

He said it would be more helpful if Apple’s staff offered specific suggestions for what developers could change - sometimes as minor as tweaking a menu - to get the app approved. (The United States Constitution plus all the amendments runs for 7,600 words.)Įiting said developers sometimes get rejection letters that simply recite a portion of Apple’s rules. Specify how developers can fix rejected apps: Apple says yes or no to each new iPhone app or app update, based on the company’s 12,700-word app rule book - not including addendums.

I asked for ideas on how Apple could improve the app store from Jacob Eiting, a founder of RevenueCat, which helps app makers design in-app purchases and knows what drives developers crazy.
