App Store Optimization (ASO): the complete 2026 guide.
ASO is how the right people find your app — and how enough of them tap Install once they do. This guide covers both halves: the keyword and metadata work that drives discovery, and the screenshot and conversion work that closes the install. When you're ready to ship, ShotCanvas can write the metadata, design the screenshots, and publish to both stores.
What ASO is, and why it matters
App store optimization is the discipline of improving an app's store listing so it surfaces for relevant searches and converts a higher share of the people who land on it. Search is still the dominant way users discover apps, and the App Store and Google Play both rank listings partly on relevance signals you control. ASO is the closest thing mobile has to organic SEO: there's no media spend, the gains compound, and a better listing makes every other acquisition channel cheaper because paid and referral traffic convert better too.
It helps to split ASO into two jobs that pull different levers. Discovery is about being found — keywords, title, subtitle, and the indexed parts of your listing decide which searches you show up for. Conversion is about being chosen — your icon, screenshots, and app preview decide whether someone who sees you actually installs. You need both. Ranking for a great keyword does nothing if your screenshots don't sell, and a beautiful product page does nothing if no one ever sees it.
The two halves of every listing
Keyword and metadata optimization (discovery)
Both stores index text, but they do it differently, so the same copy can't be pasted into each one. Know your character budgets before you write:
| Field | App Store | Google Play |
|---|---|---|
| Title / name | ≤ 30 chars | ≤ 30 chars |
| Subtitle | ≤ 30 chars | — |
| Short description | — | ≤ 80 chars |
| Keywords field | 100 chars (hidden) | none — uses description |
| Full description | not indexed for search | indexed, ≤ 4,000 chars |
On Apple, the title and subtitle carry the most ranking weight, and the dedicated 100-character keywords field is hidden from users but fully indexed. On Google Play there is no separate keywords field — the title, the 80-character short description, and the full description are all crawled, so your description does double duty as marketing copy and as your keyword surface.
Visual and conversion optimization (conversion)
The other half is everything a visitor sees: the icon that earns the tap from search results, the screenshots that make the case once they arrive, and the app preview video that demonstrates the experience in motion. These elements don't help you rank, but they decide whether ranking turns into installs — which is why most of the leverage in ASO lives here.
How to do keyword research
Good keyword choices balance three things: relevance (does the term actually describe what your app does — irrelevant traffic won't convert and can hurt you), volume (are enough people searching it to matter), and difficulty (can a new app realistically rank against the incumbents). New and niche apps usually win faster by targeting specific, lower-competition phrases than by chasing one broad head term everyone fights over.
Start from how real users describe the problem you solve, not internal product jargon. Mine store autocomplete suggestions, look at the terms competing apps appear to target, and group candidates by the three criteria above before committing your limited characters.
photo,editor,filter
rather than photo editor.
Screenshots: the #1 conversion lever
Of everything in a listing, screenshots move conversion rate the most. The reason is behavioral: most visitors form an install decision from the first one or two screenshots and never swipe further. That makes your opening frames the most valuable real estate you own.
- Lead with your single strongest benefit. The first screenshot should answer "why should I care" in one glance — not show a login or settings screen.
- Put a readable headline on every shot. A bare UI capture explains nothing; a short benefit-driven caption above the device does the selling. Keep it to a few words, large enough to read as a thumbnail.
- Use one consistent visual system. Shared palette, typography, and device angle across the set make a listing look art-directed and trustworthy rather than thrown together.
- Sequence like a story. Order your shots so they build a case — hook, then the two or three features that back it up.
- Localize the captions, not just the listing. Stores display screenshots per locale, so translated headlines are an easy, high-impact conversion edge most apps skip.
For the exact pixel dimensions every slot requires, see our companion guide on App Store & Google Play screenshot sizes, and for deeper craft on the frames themselves, read app store screenshots that convert.
Metadata best practices, per store
Because the two stores index text differently, write for each one rather than reusing copy:
- App Store — front-load your highest-value keyword in the title and use the subtitle for a second strong term plus a benefit. Treat the 100-character keyword field as pure inventory: comma-separated, no spaces, no repeats of indexed words, no app name.
- Google Play — the description is your keyword surface, so weave your priority terms naturally into the first lines (which double as the most-read copy) and across the body. Keep it readable — keyword stuffing reads badly to humans and can trip store policy. The 80-character short description is prime, indexed space; make it a clear value statement.
Localization for ASO
Localization is one of the highest-leverage moves in ASO because it expands both discovery and conversion at once. Translating your metadata lets you rank for search terms in each language, and localized screenshots and descriptions convert far better than English shown to a non-English audience. Apple in particular lets some localizations contribute keyword reach beyond their primary market, so a few well-chosen languages can punch above their weight. Translate the screenshot captions too, not just the store fields — the visuals are what actually persuade.
A/B testing and iterating
ASO is never "done" — it's a loop of hypothesis, test, measure, repeat. Both stores give you native tools for it. Apple's Product Page Optimization lets you run alternate screenshots, app previews, and icons against your default page and reports which converts better. Google Play offers store listing experiments for comparable tests on creative and text.
Test one variable at a time so you can attribute any movement to a specific change, let each test run long enough to reach a confident result rather than reacting to a few days of noise, and roll winners into your default page before starting the next experiment.
Measuring ASO
A handful of metrics tell you whether the work is paying off, and which half of ASO to focus on next:
- Impressions — how often your app appears in search and browse. Low or flat impressions point to a discovery problem: revisit keywords and metadata.
- Product page views — how many people actually open your listing. The gap between impressions and views reflects how compelling your icon and title are in results.
- Conversion rate — installs as a share of views (or impressions). This is the clearest read on how persuasive the page itself is; screenshot and metadata changes move it most.
Use the stores' own analytics — App Store Connect and Google Play Console — as your source of truth, and tie every test back to one of these numbers so each change is judged on impact, not opinion.
How ShotCanvas helps
ShotCanvas is built to handle both halves of ASO in one place — a browser Studio plus iOS and Android apps. Its AI writes conversion-focused screenshot headlines and store metadata, designs the screenshots themselves across 26 templates, and can grade a full set with a letter grade and concrete fixes so you know what to improve before you publish. It localizes captions and metadata for every market, exports every store size losslessly, and publishes straight to App Store Connect and Google Play — so the work in this guide goes from research to a live listing without leaving the app.