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We tailor each demo to your specific business needs. See it for yourself and contact us today!
Thanks for reaching out! While you wait for confirmation from an Apptentive team member, you may find these free resources to be of interest:
Guide
View resourceGuide
7 Steps to Product Roadmap Success
Learn how to fight feature creep, deliver the right value, and translate vision into action. Let us help you revitalize your product roadmap today, and help make 2021 your year.
The Three Changes in iOS 13 that Product, Marketing, and Technology Teams Need to Know
Today, Apple released the latest version of its most popular operating system, iOS (as well as the re-branded iPadOS), to hundreds of millions of customers worldwide. The 13th generation of iPhone and iPad software may seem incremental at first, but if you dig deeper there are some notable changes that may impact your app and business.
Our work at Rightpoint spans industries and it’s important for our clients to stay abreast of these changes. Below I’ve compiled a list of the three changes in iOS 13 that product folks, marketers, and technologists need to pay attention to.
Privacy Changes
Apple has a long history of a privacy-first ecosystem, and iOS 13 is no exception. Apple builds on this foundation with three new changes (two I’ll touch on here and one I’ll cover later) that will likely impact your customer experience.
Bluetooth Access
The first is prompting for Bluetooth access. Prior to iOS 13, apps could get access to your Bluetooth stack and look for iBeacons and other Bluetooth signatures without your explicit permission. This sort of passive location monitoring was included in many SDKs (software development kits that app developers integrated) that were able to figure out your location based on the Bluetooth devices you were passing. Unfortunately, a lot of apps look for this sort of information, and I’m sure we’ll see a flurry of complaints in the coming days.

What this means for you: Make sure your app or any SDK that your app uses does not require Bluetooth unless you absolutely need it. If you need it, make sure to ask your customers nicely with a well-articulated prompt at an appropriate moment (i.e. after I receive my pizza, not before!). Once you have my trust I’ll be okay with you sending push notifications to me at seemingly the exact moment on Friday when I’m commuting home and probably want to order a pizza.
GPS Tracking
Apple is also changing the way apps request other private information such as Location Services for GPS. The new Location Services prompt includes a new “Allow Once” option so that your customers can choose to only grant access to their GPS location once. This may mean customers are more willing to give you temporary access to their location, but keep in mind that access to Location Services will expire shortly and can’t be relied upon in the future.


So, why does this matter? If you need background location access for your app to work, you need to do a fantastic job of messaging this particular need and you might want to prompt people to let them know you are tracking them in the background. You might consider sending a push notification like this: “Just a reminder, with your permission we’re tracking your location in the background. This is vital for the app and service you love to continue to work.” Full disclosure, I am not a copy editor. And if your app only needs location access at particular times, consider limiting your requested Location Access permission to “Only While Using.”
Sign In with Apple
Earlier this year, Apple announced a new option for apps to let customers sign in easily and securely. Apple spent a lot of time and money crafting and refining this initial description, so I’ll just include it here:
“Sign in with Apple makes it easy for users to sign in to your apps and websites using their Apple ID. Instead of filling out forms, verifying email addresses, and choosing new passwords, they can use Sign in with Apple to set up an account and start using your app right away.”

If you think Sign In with Apple won’t take off, think again. Look at the new App Store Review Guidelines that require the inclusion of Sign In with Apple in certain circumstances as an alternative to the other social sign-on options.
“Apps that exclusively use a third-party or social login service (such as Facebook Login, Google Sign-In, Sign in with Twitter, Sign In with LinkedIn, Login with Amazon, or WeChat Login) to set up or authenticate the user’s primary account with the app must also offer Sign in with Apple as an equivalent option.”
This certainly sounds a bit anti-competitive to me, but either way, Apple’s new sign-in option is going to grow quickly.
Silence Unknown Caller
iOS 13 will also silence calls that are unfamiliar to the operating system. Now, unknown calls just show up as missed calls without even ringing your phone. No more telemarketers, no more off by one calls looking for the wrong person; everything just goes to voicemail. Having lived with this new feature for the last few months I can tell you, IT IS AMAZING!

These are just three of the bigger changes coming with iOS 13. In addition to those, I’m excited about improvements in Share Sheets, new support for app developers to include Dark Mode in their apps, and removed limitations on cellular downloads from the App Store. These will all have varying impacts on how you craft your apps and how your customers consume them. At the end of the day, having a strong connection with your customers is going to make all of this easier, so get to it!
Ready to transform your customer experience? We’d love to chat with you and encourage you to check out our friends at Apptentive as well.