When business owners reach out to discuss a new digital product, one request comes up surprisingly often:
"We need a mobile app."
And in many cases, my response is:
"Maybe. But probably not yet."
That answer usually surprises people.
After all, some of the world's biggest companies have successful mobile apps. So shouldn't every business have one?
Not necessarily.
Over the years, I've worked with businesses across different industries, and I've noticed a common pattern: many companies rush into mobile app development before solving more important business problems.
In this article, I'll explain why I often advise clients to focus elsewhere first—and when building a mobile app actually makes sense.
The Mobile App Myth
Many businesses assume:
Mobile App = More Customers
Mobile App = Faster Growth
Mobile App = Better Business
Unfortunately, that's rarely true.
A mobile app doesn't automatically create demand.
If customers aren't actively using your service today, launching an app won't magically change that.
Technology should support a successful business model—not replace one.
What Most Businesses Actually Need First
Before investing in a mobile application, I usually ask a few questions.
Do You Have a Strong Website?
For many businesses, a website is still the most valuable digital asset.
A good website helps customers:
Discover your business
Understand your services
Build trust
Contact you
Make purchasing decisions
A website is searchable, easy to update, and usually much more cost-effective than maintaining mobile applications.
Do You Understand Your Customers?
A successful app solves a specific problem.
Before building anything, businesses should know:
Who their users are
What challenges they face
How they currently interact with the business
What would make their experience better
Without this information, app development often becomes an expensive guessing game.
Do Users Need Frequent Access?
Mobile apps make sense when users interact regularly.
Examples include:
Food delivery services
Banking platforms
Fitness tracking apps
Messaging applications
Ride-sharing services
If customers only visit your business occasionally, a well-designed website may be all they need.
The Hidden Costs of Mobile Apps
Many people focus only on development costs.
However, launching the app is often the easiest part.
Ongoing costs include:
Bug fixes
Operating system updates
Security maintenance
Performance monitoring
App Store management
Feature updates
A mobile app is not a one-time investment.
It's a long-term commitment.
When Building a Mobile App Makes Sense
There are situations where I strongly recommend mobile applications.
For example:
Frequent User Engagement
If users interact with your service daily or weekly, an app can improve convenience and retention.
Push Notifications Matter
Apps are powerful when timely communication drives engagement.
Examples:
E-commerce offers
Order updates
Appointment reminders
Offline Access Is Important
If users need access without an internet connection, mobile apps become much more valuable.
Customer Experience Is the Product
Some businesses rely entirely on the mobile experience.
In these cases, an app is often essential.
The Smarter Approach
Instead of this:
Build Mobile App
↓
Hope Users Arrive
I usually recommend:
Build Website
↓
Validate Demand
↓
Grow Users
↓
Launch Mobile App
This approach:
Reduces risk
Saves money
Improves decision-making
Creates better products
Most importantly, it ensures you're building something users actually want.
Technology Should Follow Strategy
One of the biggest lessons I've learned over the years is this:
The smartest technology decisions are often the simplest ones.
Businesses don't need every new technology.
They need the right technology.
A mobile app can be a fantastic investment when the timing is right.
But for many businesses, the better first step is:
A strong website
Clear customer validation
Effective marketing
Sustainable growth
Once those foundations are in place, a mobile app becomes much easier—and much more valuable—to build.
Final Thoughts
I love building mobile applications.
But I also believe technology should solve real business problems.
Before investing in an app, ask yourself:
What problem am I solving?
Do my users actually need an app?
Am I building this because it creates value—or because it sounds impressive?
Sometimes the best decision is not building more technology.
It's building the right technology at the right time.
What do you think?
Have you seen businesses invest in apps too early—or do you believe every modern business should have one?
I'd love to hear your perspective in the comments.
About Me
I'm Ankiit Janggid, a Technical Consultant, Software Developer, and Entrepreneur passionate about helping businesses build practical digital solutions.
🌐 Website: https://ankiitjanggid.online
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