Following a similar move made recently by rival Apple, core Alphabet has made deep cuts to the fees it charges developers of apps published on its Google Play store. It will charge developers only 15% of an app’s price and its in-app purchases, exactly half of the 30% it previously imposed.
There is a catch, however — the reduction only applies to the first $1 million of an app’s sales; the fee shifts to that original 30% once sales cross the $1 million threshold.
That also mirrors Apple’s recent adjustment. In November, the iPhone maker announced its App Store Small Business Program, which essentially feels like help-the-little-guy cover for a similar cut in fees. Apple also reduced its commission for qualifying developers to 15% from the previous 30%, up to that same $1 million limit.
The adjustments come in the wake of renewed criticism of the fees following a high-profile 2020 dispute over them between developer Epic Games — the company behind the popular title Fortnite — and Apple. Since Alphabet’s fees are similar, that dispute quickly enveloped Google too. Lawsuits between Epic Games and both Alphabet and Apple are pending in various jurisdictions.
Regardless of which entities win these legal fights, Epic Games has already achieved one of its apparent goals — to shine a light on Apple and Alphabet’s business practices. In the eyes of many developers the app fees are extortionate, and in the glare of publicity the two companies look like greedy operators leveraging a strong business position to squeeze their partners.
Especially given Big Tech’s recent scrutiny by arms of the government, it’s not good to carry such a reputation. As such, this copycat move by Alphabet feels like a sensible change in strategy.
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