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How app developers can get their apps recommended by AI search tools

Author:Sarah Jenkins|5 min read|March 11, 2026

A user asks ChatGPT, "What's the best habit tracking app that's not too complicated?" Another asks Google, "Meditation app for beginners who've never meditated." These questions used to send people to the App Store's top charts or a "best apps" Google listicle. Now AI gives a direct recommendation, often naming two or three specific apps. If your app isn't in that answer, you're losing downloads to competitors before users ever open their app store.

How AI is creating a new app discovery channel that bypasses apple's app store and google play entirely

App discovery has been controlled by Apple's App Store and Google Play for over a decade, but AI tools are now intercepting app discovery at the intent stage, recommending specific apps before users search within the app store, fundamentally changing how people find and choose apps.

App store optimization (ASO) has been the primary discovery strategy for app developers since the iPhone launched. Rank for the right keywords in the App Store or Google Play and downloads follow. But AI is inserting itself before the app store:

"Best sleep tracking app that works with Apple Watch" "Budget app for couples who share expenses" "Language learning app that's better than Duolingo for serious learners" "What's a good app for managing ADHD symptoms?" "Photo editing app with the best filters for Instagram"

These queries happen in ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, or Perplexity before the user ever opens an app store. The AI's recommendation determines which app the user searches for in the store. If ChatGPT says "Try [App Name]," the user opens the App Store, types that exact name, and downloads it. Your App Store ranking for generic keywords becomes irrelevant because the user is searching for a specific app by name.

Here's what ChatGPT evaluates for an app recommendation query:

  • Query: "Best meditation app for someone who's never meditated and gets distracted easily"

AI evaluates:

  • Is this app specifically designed for beginners (not advanced practitioners)?
  • Does the app address distraction and attention challenges?
  • Do independent reviews (tech publications, wellness blogs) validate the app's beginner-friendliness?
  • Is the app discussed positively on Reddit (r/Meditation, r/apps, r/Get Disciplined)?
  • Is the app's website detailed enough for AI to evaluate features and approach?
  • What's the pricing model (free with IAP, subscription, one-time purchase)?

A meditation app whose website describes "5-minute guided sessions designed for beginners who can't sit still, with gentle redirects when your mind wanders" matches every criterion. An app whose website says "Download our meditation app" matches none specifically.

Real example: A habit tracking app with a clean, minimal design philosophy built their marketing website around the "not too complicated" positioning that dominates habit app AI queries. Their homepage described their philosophy: "Most habit apps try to track everything. We track three habits per day. That's it. Because research from behavioral scientists suggests that simplicity, not complexity, drives habit formation." They documented their approach with references to BJ Fogg's research (Stanford's Behavior Design Lab) and James Clear's work (author of Atomic Habits, an entity signal AI recognizes). ChatGPT began recommending them for "simple habit app" and "habit tracker that isn't overwhelming" queries. The founder reported that their website traffic from AI-attributed sources eventually surpassed traffic from App Store search, and these AI-referred users had higher subscription conversion rates because they arrived already understanding and wanting the app's minimalist approach.

Real example: A budgeting app targeting couples built content around the specific use case most budgeting apps ignore: shared finances. "Budgeting for Couples: Why Mint, YNAB, and Most Apps Weren't Built for Two People" described the specific challenges (different spending habits, shared vs. individual accounts, joint goals with different priorities) and positioned their app as the solution designed specifically for this use case. Google AI Overviews began featuring their couple-specific content for "budget app for couples" queries. The app's marketing lead mentioned that couple-specific queries became their highest-converting keyword category, outperforming generic "budget app" traffic because the specificity attracted users whose exact need matched their product.

Step-by-step: how app developers can build AI visibility that drives downloads outside the app store

Step 1: Build a content-rich marketing website, not just an app store listing. Your App Store page has strict formatting constraints. Your website doesn't. Build detailed feature explanations, use-case descriptions, methodology documentation, and the kind of narrative content AI needs to evaluate and recommend your app. Most apps have websites that say "Download now" and nothing else. That's invisible to AI.

Step 2: Create use-case-specific content. "Best App for [Specific Use Case]" is the dominant app AI query format. If your app serves multiple use cases, create a page for each: "Meditation for Anxiety," "Meditation for Sleep," "Meditation for Focus During Work." Each page captures a distinct user need.

Step 3: Build comparison content against category leaders. "[Your App] vs. Headspace vs. Calm: Which Meditation App Is Right for You?" for meditation apps. "[Your App] vs. YNAB vs. Mint" for budget apps. Honest comparison content captures users at the decision stage. Be genuinely balanced. Acknowledge where competitors are strong.

Step 4: Pursue independent tech and vertical reviews. TechCrunch, The Verge, Wired, and category-specific publications (wellness sites for health apps, finance sites for money apps, parenting sites for kids' apps) create the third-party authority AI references. A single review in a recognized publication carries more AI weight than thousands of App Store ratings for recommendation purposes.

Step 5: Build community presence where users discuss apps. Reddit communities are heavily referenced by AI for app recommendations. Genuine, helpful participation in communities where your users congregate (not spam, not self-promotion) creates organic mentions. When someone on r/productivity asks "what's the best task management app?" and three users recommend yours organically, that's exactly the signal AI processes.

Step 6: Document your methodology or approach. If your app is based on specific research, a particular methodology (CBT for mental health apps, zero-based budgeting for finance apps, spaced repetition for learning apps), document it. Methodology documentation differentiates you from competitors whose apps are feature-driven but methodology-thin.

Step 7: Optimize for both AI and app store search. AI visibility and ASO serve different stages of the funnel. AI drives awareness and consideration. The App Store converts consideration to download. Both matter. Ensure your App Store listing matches the positioning your AI-optimized website establishes so users who find you through AI see consistency when they search the store.

Why the apps winning AI recommendations are the ones with strong websites, not just strong app store listings

AI tools evaluate apps primarily through web content (marketing websites, tech publication reviews, Reddit discussions, blog posts) rather than App Store data, creating a visibility gap where apps with minimal web presence but strong App Store rankings are invisible to AI, while apps with rich web content and modest store rankings earn AI recommendations.

App Store rankings and AI recommendations are measured on completely different signals. App Store ranking depends on download velocity, keyword optimization, and rating volume. AI recommendation depends on web content depth, third-party validation, and community mentions.

An app ranked #47 in its App Store category but with a comprehensive website, two tech publication reviews, and active Reddit community presence will outperform an app ranked #5 with no website, no reviews outside the store, and no community presence for AI recommendations.

The lesson: web presence is no longer optional for app developers. It's the foundation of AI discoverability.

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