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Mobile Apps Increasingly Viewed by Small Businesses as a Best Practice

Two-thirds (67%) of SMBs surveyed said they plan on having a mobile app by the end of 2017.

Small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are moving rapidly toward adopting mobile apps, according to new research from Clutch, a research, ratings, and reviews platform for business services. Currently, 42% of SMBs have built their own mobile app, but Clutch’s survey indicates that SMBs increasingly view them as a worthwhile tool to improve business operations and return on investment.

Two-thirds (67%) of SMBs surveyed said they plan on having a mobile app by the end of 2017, a benchmark growth rate of over 50% over the course of the year.

SMBs gave various reasons for building mobile apps as well as identified features they particularly value. Most of those features directly relate to mobile apps’ impact on improving business, particularly their ability to provide solid return on investment (ROI).

Other factors which influence whether or not SMBs have developed a mobile app include company size and age of management personnel, as well as the resources a company has available to devote to mobile applications.

Larger SMBs, in addition to those with younger managers, are more likely to have developed mobile apps. SMBs with owners under the age of 45 are two times more likely to have built a mobile app than those with owners over 45.

iPivot provides a list of recommendations for SMBs that may still be hesitant to adopt a mobile app. These recommendations compel SMBs to take advantage of the mobile app market while it is still in its relative infancy, as well as advise SMBs to stay abreast of trends in the mobile app market in order to better inform their own strategies.