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November 6, 2009 4:00 AM PST

GetJar: The unknown app store leader

by Marguerite Reardon
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I'm sure you've heard of Apple's App Store for the iPhone. But have you ever heard of an independent mobile app store called GetJar?

No? Well, that's not surprising. The tiny company now based in Silicon Valley has done virtually no marketing. And yet in the nearly five years it's been around, the company has managed to build the second largest application store front for mobile phones in the world, likely making it the biggest mobile app store you've never heard of.

The privately held Getjar claims it has nearly 57,000 applications in its store, making it second only to Apple in terms of total applications. Apple just announced this week that it now has more than 100,000 applications in its store.

Google's Android Market, which launched earlier this year has more than 10,000 applications. Research in Motion's BlackBerry App World has just more than 2,000 applications available today, according to estimates.

Since Getjar's virtual store went live in early 2005, about 650 million applications have been downloaded. And momentum has been growing. For the month of October, Getjar executives say the company saw its users download 55 million applications, which is a 267 percent increase over the same month a year ago when 15 million mobile applications were downloaded. And the company says that it has more than 300,000 registered developers uploading applications to its site.

Meanwhile, Apple's much-hyped and heavily marketed iTunes App Store, which is nearly twice the size of Getjar, as of September had more than 2 billion app downloads since the store was launched in July 2008. And executives at Apple recently said the company had 125,000 developers on its roster. By comparison, the Android Market has had an estimated 40 million downloads since it went live earlier this year.

GetJar got its start not as an application store but as a beta testing Web site for mobile developers. GetJar founder and CEO Ilja Laurs had started the site to allow developers a way to test their applications on a variety of handsets.

"Originally, we were trying to help developers who couldn't get access to certain phones for testing," he said. "But then developers came to us and asked if they could use the site to also distribute their applications."

And so the GetJar application store was born in early 2005. At first, the site attracted mostly hard-core mobile application fans. But over the years, word of the site has spread, and users all over the world come to GetJar to download different applications.

Unlike most of the other application stores that have been announced recently, GetJar's store offers mobile applications for almost any phone.

"With the GetJar store, consumers don't have to worry about whether they have an Android phone or a Java phone," said Patrick Mork, vice president of marketing for GetJar. "They don't need to know which model Nokia they have. We take the fragmentation out of the equation by auto-detecting what apps can run on which phones and offering consumers those applications."

The way it works is that GetJar is able to detect the type of phone a wireless subscriber is using when they connect to the GetJar mobile Web site. It can also detect the type of phone used from the regular Web site using a wireless subscriber's phone number.

A screen shot of a GetJar download page for the Facebook shortcut link.

(Credit: GetJar)

Based on this information, GetJar is able to direct app shoppers to the applications that will work on their phones.

"If there is a BlackBerry app available and you are using a BlackBerry you will get that application," Mork said. "But if you're on a feature phone, you'll likely get a shortcut link."

This is yet another important differentiator for GetJar. Unlike device or operating system specific app stores, such as Apple's App Store or Android Market, GetJar also provides millions of consumers using basic feature phones an app-like experience, even if a specific application hasn't been developed for their particular phone.

For example, GetJar has worked with Facebook to provide a downloadable shortcut link that leads to the Facebook mobile Web site for wireless subscribers who are not using a smartphone for which a special Facebook application has been developed.

While the link is not really a native application for that specific device, the link appears on the phone's menu and provides access via the phone's browser to a mobile Web site. For consumers, the experience is very similar to that of a native application that has been downloaded to a smartphone.

"Facebook didn't have a strategy for developing applications for Motorola Razrs and Samsung Instincts" Mork said. "So they teamed up with us to get around that problem by providing short cut links. It's really not an app. But the beauty of it is that it allows any company to play in the app game from a shortcut."

And for brands, such as Facebook, the shortcut increases their mobile presence. Before it started working with GetJar, Facebook would get between 100,000 and 150,000 downloads per week from its mobile site. After the shortcut, links were available on the GetJar site and on Facebook's site, Facebook started to see 1.5 million mobile downloads per week, Mork said.

But GetJar does have some limitations. One major limitation for consumers in the U.S. is that GetJar cannot offer applications to most phones operating on Verizon Wireless's network. The reason is that Verizon uses a closed platform called BREW on many of its phones. And there is no way for third-party application developers to create applications for these devices without going through Verizon's BREW approval process. But BREW is a legacy platform for Verizon, and newer smartphones on Verizon, such as BlackBerry devices and the new Android phones, will be able to access applications from GetJar.

GetJar also doesn't explicitly serve apps to iPhone users, again because the iPhone platform is closed. But iPhone users can use the GetJar store to discover new applications and GetJar can redirect those users to the Apple App Store, where they can download the applications.

Yet another limitation is that GetJar does not offer developers the ability to charge for applications. The company has not yet figured out how to bill for these applications. Instead, application developers can monetize their applications by incorporating advertising into the application or using the app on GetJar to up-sell consumers to a more robust application in a different application store.

But GetJar does allow developers to promote their applications, and the company has developed a marketplace so that developers can bid for top promotional spots on the Web site. GetJar gets paid based on how many users download these applications. Most other application stores today do not offer developers a way to promote their applications, which makes it difficult for smaller developers to get their applications noticed.

While there is no question that Apple dominates the mobile application market today, Mork admits that Apple's push into applications has been a boon for GetJar, and likely for other app stores.

"It's undeniable that Apple has had a positive effect on our business, especially in the U.S.," he said. "But we don't really compete with Apple. Still, it's clear that the mass market is just starting to catch on. And that is largely thanks to the success of Apple and its App Store."

Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies. E-mail Maggie.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (19 Comments)
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by lazycat202 November 6, 2009 4:45 AM PST
thanks for the site. Bookmarked!
Reply to this comment
by ProOnGo November 6, 2009 4:47 AM PST
Although it doesn't change the basis of this story, BlackBerry App World has over 3000 applications, not the 2000 mentioned in this article. One easy way to fact-check is to go to their online catalog, and just add up the number of apps in each category.

http://appworld.blackberry.com/webstore/category/69
Reply to this comment
by safed_chuha November 6, 2009 8:30 AM PST
Except that several applications will appear in more than one category; inflating the number from the likely accurate 2000 to the 3000 you're presuming.
by BtmnHatesRbn November 6, 2009 5:21 AM PST
Callin GetJar the app "leader" is like calling Pirate Bay the "leader" for media.
Reply to this comment
by tigger5662 November 6, 2009 5:43 AM PST
How so?
by Seaspray0 November 6, 2009 6:54 AM PST
@tigger. It's a common fanboy tactic. If they find something that competes with their holy product, they attack, condemn, and insult it. Expect them to do it for every app store.
by ozoneocean November 6, 2009 5:36 AM PST
Well apparently only about 200 are ever really used by anyone so number above something like 10,000 are meaningless. It's like boasting you have 1 million spoons or something- great, but what do you DO with them? Make an anchor?
So with 57k or 100k apps all they do is take up server space. Still, like having a million spoons it's something to boast about, an empty boast, but it counts for something.
Reply to this comment
by ozoneocean November 6, 2009 5:37 AM PST
Duh, 2000. DOH! >_<
by tigger5662 November 6, 2009 5:47 AM PST
Actually, it's more like boasting that you have 1 million books. Only a few are useful to most people, but visitors are much more likely to find something they like. More variety = More satisfied customers.
by Dust_Puppy November 6, 2009 5:56 AM PST
Am I the only doom-and-gloom thinker that sees this future:
Company X, Y, and Z push the market forward, innovating apps, making a real market and it evolves into something very helpful and profitable.

Company N filed a patent in 1994 for "Selling IP fluidly on small devices", does nothing for 20 years, and sues Apple, Microsoft, Blackberry, GetJar and anyone else making money in a certain "totally lost their mind" court district in Texas?

Don't get me wrong . . . what I'm saying is that it's cool that there's competition, a market, and more things available to consumers . . . we've just seen a lot of "I didn't work for this, but I thought it up while smoking pot in my basement during the dot-com bubble, pay me." law suits . . .
Reply to this comment
by Seaspray0 November 6, 2009 6:59 AM PST
Like what we've already seen in the past and present? And uhhhh, where's this basement at? :-)
by lazycat202 November 6, 2009 6:19 AM PST
handango.com and pocketgear.com have quality apps.
Reply to this comment
by yeshuawatso November 6, 2009 8:50 AM PST
GetJar has been around for a long time. I'm shocked that it's just now getting attention. What's not being told here, is that a lot of the Motorola apps will also work on Blackberrys natively.
Reply to this comment
by ROPO5 November 6, 2009 10:09 AM PST
Ms. Reardon,

My understanding is that the Droid only has 256MB onboard capacity. Will all these apps run on the removable (SD) card?
Reply to this comment
by direwolff November 6, 2009 3:55 PM PST
just checked out getjar. first thing the site does is ask you for your cell phone # in order to determine what type of phone you have. ARE THEY NUTS?!!! just what we need convenience through the giving up of the only number direct marketers can't easily get to...unless the user gives it to them. regardless of any promises getjar makes, the idea that someone could acquire the company and instantly have a database of mobile numbers is a frightening thought. given all the talk about scams on social network apps over users giving up their cell #s to marketers, i'm surprised getjar has been kept out of the controversy.

on the bright side, love the site and all of the stuff they have. cool stuff on it. just wish they would do the RIGHT thing and allow for users to simply select or enter the type of phone they have rather than their cell #.
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by moneyrules November 6, 2009 4:00 PM PST
getjar stinks
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by orbital_bruiser November 6, 2009 4:21 PM PST
From the for what it is worth department. The Google Market Place has been active for OVER one year and not from earlyier this year as implied by this article.
Reply to this comment
by aryaswhite November 8, 2009 7:54 AM PST
Good article, but I prefer the simpler, cleaner phoload.com site to getjar
Reply to this comment
by 0ri0n November 8, 2009 1:07 PM PST
Not very comfortable giving away my cell number, simply to find applications for a phone I already could select according to carrier and phone model type. Sheesh.
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About Signal Strength

Marguerite Reardon has been covering the telecom beat for more than a decade and knows more about wireless and IP networking than she cares to admit. She has been a senior writer for CNET News since 2003, covering all things wireless and broadband related from iPhone launches to major telephone company mergers to IPTV developments. She often appears as an expert on news networks, including CNBC, MSNBC, NPR, and the BBC. Maggie loves visiting CNET's headquarters in San Francisco, but she's an East Coaster at heart, living and working in Manhattan.

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