- Stop using Apple Search Ads 'Basic'. The 'Advanced' setup is the only way to get control over your campaigns and stop burning cash on irrelevant downloads in the competitive London market.
- Structure is everything. You absolutely must seperate your campaigns into Brand, Competitor, Generic, and Discovery. This isn't optional if you want to lower your costs.
- Your biggest lever for reducing cost isn't bidding lower, it's ruthless use of negative keywords. Keywords found in your Discovery campaign should be constantly added as negatives to your other campaigns.
- The London app scene is a different animal. Competition, especially in FinTech and services, is fierce. You need a specific strategy that accounts for higher user LTV but also much higher bids.
- This guide includes an interactive calculator to help you figure out your app's Lifetime Value (LTV) and determine a target Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) you can actually afford.
If you're an app developer in the UK, especially in London, you're probably feeling the pressure. You've built something great, but getting it seen in the App Store feels like shouting into the wind. You turn to Apple Search Ads, hoping for a flood of new users, and instead, you get a trickle of expensive downloads that don't seem to stick around. Your cost per acquisition is through the roof and you're wondering if it's even possible to compete with the big players without a venture-capital-sized war chest. It is, but you have to stop doing what everyone else is doing.
The truth is, most developers are using Apple Search Ads completely wrong. They treat it like a slot machine, putting money in and hoping for a jackpot. That's a surefire way to drain your budget. Real success on this platform, particularly in a hyper-competitive market like London, comes from a disciplined, strategic approach. It's about control, structure, and understanding the numbers that actually matter. Forget broad campaigns and vanity metrics. It's time to build a proper acquisition engine.
So, why are my app installs so bloody expensive?
First, let's get one thing straight. If your Cost Per Install (CPI) or Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) feels high, it probably is. But it's not random. There's a few reasons why you're likely paying more than you should, especially in the UK.
The London market is, frankly, a bit of a beast. It's dense with early adopters and high-value users, particularly in sectors like finance, tech, and business services. This means competition is absolutely cut-throat. You're not just bidding against other indie developers; you're bidding against Monzo, Revolut, Deliveroo, and countless other well-funded scale-ups who can afford to pay a premium for a user. They know a London-based user is often worth more in the long run, and they bid accordingly, driving up the price for everyone.
Industry data often shows this. A campaign for a fitness app might see a CPI of £1.50 in Manchester, but that same keyword in London could easily cost £3.00 or more. The potential reward is higher, so the cost of entry is too. It's not just about geography, though. The category of your app plays a huge part. A simple utility app will have a much lower acquisition cost than a FinTech app where the lifetime value of a single user can be thousands of pounds. I remember one campaign we ran for an app, we managed to get over 45,000 signups at under £2 per signup, but that was for a sports and events app, a much less competitive space than finance.
This is why understanding your own numbers is so important. You can't just look at your competitors and guess. You need to know what a user is worth to you before you can decide what you're willing to pay for them. Most developers just look at the initial install cost, panic, and turn the ads off. The successful ones understand the relationship between what they spend and what they earn over the lifetime of a user.
Typical UK Cost Per Install (CPI)
Benchmark figures by app category
Avg. FinTech CPI
How do I build a campaign that doesn't just burn money?
Right, let's get into the meat of it. If you take one thing away from this, let it be this: Stop using Apple Search Ads 'Basic'. Just stop. It's designed to be simple, which means it takes away all the controls that actually matter. It's a black box that just spends your money. To get results, you MUST use 'Advanced'. It's not as scary as it sounds, and it's the only way to implement a proper structure.
A winning structure isn't about having dozens of campaigns. It's about having a few, very specific campaigns that do different jobs. There are four campaigns you need to have running, and each one has a distinct purpose.
- -> Brand Campaign: This is your defence. You bid on your own app's name and related terms. Why? Because if you don't, your competitors will. You want to make sure that when someone searches for you directly, you're the one they find. These should be your cheapest, highest-converting installs. This campaign should have Search Match turned OFF.
- -> Competitor Campaign: This is your offence. You bid on the names of your direct competitors. This is more expensive, but it allows you to capture users who are already in the market for a solution like yours. You're trying to peel off their potential customers at the last second. Again, Search Match is OFF.
- -> Generic Campaign: This is your bread and butter. You bid on non-branded keywords that describe what your app does, like "budgeting app", "photo editor", or "london tube map". These are people looking for a solution, but they don't have a specific brand in mind. This is where you can find a lot of new users. Search Match OFF.
- -> Discovery Campaign: This is your research department. Here, you turn Search Match ON and use broad match keywords. Apple's algorithm will show your ad for search terms it thinks are relevant. Most of these will be rubbish, but some will be gold. The job of this campaign is to find new, profitable keywords. You then take those winning keywords and move them into your Generic or Competitor campaigns as exact match keywords. Crucially, you must also add them as negative keywords to the Discovery campaign so you don't bid against yourself.
This structure gives you total control. You can allocate budget to the campaigns that are working best. You can see exactly which terms are driving installs. It stops being a guessing game and starts being a system. Any keyword that performs well in the Discovery campaign gets promoted. Any keyword that spends money without converting gets added as a negative keyword across the entire account. This constant refinement is how you lower your costs over time. It's an active process, not a 'set it and forget it' one.
The Winning Apple Search Ads Structure
Discovery Campaign
Search Match: ON
Broad Match Keywords
Promote to...
...Generic or Competitor Campaigns as Exact Match
Add as Negative...
...to Discovery, Generic, and Brand Campaigns
Brand Campaign
Your App Name [Exact]
Generic Campaign
"budget app" [Exact]
Competitor Campaign
"competitor name" [Exact]
What keywords should I even be bidding on?
Once your structure is in place, it's all about the keywords. This is where most people get it wrong. They either go way too broad (bidding on "app") or they don't understand match types. Apple Search Ads has two main match types: Broad Match and Exact Match.
Broad Match: You only use this in your Discovery campaign. If you bid on 'photo editor', Apple might show your ad for 'picture collage maker', 'remove background from image', or 'camera filters app'. It's good for finding new ideas, but terrible for control.
Exact Match: This is what you use in your Brand, Competitor, and Generic campaigns. If you bid on [photo editor], your ad will only show when someone types in "photo editor". This gives you precision and control over your spending.
The real secret weapon, though, is negative keywords. This is the single most powerful tool you have for reducing wasted spend. A negative keyword tells Apple not to show your ad for a certain search. Your Discovery campaign will unearth all sorts of irrelevant terms. Let's say your premium photo editing app shows up for "free photo editor". Those users are looking for something you don't offer. You should immedietly add "free" as a negative keyword to all your campaigns (except maybe a specific ad group where you address it). Every pound you don't spend on an irrelevant click is a pound you can spend on a click that might convert.
Your weekly routine should involve going into your Discovery campaign's search terms report, sorting by spend, and ruthlessly adding any irrelevant term as a negative keyword. Things like 'free', 'jobs', 'reviews', 'alternative' are common ones to add from day one. This simple housekeeping task can have a dramatic impact on your overall CPA.
How do I know what to actually spend?
This is the million-dollar question, or perhaps the ten-thousand-pound question for a London startup. You can't just pick a budget out of thin air. You need to work backwards from what a customer is actually worth to you. This is where so many developers go wrong; they focus on the Cost Per Install (CPI) but ignore the Lifetime Value (LTV). Who cares if an install costs £5 if that user goes on to spend £100 in your app?
To figure this out, you need three numbers:
- Average Revenue Per User (ARPU): How much money, on average, a user generates over a specific period (e.g., per month).
- Gross Margin %: Your profit margin on that revenue after app store fees and other direct costs.
- Monthly Churn Rate %: The percentage of users you lose each month.
The calculation is simple: LTV = (ARPU * Gross Margin %) / Monthly Churn Rate. This tells you the total profit you can expect to make from an average user over their entire 'lifetime' with your app. Once you know your LTV, you can set a sensible target for your Customer Acquistion Cost (CAC). A healthy ratio is often 3:1, meaning your LTV should be at least three times your CAC. So if your LTV is £90, you can afford to spend up to £30 to acquire a customer and still have a very profitable business. Suddenly that £5 CPI doesn't seem so scary, does it?
This kind of financial modelling is what separates the apps that scale from the apps that die. It allows you to bid confidently and intelligently. To make this easier, I've built a simple calculator below. Play around with your own numbers and see what your target CPA should be. This will be your north star for optimising your campaigns.
App LTV & Target CPA Calculator
Use the sliders to input your app's metrics. The calculator will estimate your customer Lifetime Value (LTV) and suggest a target Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) based on a healthy 3:1 LTV:CAC ratio.
Is advertising in London really that different?
Yes and no. The principles of a good campaign structure and keyword management are universal. But the context in London adds layers of complexity and opportunity. The tech scene, especially around 'Silicon Roundabout' in Old Street, means you have a highly concentrated audience of tech-savvy, high-income professionals. This is a goldmine if your app serves this demographic, but it also means every other B2B or FinTech app is targeting them too, driving up costs.
One tactic that can work well is getting more granular with location targeting. Instead of just targeting 'London', you could try targeting specific boroughs or even postcode areas known for being affluent or for having a high concentration of your ideal users. You can also layer demographic data, like age and gender, to refine your audience further. This is how you can start to dominate the London market without a massive budget; by being smarter and more specific than your competitors.
You also need to be mindful of your creative. London is a global, multicultural city. Does your ad creative reflect that? Are your screenshots and app previews compelling to this audience? A generic, one-size-fits-all approach is less likely to work. Using Creative Sets in Apple Search Ads to test different visual approaches for different ad groups is a smart move. You might find that one set of screenshots works well for your competitor campaigns, while another performs better for your generic ones. You must also ensure your visuals and copy meet the necessary UK advertising standards to avoid any frustrating ad rejections.
Ultimately, success in London comes from embracing the competition. You need to be more disciplined, more data-driven, and more strategic. It's not about outspending everyone; it's about out-thinking them. Knowing the expected cost per lead in London helps you set realistic goals from the outset.
When should I stop trying to do it all myself?
There comes a point where your time is better spent working on your product than in the weeds of an ad account. Managing Apple Search Ads effectively is a full-time job. If you find yourself hitting a plateau, where your CPA is stuck and you can't seem to scale further, or if you're simply burning through your budget with little to show for it, it might be time to get expert help.
The strategies I've outlined here are the foundation. They will absolutly get you on the right track and put you ahead of 90% of other app developers. But there's always another level of optimisation. Advanced techniques like custom product pages, seasonal bidding adjustments, and more sophisticated LTV modelling can take your growth to the next level. This is often where an agency or a consultant comes in. We live and breathe this stuff every day.
The main advice I have for you is to be methodical. Don't just throw things at the wall to see what sticks. Build the right structure, manage your keywords diligently, and understand your numbers.
| Action Item | Why It's Important | First Step |
|---|---|---|
| Switch to 'Advanced' | Gives you control over bidding, keywords, and campaign structure. 'Basic' is a black box designed to spend your money easily. | In your Apple Search Ads dashboard, create a new campaign and ensure you select the 'Advanced' option. |
| Implement the 4-Campaign Structure | Separates your traffic by intent (Brand, Competitor, Generic, Discovery), allowing for precise budget allocation and performance analysis. | Create four seperate campaigns, one for each type. Set Search Match to ON only for the Discovery campaign. |
| Begin Negative Keyword Harvesting | This is the #1 way to reduce wasted ad spend on irrelevant clicks and lower your CPA. It's a continuous process. | Check the 'Search Terms' tab in your Discovery campaign weekly. Add any irrelevant term as a negative keyword at the campaign level for your other campaigns. |
| Calculate Your LTV and Target CPA | Moves you from guessing to a data-driven approach. You can't optimise for profitability if you don't know what a user is worth. | Use the calculator in this guide with your own ARPU, Margin, and Churn Rate to find your sustainable CPA. |
| Test Creative Sets | Your App Store screenshots are your ad creative. Different visuals will resonate with different audiences (e.g., users searching for competitors vs. generic terms). | In an ad group, go to the 'Ads' tab and create a new Creative Set. Align the messaging and visuals with the keywords in that ad group. |
If you've implemented all of this and still feel like you're leaving money on the table, it might be worth a chat. Deciding to work with a professional is a big step, and it's sensible to understand the potential costs of ad management in the UK before you even start looking. There are many great ad experts based in London who specialise in exactly this kind of challenge.
We offer a free, no-obligation strategy session where we can look at your current campaigns and give you some honest, actionable advice on what to do next. Sometimes a fresh pair of expert eyes is all it takes to spot the opportunity you've been missing.
Hope this helps!
Lukas Holschuh
Founder, Growth & Advertising Consultant
Great campaigns fail without expertise. Lukas and his team provide the missing strategy, optimizing your entire advertising funnel—from ad creatives and copy to landing page design.
Backed by a proven track record across SaaS, eLearning, and eCommerce, they don't just run ads; they engineer systems that convert. A data-driven partnership focused on tangible revenue growth.