About the Client
Our client, a marketing company in Dubai, wanted to see if Telegram Mini Apps could shake up the way people use product distribution models. Instead of pushing users to download yet another mobile app, they wondered, what if people could access health-tracking tools straight from Telegram? No hunting in the App Store. No extra downloads. Just open Telegram and go.
Entering a New Product Category with Unproven Telegram Mini App Technology
- The client wanted to see if people would rather use handy health-tracking tools right inside Telegram instead of downloading extra apps from the App Store or Google Play. The problem? Telegram Mini Apps were brand new. There wasn’t much documentation, things were still a bit shaky, and hardly anyone had real experience building with them yet.
- So, the client went looking for a technical partner—someone who could dive into this fresh platform, figure out a smart plan for the product, and turn the features people loved in native apps into a slick Mini App that worked seamlessly inside Telegram. No extra downloads, no hassle—just instant access from an app users already opened every day.
- Key challenges included:
- 1. Emerging Telegram Mini App Technology The platform had just launched, so documentation was scarce, things didn’t always work as expected, and hardly anyone knew how to build with it yet.
- 2. Native App Experience Needed to Be Reimagined The client wanted to pack the best features from popular mobile apps into Telegram, skipping the usual installation and signup hoops.
- 3. Unclear Technical Strategy Because Mini Apps were brand new, the client wasn’t sure what was possible, how to shape the product, or what should feel different compared to a regular native app. They needed guidance on all of that.
- 4. Need for Fast Hypothesis Validation. Their goal went beyond launching a new product—they needed to see if users would actually switch to Mini Apps instead of downloading separate apps. It was all about proving that convenience mattered.
Bringing Women’s Health Tracking into Telegram
SCIMUS built a Telegram Mini App that lets women track important health details—like their periods and pregnancies—without having to download a separate app. The real idea behind this project was to see if Telegram could actually work as a distribution and engagement channel for a consumer health app like this. To kick things off, we looked at popular health apps and singled out the features women actually use and care about most.
Then, we explored what Telegram Mini Apps could handle and narrowed down a set of features that would work well within Telegram’s limits, but still offer real value. Once we had the features nailed down, we got to work building the Mini App. We focused on the core tracking features for women’s health and didn’t stop there—we set up testing, built in analytics, laid down a solid data foundation for marketing, and developed an admin panel for ongoing management.
By the end, this little experiment turned into a working product with real data behind its adoption.
What we delivered:
- Market and feature analysis
- Telegram Mini App investigation
- Mini App development
- Testing and stabilization
- Analytics foundation
- Admin panel
The Right Team for a Beta-Stage Product Build
A duly-designed — meaning cost-efficient and result-oriented — team was assigned to the project.
From Platform Research to Product Release