A friend asked me to analyze the “bike tracker” niche. Here’s what stood out.
A friend reached out asking a simple question: “Can you take a quick look at the bike tracker niche? Is there still room?” So I opened my ASO tool (Astro) and started with the obvious keywords. What I found was… interesting. At the top you see keywords like: - bike tracker - bicycle tracker - cycling tracker - bike app They all have decent popularity, but the difficulty is brutal.70+ across the board. Red ocean. Strava, Komoot, Wahoo, Ride with GPS… all sitting there comfortably. Nothing surprising so far. But then I went one level deeper. When you scan the list, you start noticing something: Most apps ranking are generalists. They try to do: - tracking - navigation - stats - training - social - routes - maps Everything for everyone. And that’s where the opportunity usually hides. Because once you go slightly more specific: - bike commute - mountain bike gps - cycling route planner - cycling navigation Popularity drops, yes. But intent becomes much clearer. Someone searching “bike tracker” is browsing.Someone searching “bike commute” or “cycling route planner” is trying to solve a concrete problem. Another thing that stood out: A lot of these store pages look… tired. Same screenshots.Same “track your rides” headline.Same maps.Same charts. If you removed the logo, many of them would look interchangeable. So the takeaway I shared with my friend wasn’t:“Go after bike tracker, it’s huge.” It was this: If you enter this niche as another generic tracker, you’re dead on arrival.If you enter with a specific use case, a clear audience, and messaging that speaks to that moment, you actually have a chance. Examples: - Daily bike commuters in cities - MTB riders who care about routes, not stats - Casual cyclists who don’t want Strava complexity - Safety-focused tracking instead of performance tracking ASO won’t save a weak positioning here.But good positioning makes ASO much easier. That’s usually how these analyses end:Not with a magic keyword, but with a sharper question.