Sales or Technical Support: (503) 468-4890 or
help@buildableworks.com
Sales or Technical Support: (503) 468-4890 or
help@buildableworks.com
Choosing between a mobile app and a mobile website can be a difficult decision because there are many factors to consider, and the idea of a mobile website may feel overwhelming.
However, here's a checklist that will help you decide whether a mobile app or mobile website is appropriate for your project. You will soon realize than a phone app is rarely what you need.
Before agonizing over any decision, you must go through this checklist to find out whether a mobile site is out of question. Here it is:
A mobile website is "served" to the phone web browser, and requires only one programming language: only that of the website technology (PHP, ASP.NET, JSP, etc). Only one cost, that of making the mobile site, and it's easier than it sounds since the technology is very well known... after all, it's all just HTML and Javascript on the mobile browser.
On the other hand, a phone app dictates the following:
Most likely you will have to either implement your app in two languages and double your costs, or jimmy rig your app so that it works well on both. The latter is expensive, and limits you to the common subset of functionality on each device, to some extent.
The winner? a mobile website.
Because of the programming restrictions described above, and according to your budget, you must decide which of the platforms, iphone or android, you wish to target. Given that android and Apple share the market roughly at 50/50 these days, it may be a costly decision.
On the other hand, a mobile website will work on all phones, the old blackberry included, and it will also work on a regular desktop computer. Believe or not, this last point is vital.
The winner? a mobile website.
A mobile website has no deployment cycle. You create the website once, select a CMS (Content Management System) such as the LVSYS CMS which allows you to edit a website for mobile and desktop devices from one central location, requiring no additional investment to make your site mobile.
You can update your mobile site anytime, anywhere and the new content or functionality is live immediately.
On the other hand, any phone app must be published on an app directory, which requires approval cycles from Apple or Google, with various delays involved. Each time you update your phone app, you must deploy the updates as well. Furthermore, only the end user can initiate the download of updates of your phone app, which forces you to maintain compatibility between old versions and new versions of your app when they access remote content. It also means end users may rely on old outdated content.
The winner? Undoubtedly a mobile website.
In conclusion, the fine line between selecting a phone app or a mobile site as the technology of choice for your project boils down to the functions your project absolutely requires access to, use of network, ease of deployment, need for live updates, and your budget.
We welcome your comments.