app-store-opportunity-research

📁 froessell/app-store-opportunity-research 📅 2 days ago
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总安装量
67
周安装量
#6192
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/froessell/app-store-opportunity-research --skill app-store-opportunity-research

Agent 安装分布

codex 66
cursor 65
gemini-cli 65
amp 65
cline 65
github-copilot 65

Skill 文档

When to Use

Use this skill when the user wants to:

  • Find profitable app ideas in a category or niche
  • Research App Store charts for underserved opportunities
  • Analyze competitor apps (ratings, reviews, revenue, gaps)
  • Generate a top-3 opportunity report with revenue validation
  • Write a detailed MVP Product Requirements Document (PRD)
  • Build a working prototype from the PRD on Rork

Trigger phrases: “find app opportunities”, “app store research”, “what app should I build”, “research this app category”, “find a gap in the app store”

Prerequisites

  • Chrome browser with Claude in Chrome extension (for App Store browsing)
  • Rork account at rork.com (for prototype building, optional)
  • No API keys required — all research is done through live browser interaction

Pipeline Overview

App Store Charts → Competitor Deep-Dive → Gap Analysis → Top 3 Report → PRD → Rork Prototype

The entire pipeline can run end-to-end in a single session (~30-45 min).


Step 1: Define the Category

Ask the user what space they want to explore. Help them narrow down:

  • Too broad: “Health apps” (thousands of competitors)
  • Good: “Sleep + anxiety apps for consumers” (specific intersection)
  • Good: “Habit tracking for fitness beginners” (audience + niche)
  • Good: “AI-powered journaling apps” (tech angle + category)

Key questions to ask:

  1. What category or problem space interests you?
  2. Consumer or B2B? (Consumer is easier to validate quickly)
  3. Any budget constraints? (No-AI = cheaper to build, AI = higher ceiling)
  4. Target revenue? ($1K/mo hobby vs $10K/mo business)

Step 2: App Store Charts Research

Browse the App Store charts in the relevant category using Chrome:

  1. Navigate to: https://apps.apple.com/us/charts/iphone/{category-slug}/{category-id}

    • Health & Fitness: /health-fitness-apps/6013
    • Lifestyle: /lifestyle-apps/6012
    • Productivity: /productivity-apps/6007
    • Education: /education-apps/6017
    • Medical: /medical-apps/6020
    • Entertainment: /entertainment-apps/6016
  2. Document the top 25-50 apps noting:

    • App name and position
    • Rating count (proxy for install base)
    • Star rating
    • Price/monetization model
    • Brief description
  3. Identify patterns:

    • Which apps have massive ratings (>100K)? These are saturated.
    • Which apps have moderate ratings (1K-50K)? Proven demand, beatable.
    • Which apps have low ratings (<500)? Possible new/underserved niche.

Step 3: Competitor Deep-Dive

For each promising niche area, deep-dive into 5-8 competitor apps:

Data to Collect Per App

Field How to Find
Name App Store listing
Ratings count App Store listing
Star rating App Store listing
Price / subscription App Store listing
Trustpilot score Search {app name} trustpilot
Estimated revenue Search {app name} revenue or use web research
Key features App Store description / screenshots
Top complaints 1-star App Store reviews, Trustpilot reviews
Missing features Compare across competitors

Revenue Estimation Techniques

  • Direct sources: Search “{app name} revenue”, “{app name} ARR”
  • Proxy calculation: rating_count * 40-80 = approximate installs (rule of thumb)
  • Industry benchmarks: 2-5% of free users convert to paid
  • Comparable apps: Find similar apps with known revenue

Red Flags (Avoid These Niches)

  • Top app has 1M+ ratings (dominated by a giant)
  • Category requires hardware integration (Apple Watch data, etc.)
  • Heavy regulation (medical devices, financial trading)
  • All competitors are free with no monetization path

Green Flags (Pursue These Niches)

  • Top competitors have poor reviews (< 3.0 Trustpilot)
  • Solo devs making $50K+/yr (proves indie viability)
  • “Editors’ Choice” app exists with < 20K ratings (Apple promotes the niche)
  • Users complain about the same missing feature across multiple apps
  • Clear $5-15/mo willingness to pay

Step 4: Gap Analysis

Create a feature comparison matrix across the top competitors:

| Feature | App A | App B | App C | App D | YOUR APP |
|---------|-------|-------|-------|-------|----------|
| Core Feature 1 | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | YES |
| Core Feature 2 | No | Yes | Yes | No | YES |
| Missing Feature | No | No | No | No | YES |
| Price | $14.99 | $9.99 | Free | $6.99 | $5.99 |
| UX Quality | Poor | Good | OK | Good | Premium |

The winning opportunity is where:

  1. Multiple competitors exist (proven demand)
  2. They all miss the same 1-2 features
  3. Users vocally complain about the gap
  4. Pricing is high enough to support indie revenue

Step 5: Top 3 Opportunity Report

Produce a ranked report with this structure:

# Top 3 App Opportunities in {Category}

## Opportunity 1: {App Name} (RECOMMENDED)
**One-line pitch:** {What it does in 10 words}
**The gap:** {What's missing in the market}
**Target user:** {Who and why they'd pay}
**Revenue model:** {Price point and conversion assumptions}
**Revenue path:** {How to reach $X/mo}
**Competition:** {Who exists, why you win}
**Build complexity:** {Low/Medium/High}
**Confidence:** {High/Medium/Low with reasoning}

## Opportunity 2: {App Name}
...

## Opportunity 3: {App Name}
...

## Recommendation
{Why #1 is the best bet, with specific reasoning}

Present this to the user and get their pick before proceeding.


Step 6: Write the MVP PRD

Once the user selects an opportunity, write a comprehensive PRD with these sections:

  1. Executive Summary — One paragraph pitch
  2. Market Opportunity — Problem, market size, competitive landscape table, revenue validation
  3. Target Users — 3 personas with name, age, job, pain points, willingness to pay
  4. MVP Feature Set — 5-8 feature groups with detailed specs, UI behavior, edge cases
  5. Screen Map — All screens listed with parent/child relationships
  6. User Flow — Primary user journey from onboarding to daily use
  7. Monetization — Free vs Premium feature split, pricing, trial strategy
  8. Tech Stack — Framework, libraries, state management, persistence
  9. AI Features — If applicable, what AI does and doesn’t do
  10. Data Models — TypeScript interfaces for core entities
  11. Design Direction — Color palette (with hex codes), typography, component style, mood
  12. Launch Strategy — Week 1-12 plan, marketing channels, content strategy
  13. Success Metrics — KPIs with specific targets
  14. Risks & Mitigations — Top 5 risks with solutions
  15. Compliance — Privacy, data handling, App Store guidelines
  16. Future Roadmap — V2, V3 features beyond MVP

Save the PRD as: PRD-{AppName}.md


Step 7: Build on Rork (Optional)

If the user has a Rork account, build a working prototype:

  1. Navigate to rork.com
  2. Select model: Opus 4.6 (or latest available)
  3. Write the prompt — Condense the PRD into a detailed Rork prompt covering:
    • App name and purpose (1 sentence)
    • Design system (colors with hex codes, card styles, corner radii, typography)
    • Navigation structure (tab names, icons)
    • Each tab/screen with specific UI elements
    • Modal screens with full interaction specs
    • State management approach and mock data
    • Tech stack (Expo SDK, TypeScript, key libraries)
  4. Submit and monitor the build (typically 5-10 min, 7-10 steps)
  5. Verify the preview renders correctly (Cmd+R if stuck on loading)
  6. Share the project URL with the user

Rork Prompt Template

Build "{AppName}" — {one-line description}.

DESIGN: {Theme name}. Background: {color}. Cards: {style}.
Primary accent: {color}. Secondary accent: {color}.
Text: {color}. Corners: {radius}. Effects: {glow/shadow/glass}.

NAVIGATION: {N} tabs — {Tab1} ({icon}), {Tab2} ({icon}), ...

{TAB1 NAME} TAB:
- {Element 1 with full spec}
- {Element 2 with full spec}
...

{TAB2 NAME} TAB:
...

{MODAL SCREEN}:
...

STATE MANAGEMENT: {Approach}. Mock data for {N} days.

TECH: Expo SDK 52+, TypeScript, Expo Router, {styling}, {animations}.

Revenue Validation Benchmarks

Use these benchmarks to reality-check opportunity viability:

App Type Solo Dev Benchmark Small Team Reference
Niche utility $1-5K/mo $5-20K/mo Rootd ($1M+ total, 1 person)
Habit/tracker $5-15K/mo $20-80K/mo Daylio ($50K/mo)
Gamified self-care $10-50K/mo $100K+/mo Finch ($2M/mo)
Meditation/wellness $5-20K/mo $50-500K/mo Calm ($100M+/yr)
Productivity $3-10K/mo $20-100K/mo Various
AI-powered tool $5-30K/mo $50-300K/mo Emerging category

Pricing Sweet Spots (2025)

Tier Monthly Annual Best For
Impulse buy $2.99-4.99/mo $19.99-29.99/yr Simple utilities
Standard $5.99-6.99/mo $34.99-44.99/yr Most indie apps
Premium $9.99-14.99/mo $59.99-99.99/yr AI-heavy or professional

Marketing Channel Playbook

Channel Best For Cost Time to Results
TikTok organic Consumer apps, visual demos Free 2-4 weeks
Reddit (niche subs) Technical/niche apps Free 1-2 weeks
Product Hunt Productivity/dev tools Free Launch day spike
Apple Search Ads Any iOS app $0.50-3/tap Immediate
Instagram Reels Lifestyle/wellness apps Free 2-6 weeks
Twitter/X Dev tools, indie hackers Free Ongoing

Example Session Output

A complete session produces:

  1. Category research notes — charts analysis, competitor list
  2. Top 3 Opportunity Report — ranked with revenue validation
  3. MVP PRD — 16-section document with full specs
  4. Working prototype — live on Rork with shareable URL
  5. Go-to-market notes — pricing, channels, launch plan

All in ~30-45 minutes of automated research and building.