Developers can now try special offers to persuade subscribers to stay

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Apple is adding a retention facility to the App Store, meaning if a user cancels their subscription to an app, its developer can try to talk them out of leaving with an offer.

Mobile screen showing subscription cancellation confirmation, stating service ends on January 15, 2025. Includes a developer message section with a blurred nature image.
A suggested new cancellation screen -- image credit: Apple



Apple has been changing the App Store to meet EU demands, and still some developers want a completely free ride. But there is now a retention feature that is so necessary that it's surprising it hasn't always been part of the App Store.

It's more necessary for developers than it is for users, though. Apple has always been good at making it easy to cancel a subscription to an app, and that has benefited users.

Now, however, once they start that process of cancelling, they may be taken through an extra step. As detailed in Apple's App Store documentation, if a developer chooses to, they can prompt a user in one of four ways:

  • Text-based message

  • Text-based message plus an image

  • Switch-plan message, suggesting a different subscription tier

  • Promotional offer message with discounted price



This is what already happens in just about any other online business. But Apple is taking the simplest, clearest approach by offering this Retention Messaging API, as first spotted by 9to5Mac.

The message, again only if the developer chooses to use it, appears when the user taps on a Cancel Subscription button.

They can then be offered one of these messages by the developer. However, they will still always also get buttons for Confirm Cancellation, or Don't Cancel, as they do now.

There is one further option that developers can benefit from and which might be helpful to users. While Apple says that the four different types of retention messages should be uploaded in advance, ready for cancellation, it does allow for variations on those messages.

Instead of having one previously prepared prompt and promotion for the user, developers can upload a series of them. Then when the user goes to cancel the subscription, the developer can have a message displayed that reflects the user's location.

So international apps could have a special offer in Sterling or Euros, while still showing US dollars for users in the States.

Apple's introduction of a retention feature comes after the FTC failed to get its "Click to Cancel" rule made into law. That rule was aimed at firms implementing vastly more complex systems than Apple, though, in an attempt to make it as difficult as possible to cancel.



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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 4
    darbus69darbus69 Posts: 97member
    Mos def like this change, we all come and go on streaming apps so it could provide a vehicle for consumer savings if businesses take advantage…
    VictorMortimer
     0Likes 1Dislike 0Informatives
  • Reply 2 of 4
    yyzguyyyzguy Posts: 78member
    I often start cancellation process with various services and frequently get discounts.    This is going to be a great way to attempt to get a lower price on just about any subscription.   I wonder if it will apply to Apple’s own subscription offerings.
    VictorMortimerappleinsideruser
     1Like 1Dislike 0Informatives
  • Reply 3 of 4
    It doesn't matter to me in the slightest, I don't use and never will use subscription software. I'll happily buy a license for software I use, but I won't pay an ongoing software subscription.
    VictorMortimerappleinsideruser
     2Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 4 of 4
    Ugh.  More shady business practices.  Just what we needed.
    Wesley_Hilliardappleinsideruser
     0Likes 2Dislikes 0Informatives
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