Does your business really need an app?

When an app is meant to be more than just another channel

The idea of having your own app often seems like a good one at first glance. A product needs to become more digital. A service needs to be more convenient to use. Customers need to stay more engaged with the offering. But this is exactly where the real question arises: Does an app truly improve usage, service, or interaction in a noticeable way, or would it just be another product?

An app makes sense when it makes a clear difference in everyday life around a product or offering. When it simplifies control, makes statuses visible, makes service directly accessible, or strengthens loyalty to the offering. Then it becomes part of the service. If this benefit is missing, it often remains an add-on that creates effort but achieves little impact.

Here are the answers to those questions:

  • When an app really makes sense for your product or service
  • How to tell if an app idea will generate real business value
  • When a web solution is the better choice
  • What role an app can meaningfully play within your overall offering
  • How apps can specifically improve usage, service, and processes

When does it make sense for your business to have an app?

An app is worthwhile when it has a fixed place in the user context—that is, where users regularly interact with a product, device, system, or service and derive a clear benefit from having certain information, features, or services immediately available.

This can take many different forms. For a device, it might involve status, control, or maintenance. For a connected product, it could be monitoring, configuration, or notifications. For a service offering, it might be progress tracking, documentation, or direct interaction. The key point is always the same: The app must not simply exist in digital form, but must genuinely improve everyday life.

What makes a good app?

  • Control

    When users need to access a device or system directly.

  • Monitoring

    When conditions, values, or trends need to be constantly visible.

  • Notifications

    When you want to be notified of relevant events immediately.

  • Status and History

    When transparency regarding usage, processing, or status is important.

  • Service Access

    When you need immediate access to assistance, maintenance, or support.

  • Documentation

    When instructions, documentation, or information are needed at just the right moment.

  • Interaction

    When users are actively working with settings, content, or features.

Case Study: App Development

  • Case Study: App Development
  • 3.5 times faster service processes at Electrolux

  • 1 Project Overview

    Electrolux wanted to digitize administrative processes within its service network and make them accessible via mobile devices. The goal was to simplify the scheduling of customer visits and enable the quick entry of daily reports. To this end, soxes developed the web application “EasyAdmin.”

  • 2 Challenge

    Previously, processes were managed in Excel, which made them prone to errors and difficult to control. Technicians needed a solution that would work on-site even without a stable internet connection. At the same time, data needed to be centrally monitored and processed quickly.

  • 3 Solution

    "EasyAdmin" collects daily reports directly from customers and generates quotes, order confirmations, and warranty extensions. Spare part orders can be placed immediately, and an offline mode with secure synchronization ensures reliable data transfer.
    Technologies: Laravel on the backend, Angular on the frontend.

  • 4 Result

    Media breaks have been eliminated and manual rework reduced. Planning, data entry, and approval are faster, with higher data quality. Billing and service processes are more transparent, and the user experience for technicians and dispatchers is noticeably better.

Just an idea, or a real business benefit?

Many app projects start with an obvious thought: “You could make an app for that.” That’s understandable, but it’s not enough. A good idea alone doesn’t make for a good business case.

Real business value only emerges when the app solves a specific problem, is used regularly, and tangibly improves the user experience. In other words, when it simplifies the service, makes usage more enjoyable, facilitates control, or strengthens user loyalty.

When a web solution makes more sense than an app

Not every requirement needs an app. And that’s exactly what makes a good decision credible. In many cases, a web solution is entirely sufficient or even the better choice.

This is especially true when usage is only occasional, no device-specific features are required, or information and simple interactions are the main focus. In such cases, an app often creates more hurdles than benefits. Installation, maintenance, and updates are then out of proportion to actual usage.

Common Mistakes in App Projects

Many app projects fail not because of the development process, but because they are misclassified from the start. In such cases, an app is planned even though its benefits, frequency of use, or role within the product offering are still unclear.

The situation becomes particularly critical when:

  • too many features are crammed in at once
  • usage frequency is overestimated
  • target audiences and platforms are defined too late
  • Operation, maintenance, and further development are underestimated
  • the app is conceived as an add-on rather than an integral part of the offering

Mistakes like these don’t just make a project more expensive. They often result in the app being underutilized and failing to achieve its strategic purpose.

What questions should you clarify before making a decision?

Before an app is developed, some questions should be answered very clearly. Not primarily from a technical perspective, but from the perspective of usage and the business model. The following points are particularly important:

  • Who exactly will use the app?
  • When is it needed?
  • How often will it realistically be used?
  • What specific value does it add?
  • Which platforms are truly relevant?
  • What data or systems need to be integrated?
  • Is offline use crucial in everyday life?
  • What role does the app play in the overall offering?

The clearer the answers to these questions are, the easier it is to decide whether an app makes strategic sense or whether another solution is a better fit.

Typical examples of apps included in a package

The following examples showcase apps developed by soxes that significantly improve the usability of a product or service in everyday life.

Inspection App for Quality Control and Documentation

At Stadler Rail, a mobile app supports the quality inspection of rail vehicles directly in service. Relevant order data, scope of delivery, and work steps are available on mobile devices; images can be linked to defects; and inspection reports are automatically generated via “speech-to-text.” The native Android app reduces the average processing time per inspection by 30%. This is exactly how an app becomes part of a production-related process and not just an additional channel.

Planning app for training and support

At OYM, the “OYM Planner” supports the Athletic Training Department in creating individual training plans. Training phases, weekly goals, and daily priorities can be planned in a structured manner, and through integration with Office 365, training sessions are sent directly as Outlook appointments to participants and assigned to rooms. The app is thus not merely a digital add-on, but a working tool in the day-to-day operations of a specialized service offering.

Scan App for Insurance Processes and Digital Document Capture

At BBT , the mobile app enables invoices and documents to be scanned directly on a smartphone. The solution was enhanced with AI-powered image enhancement so that scans can be processed in high quality regardless of the device used. This allowed processes to be fully digitized and paper-based workflows to be eliminated. Additionally, the app can be licensed as a white-label solution to other insurance companies.

What a good app should ultimately be able to do

A good app makes a product or service more useful in everyday life. It provides clear value to users, simplifies certain steps, and strengthens the connection between the product, service, and how it’s used.

Frequently asked questions

  • When is a corporate app worth it?

  • App or website, which is better?

  • Native app or web app, which is better?

  • What features should an app for a product or service have?

  • How much does it cost to have an app developed?

  • How can I tell if we just have an app idea or if we already have a real business case?

  • When is a web solution sufficient instead of an app?

The right app enhances both the product and the process

We’ll work with you to determine whether an app provides real value or if another solution is a better fit for your business.

  • Clear assessment of whether an app truly improves usage, service, or processes
  • Focus on everyday benefits

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Sofia Steninger

Sofia Steninger
Solution Sales Manager