There seems to be a push and demand war raging between customer and marketers in the mobile world. Marketers push to stay on the trail of the customer journey at every juncture while customers demand to be engaged in a sensible, personalized way when the marketers do approach them on their journey. The PWA fills a gap in connectivity with the consumer. It picks up where a native mobile app leaves off and before a mobile website can pick the consumer back up on the radar screen. The PWA executes a smooth handoff from the native app and a clean re-entry into the mobile app while engaging the consumer during what used to be the dead time in between. The proof of the effectiveness of the concept is borne out in the staggeringly successful use cases that have delivered impressive results for increased CTR\u2019s and conversion up checks attributed to the PWA. We\u2019ll get to those in a little bit.<\/p>\n
Data Science Supports the PWA Concept<\/strong><\/p>\n Consumer frustration with mobile UX has been a pervasive and persistent problem since 2006 (Jonathan Lazar, 2004). The study measured the incident frustration level totaling 372 from the 111 participants. The graph below shows the results.<\/p>\n This study<\/span><\/a>, while dated, illustrates the need for tools like the progressive web app (PWA) to be developed as the state of the art of the internet continues to introduce new technology such as HTML5 and other web technologies. PWA\u2019s are required to take full advantage of all the capabilities delivered by HTML5. More recent studies, (F\u00f8lstad, 2018), are looking at conversational UX towards realizing the potential for engaging user experiences in conversational user interfaces in the new applications such as PWA\u2019s.<\/p>\n The Characteristics of PWA\u2019s That Attract Consumers<\/strong><\/p>\n Progressive Web Apps have the positive characteristics of both native mobile apps and mobile web pages plus much more.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n There is one issue to watch out for. PWA\u2019s are browser-based technology. Not every browser supports PWA\u2019s, and if you\u2019re delinquent in keeping your browser up to date, advanced features of the PWA may not work. It will still be operational but in a degraded capacity.<\/p>\n Use Case Results and How to Use a PWA<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n We all know that smartphones are small computers and becoming more powerful with each new generation of phones. However, they still have limitations on screen size, keyboard usability, and bandwidth. To obtain the page load speeds that customers want in the mobile environment, PWA\u2019s remove data-intensive sections of a website and optimize the images, plus caching data and adding push notifications based on user preference. So, creating a PWA for a sports website with its live feeds and charts would not be a good idea. They would take a ton of time to load.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s look at some of the results from companies that have embraced the PWA. It is an inspiring insight.<\/p>\n 1. Forbes<\/span><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n 43% increase in sessions per user 2. AliExpress<\/strong><\/span><\/a><\/p>\n 104% increase in conversions for new users<\/p>\n
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\n20% increase in impressions per page
\n100% increase in engagement rates
\n6x increase in the number of readers completing articles<\/p>\n
\n2x more pages visited per session
\n74% increase in time spent per session<\/p>\n