-Jobs-Study.pdf
URL = http://www.technet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/TechNet-App-Economy-Jobs-Study.pdf
=Findings=
"by Todd Bishop:
"A new study out today documents the impact of apps on the U.S. economy, concluding that 466,000 jobs have been created by the “App Economy” since 2007 — including programmers, marketers, interface designers, managers and support staff working on apps and infrastructure for platforms including Android, Apple iOS, BlackBerry, Facebook and Windows Phone.
The New York Metro area has the largest proportion of jobs in the sector, at 9.2 percent. The Seattle region is fourth, at 5.7 percent, behind San Francisco and San Jose.
The research was conducted by economist Michael Mandel for industry group TechNet based on trends in help-wanted ads, in addition to other economic data. A summary of the findings is available here.
The report says, “Every major consumer-facing company, and many business-facing companies, has discovered that they need an app to be the public face of the business. In some sense, that makes the App Economy the construction sector of the 21st century, building a new front door to everyone’s house and in some cases constructing a whole new house.”
((http://www.geekwire.com/2012/study-app-economy-created-466000-jobs-2007))
=Excerpts=
1.
"‘App’, in the sense that we mean it today, did not
exist before the iPhone was introduced in 2007.
Apps are relatively lightweight programs, specifically
designed to run on mobile platforms such as
the iPhone and Android phones. In the past couple
of years, the term ‘app’ has been extended to
Facebook applications as well.
In the prospectus
for its initial public offering, Zynga described the
App Economy in this way:
- In order to provide users with a wider range of
engaging experiences, social networks and mobile
operating systems have opened their platforms to
developers, transforming the creation, distribution
and consumption of digital content. We refer to this
as the “App Economy.” In the App Economy, developers
can create applications accessing unique
features of the platforms, distribute applications
digitally to a broad audience and regularly update
existing applications”
The term ‘App Economy’ started coming into use
in early 2009, and was popularized by a prescient
November 2009 BusinessWeek cover story.
The combination of ease of development and ease
of delivery makes possible a stunning variety of
apps. To just give some examples: You can take
verbal notes; make your voice sound like a robot;
schedule plane flights; play a baseball simulation;
have customized news delivered to your device;
create a digitized voodoo doll; and edit Microsoft
Word documents.
But the App Economy is much more than a better
delivery channel for software. From the economic
perspective, we can think of the App Economy as
a collection of interlocking innovative ecosystems.
Each ecosystem consists of a core company,
which creates and maintains a platform and an
app marketplace, plus small and large companies
that produce apps and/or mobile devices for that
platform. Businesses can belong to multiple ecosystems
and usually do.
The key platforms in the App Economy today are
• Android, anchored by Google;
• Apple iOS, anchored by Apple;
• Blackberry, anchored by RIM;
• Facebook, anchored by Facebook;
• Windows Phone and Windows Mobile, anchored by Microsoft
Every major consumer-facing company, and many
business-facing companies, has discovered that
they need an app to be the public face of the business.
In some sense, that makes the App Economy
the construction sector of the 21st century, building
a new front door to everyone’s house and in some
cases constructing a whole new house."
==Turnover==
Michael Mandel:
“The App Economy lends itself to several types of metrics. For example, it’s relatively easy to count the number of apps in a particular app store, how many different developers, and even how many times apps have been downloaded. For example, the Apple App store had 529,550 active apps as of December 12, 2011, according to 148apps.biz, uploaded by 124,475 active publishers.
Another important metric is revenue. By one estimate, the App Economy generated almost $20 billion in revenue in 2011.6 This includes app downloads, in-app revenues, sales of virtual goods, and sales of physical goods and services.”
(http://www.technet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/TechNet-App-Economy-Jobs-Study.pdf)
=More Information=
Full report: http://www.technet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/TechNet-App-Economy-Jobs-Study.pdf




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[[Category:Collaborative Economy]]
[[Category:Collaborative Economy]]


[[Category:Business Model]]
[[Category:Business Models]]


[[Category:Statistics]]
[[Category:Statistics]]

Latest revision as of 03:06, 14 January 2019

Detailed treatment at: the App Economy

Report: WHERE THE JOBS ARE: The App Economy. Michael Mandel. TechNet, 2012

URL = http://www.technet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/TechNet-App-Economy-Jobs-Study.pdf