With a press release, Apple today announced new App Store numbers and milestones, as well as updated statistics on job creation in the United States and globally.
From the press release:
Apple today announced that the first week of January set a new record for billings from the App Store with customers around the world spending nearly half a billion dollars on apps and in-app purchases, and New Year’s Day 2015 marked the single biggest day ever in App Store sales history. These milestones follow a record-breaking 2014, in which billings rose 50 percent and apps generated over $10 billion in revenue for developers. To date, App Store developers have earned a cumulative $25 billion from the sale of apps and games. The introduction of iOS 8, the most significant iOS update ever, gave developers the ability to create amazing new apps and offers innovative features which proved wildly popular with App Store customers around the world.
In the press release, Apple announced that 1.4 million apps are now available on the App Store, with 725,000 of them made for iPad. Apple estimates that the “iOS ecosystem” has created 627,000 jobs in the US, and, in an updated job creation webpage, they put that number at slightly over a million for jobs “created or supported” by Apple. The same mini-site includes other numbers related to the company’s future Campus 2, US-based customer support, and more.
The App Store numbers come at an interesting time for Apple – the company has been criticized for some of its App Store practices over the past few months, but the stats shared today appear to paint a more positive picture in terms of overall growth and health of the market. Below, I’ve included some tweets by Horace Dediu for further context and analysis.
iOS apps are now a $10 billion/yr industry. (up 50% in 2014)
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) January 8, 2015
App Store developers earned a cumulative $25 billion from the sale of apps and games (note: excludes ads). pic.twitter.com/gAePM7Wrrk
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) January 8, 2015
iOS developers were paid at the average rate of $28 million/day in 2014. The rate was $22 million/day in 2013 and about $9m/day in 2012.
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) January 8, 2015
iOS Developer payment rate ($million/yr). pic.twitter.com/uGMd6JhKLO
— Horace Dediu (@asymco) January 8, 2015