ASO Audit: Analyzing Top 10 Productivity Apps' Store Listings
The best way to learn ASO isn't theory β it's studying the apps that dominate. The top productivity apps on the App Store and Google Play have been optimized by some of the most sophisticated growth teams in mobile. Their store listings are the result of years of A/B testing, keyword refinement, and creative iteration.
By auditing these listings systematically, we can extract the patterns, techniques, and strategies that consistently appear across the highest-ranking apps. This analysis covers the top 10 productivity apps by download volume and revenue, examining their title strategy, keyword usage, screenshot design, rating management, and overall ASO approach.
Methodology
Selection Criteria
We selected the top 10 productivity apps based on a combination of:
- Download volume (App Store + Google Play combined)
- Revenue ranking in the Productivity category
- Sustained top-chart presence over the past 12 months
- Representation across different productivity subcategories
Apps Analyzed
| # | App | Subcategory | Rating | Downloads |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Notion | Notes & workspace | 4.7 | 50M+ |
| 2 | Todoist | Task management | 4.7 | 30M+ |
| 3 | Microsoft 365 | Office suite | 4.7 | 1B+ |
| 4 | Google Calendar | Calendar | 4.6 | 500M+ |
| 5 | Evernote | Notes | 4.4 | 100M+ |
| 6 | Forest | Focus timer | 4.7 | 10M+ |
| 7 | Spark Mail | 4.6 | 10M+ | |
| 8 | TickTick | Task & habit | 4.7 | 10M+ |
| 9 | Bear | Notes (Apple) | 4.6 | 5M+ |
| 10 | Things 3 | Task management (Apple) | 4.8 | 5M+ |
Audit Framework
Each app was evaluated across six ASO dimensions:
- Title & subtitle optimization β keyword usage, character efficiency
- Keyword strategy β breadth of ranking keywords, competitive positioning
- Screenshot design β visual quality, messaging, conversion optimization
- Description & metadata β description quality, feature communication
- Ratings & reviews β rating score, review management, response strategy
- Overall ASO maturity β how systematically the listing is optimized
Finding 1: Title Strategies
Pattern Analysis
| App | iOS Title | Character Count | Keywords in Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| Notion | Notion - Notes, Tasks, AI | 25 | notes, tasks, AI |
| Todoist | Todoist: To-Do List & Planner | 29 | to-do list, planner |
| Microsoft 365 | Microsoft 365 (Office) | 22 | office |
| Google Calendar | Google Calendar: Get Organized | 30 | calendar, organized |
| Evernote | Evernote - Notes Organizer | 26 | notes, organizer |
| Forest | Forest: Focus for Productivity | 29 | focus, productivity |
| Spark Mail | Spark β Email App by Readdle | 28 | email, app |
| TickTick | TickTick:To-Do List & Calendar | 30 | to-do list, calendar |
| Bear | Bear: Markdown Notes | 20 | markdown, notes |
| Things 3 | Things 3 | 8 | (none β pure brand) |
Key Observations
Most apps use the "Brand β Keyword" format. 8 out of 10 apps include at least one high-value keyword in their title alongside the brand name. The format is nearly universal: brand name, separator (colon, dash, or em dash), then keyword phrase.
Keyword selection reflects primary user intent. Each app targets the keyword that most directly describes what it does. Notion targets "notes" and "tasks" β the two core use cases. Todoist targets "to-do list" β the highest-volume keyword in their subcategory.
Things 3 is the exception. With only 8 characters, Things 3 uses no keywords in its title. This works because of its strong brand recognition, premium pricing model (users search for it by name), and iOS exclusivity. This strategy is NOT recommended for apps without established brand awareness.
AI is entering titles. Notion recently added "AI" to its title β reflecting the trend of AI features becoming a selling point and a searched term.
Subtitle Analysis (iOS)
| App | Subtitle | Keywords |
|---|---|---|
| Notion | Wiki, Docs & Projects | wiki, docs, projects |
| Todoist | Planner & To Do List | planner, to do list |
| Evernote | Note Pad & AI Organizer | note pad, AI, organizer |
| Forest | Stay Focused, Be Present | focused, present |
| TickTick | Habit, To Do & Calendar | habit, to do, calendar |
Pattern: Subtitles avoid repeating title words and introduce secondary keywords. Notion's subtitle adds "wiki," "docs," and "projects" β three keywords not in the title, dramatically expanding search coverage.
Finding 2: Screenshot Strategies
Design Patterns
| App | # Screenshots | Style | Captions | Device Frame |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Notion | 10 | Dark background, app UI | Benefit-oriented | Yes (minimal) |
| Todoist | 10 | Clean white, colorful accents | Feature-oriented | Yes |
| Microsoft 365 | 10 | Brand blue, product shots | Feature-oriented | Minimal |
| Google Calendar | 8 | Material Design, colorful | Benefit-oriented | Yes |
| Evernote | 8 | Green brand + dark | Mixed benefit/feature | No |
| Forest | 8 | Nature imagery + app UI | Emotional/benefit | Yes |
| Spark Mail | 10 | Dark theme, clean | Feature-oriented | Yes |
| TickTick | 10 | Gradient backgrounds | Benefit-oriented | Yes |
| Bear | 7 | Minimal, white space | Minimal text | No |
| Things 3 | 10 | Clean, minimal, brand-aligned | Feature-oriented | Yes |
Key Observations
Dark backgrounds dominate. 6 out of 10 apps use dark or colored backgrounds for their screenshots. This creates higher contrast and visual impact, especially as more users browse in dark mode.
First screenshot communicates the core value proposition. Without exception, every app's first screenshot shows either the primary use case or the most compelling benefit. Notion leads with its flexible workspace. Todoist leads with task management. Forest leads with the focus timer concept.
Benefit captions outperform feature labels. The highest-rated listings (Notion, Google Calendar, TickTick) use benefit-oriented captions: "Organize everything in one place" rather than "Workspace with pages and databases." This tells users what they GET, not what the app HAS.
Screenshot count: Most apps use the maximum (8-10). Only Bear (7) uses fewer β consistent with its minimalist brand identity.
Social proof in screenshots: Several apps include awards, App Store Editor's Choice badges, or "Trusted by X million users" in their screenshot sequences.
First Screenshot Comparison
The first screenshot is the most critical β it's visible in search results and determines whether users tap into the full listing.
| App | First Screenshot Content | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Notion | "Your connected workspace" + multi-device view | Value proposition + platform breadth |
| Todoist | Task list view with sample tasks | Product in action |
| Forest | Illustrated tree growing + timer | Emotional concept |
| TickTick | "All-in-one" view showing calendar + tasks | Feature breadth |
| Things 3 | Clean task list with minimal UI | Product elegance |
Takeaway: There's no single "right" approach for the first screenshot. The best choice depends on your app's differentiator β whether that's breadth (Notion), simplicity (Things 3), or emotional appeal (Forest).
Finding 3: Description Optimization
iOS Description Patterns
Since the iOS description isn't indexed for search, top apps optimize it for conversion:
Opening line strategy:
- Notion: Leads with social proof ("Millions of people use Notion...")
- Todoist: Leads with authority ("Trusted by 30 million people and teams")
- Things 3: Leads with the problem ("Things is the award-winning personal task manager...")
Structure patterns across top apps:
- Hook (social proof or problem statement)
- Core value proposition (1-2 sentences)
- Key features (bullet points)
- Use cases or scenarios
- Social proof (awards, press mentions)
- Call to action
Google Play Description Patterns
Since Google Play indexes the description for search, top apps balance keyword inclusion with readability:
Keyword density: Top apps mention their primary keyword 3-5 times in the description without sounding forced. "To-do list" appears 4 times in Todoist's Google Play description, embedded naturally in different contexts.
Formatting: All top apps use structured formatting with line breaks, bullet points, and section headers for scanability.
Finding 4: Rating & Review Management
Rating Comparison
| App | iOS Rating | Review Count | Response Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Notion | 4.7 | 180K+ | High |
| Todoist | 4.7 | 200K+ | Very High |
| Microsoft 365 | 4.7 | 500K+ | Moderate |
| Google Calendar | 4.6 | 300K+ | Low |
| Evernote | 4.4 | 300K+ | Moderate |
| Forest | 4.7 | 100K+ | High |
| TickTick | 4.7 | 50K+ | Very High |
| Bear | 4.6 | 20K+ | High |
| Things 3 | 4.8 | 30K+ | High |
Key Observations
4.5+ is the baseline. 9 out of 10 top productivity apps maintain a 4.5+ rating. The only exception (Evernote at 4.4) has struggled with user satisfaction over the past several years β and its declining rating correlates with declining category rank.
Review response correlates with rating maintenance. Apps with high response rates (Todoist, TickTick, Bear) maintain higher ratings. Responding to negative reviews shows users that issues are being addressed, often leading to review updates.
Things 3's 4.8 is exceptional. Achieving 4.8 with a premium-priced app ($9.99) demonstrates that users who pay upfront have higher satisfaction β they're pre-qualified for intent and less likely to leave frustrated reviews.
Evernote's rating is a cautionary tale. Once the dominant note-taking app, Evernote's rating has declined as competitors (Notion, Bear, Apple Notes) improved. Rating decline β conversion decline β ranking decline β a negative spiral.
Finding 5: Competitive Keyword Positioning
Keyword Overlap Analysis
Examining keyword ranking overlap between the top 5 apps:
| Keyword | Notion | Todoist | Evernote | TickTick | Things 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| notes app | #1-3 | β | #1-5 | β | β |
| to do list | β | #1-3 | β | #1-5 | #5-10 |
| task manager | β | #1-5 | β | #1-5 | #1-5 |
| productivity app | #1-5 | #5-10 | #5-10 | #5-10 | #5-10 |
| planner app | β | #1-5 | β | #5-10 | β |
| note taking | #1-3 | β | #1-5 | β | β |
| project management | #1-5 | #10-20 | β | β | β |
| calendar app | β | β | β | #5-10 | β |
Key Observations
Apps own their primary keyword category. Notion dominates "notes" keywords. Todoist dominates "to-do list" keywords. Each app has established keyword ownership in its primary category.
Cross-category expansion is common. Notion ranks for both "notes" AND "project management" β reflecting its expansion from notes into broader workspace functionality. TickTick ranks for "calendar" AND "to-do list" β reflecting its multi-function approach.
Keyword differentiation matters. Things 3 doesn't try to rank for "notes" β it focuses entirely on "task manager" and "to do list" where it's competitive. Focused keyword strategies avoid diluting ranking power across too many terms.
Finding 6: ASO Maturity Assessment
Maturity Scores
| App | Title Optimization | Screenshots | Keywords | Ratings | Overall ASO Maturity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Notion | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Expert |
| Todoist | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Expert |
| TickTick | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Advanced |
| Forest | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Advanced |
| Things 3 | β β βββ | β β β β β | β β β ββ | β β β β β | Advanced (brand-driven) |
| Microsoft 365 | β β β β β | β β β ββ | β β β β β | β β β β β | Advanced |
| Google Calendar | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Advanced |
| Spark Mail | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | β β β β β | Intermediate |
| Bear | β β β ββ | β β β β β | β β β ββ | β β β β β | Intermediate |
| Evernote | β β β β β | β β β ββ | β β β β β | β β β ββ | Declining |
Actionable Takeaways
For New Productivity Apps
-
Use the "Brand β Keyword" title format. Include your highest-volume relevant keyword in your app name.
-
Don't repeat title keywords in your subtitle. Use the subtitle to expand your keyword coverage with complementary terms.
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Design dark-background screenshots. The data shows dark backgrounds dominate among top productivity apps β they create visual impact and align with current design trends.
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Lead with benefits, not features. Your screenshot captions should tell users what they'll achieve, not what buttons they'll press.
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Maintain 4.5+ rating. Below 4.5, conversion drops significantly. Implement smart rating prompts and respond to negative reviews promptly.
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Own your primary keyword category. Focus your keyword strategy on dominating 5-10 high-relevance terms rather than trying to rank for 100 loosely related ones.
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Study, don't copy. These apps have years of A/B testing behind their choices. Use their patterns as starting points, then test your own variations.
For Existing Apps Seeking to Improve
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Audit your title against the "Brand β Keyword" benchmark. If your title lacks a high-value keyword, adding one is the single highest-impact ASO change.
-
Redesign screenshots to match top-app quality standards. If your screenshots look amateur next to Notion's or Todoist's, you're losing conversions.
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Implement a review management system. Respond to negative reviews. Time rating prompts after positive experiences. This is the most sustainable way to build and maintain a high rating.
-
Analyze keyword gaps. Use an ASO tool to compare your keyword rankings against top competitors. Find high-value terms they rank for that you don't.
Conclusion
The top productivity apps share clear ASO patterns: keyword-rich titles, benefit-oriented screenshots on dark backgrounds, structured descriptions with social proof, and actively managed 4.5+ ratings. These aren't coincidences β they're the result of systematic optimization by experienced growth teams.
The good news: these techniques are available to every developer. You don't need Notion's budget to implement the "Brand β Keyword" title format, redesign your screenshots with benefit captions, or start responding to negative reviews. The patterns are clear. The execution is what separates the top from the rest.




