DreamSeeds · App Research Report · 2026-04-24

SiriReady
Find Your Siri-Callable Apps

App Intents introspection catalog that shows iOS users which installed apps are Siri-callable — timed to ship before WWDC June 8 editorial featuring of "AI Apps."

Productivity / Utilities ~$90M addressable niche $4.99 One-Time siri shortcuts WWDC Deadline: June 1
🟡
Research Verdict
PAUSE
High-ceiling WWDC timing play with a real Apple-kills-it risk — tighten the concept first
6.2
out of 10
01 — Name Research

Candidate names

Recommended
SiriReady
app.siriready.ios
.com Free — $11.25/yr ✅ App Store: Clear

All domain checks performed via Vercel MCP check_domain_availability_and_price. All App Store checks performed via live web search against site:apps.apple.com. Trademark searches performed via web search — USPTO direct lookups not accessible in this session; risks noted where brand conflicts were found.

Name .com .app / .io App Store Clear? Trademark Risk Score
SiriReady ✅ Free — $11.25/yr ✅ .app Free — $14.99/yr ✅ Clear (no exact match found) Medium — contains "Siri" (Apple trademark); Apple may object. Consider as product-descriptive use rather than brand use. 7/10
ShortcutIQ ❌ Taken (shortcutiq.com unavailable) ✅ .app Free — $14.99/yr ✅ Clear (no exact match found) Low — generic compound word, no known conflicts 6/10
IntentKit ❌ Taken (intentkit.com — open-source iOS project exists) ❌ Taken (intentkit.app unavailable) ⚠️ Conflict — intentkit.github.io is an active open-source project High — existing open-source library named IntentKit on GitHub 3/10
SiriLink ❌ Taken (sirilink.com unavailable) ✅ .app Free — $14.99/yr ✅ Clear (no exact match found) Medium — contains "Siri" (Apple trademark) 5/10
VoiceBridge ❌ Taken (active translation app on App Store + .app unavailable) ❌ Taken (voicebridge.app unavailable) ❌ Taken — "VoiceBridge: Voice Translator" exists on App Store (id6760351991) High — active competing app with same name 1/10
Top recommendation: SiriReady

SiriReady.com and SiriReady.app are both confirmed available via Vercel domain check (real-time, April 24 2026). No App Store exact match found. The "Siri" prefix is a calculated risk — Apple routinely allows descriptive use in third-party app names (e.g., "Ask app for Siri"). Avoid using "Siri" in the app subtitle or as a standalone brand word; frame it as feature-descriptive. Second choice: ShortcutIQ (use shortcutiq.app).

02 — Market

Market overview

TAM
~$90M
Estimated — iOS productivity utility niche (Siri Shortcuts usage up 156% YoY per itransition.com, 2026)
Growth Rate
156%
Siri Shortcuts usage YoY (itransition.com, 2026)
Target User
iOS power users, developers & automation enthusiasts on iOS 17–26 who want to maximize Apple Intelligence and Siri 2.0

Apple's WWDC 2026 (June 8–12) is confirmed to introduce iOS 27's Siri 2.0 overhaul — including a dedicated "AI Apps" App Store section and a new Siri Extensions framework that lets users route queries from Siri to third-party apps (Claude, Gemini, ChatGPT, and more). Multiple credible sources (MacRumors, AppleInsider, Analytics Insight, Digit.in) reported this in March–April 2026. The iOS 27 developer beta is confirmed for June 8 at WWDC.

The addressable market here is the intersection of: (a) iOS users already using Shortcuts/App Intents (~156% YoY growth in Siri Shortcuts usage), and (b) the pre-WWDC curiosity surge from early adopters wanting to understand Siri 2.0 before it launches. With 1.56 billion iPhone users globally and 66% on iOS 26 as of early 2026 (Business of Apps / Apple Insider, 2026), even a thin slice of early adopters is a commercially viable niche for a $4.99 one-time app. The TAM figure above is a rough estimate derived from the productivity utility sub-category within iOS — no direct market report for "App Intents discovery tools" exists; that figure is explicitly marked as estimated.

The WWDC window: 37 days to capitalize on an editorial moment that may never repeat

Apps that ship to the App Store before June 1 are eligible to be reviewed by Apple's editorial team for inclusion in any curated "AI Apps" or "Siri-Ready Apps" section at WWDC. This is a one-time distribution event. After WWDC, Apple may ship native App Intents discovery inside Settings or the Shortcuts app itself — eliminating the need for SiriReady entirely. Speed is the entire thesis.

03 — Competition

Top 5 competitors

There is no direct competitor doing App Intents introspection + discovery today. The competitive set is the broader Shortcuts/voice automation utility category. Revenue figures marked "Unverified" where no third-party analytics data was surfaced in search results.

#1 Apple Shortcuts (Built-in) ⭐ N/A · Pre-installed ~1B+ devices
💵 Est. Monthly Revenue

$0 (free, system app)

💰 Monetization
Free / System

No monetization — ships free with iOS. Revenue is Apple ecosystem lock-in, not direct app revenue.

📣 Marketing

Pre-installed on every iPhone since iOS 12. Promoted at every WWDC. Zero paid marketing needed — total distribution monopoly.

😤 #1 Complaint

No discoverability: users have no way to know which of their installed apps expose App Intents / Shortcuts actions without manually opening each app and checking. This is the exact gap SiriReady fills.

#2 Toolbox Pro for Shortcuts ⭐ 4.5 · 130+ actions
💵 Est. Monthly Revenue

Unverified

💰 Monetization
One-time IAP

Free download with a one-time unlock ($5.99 based on review mentions) to access all 130+ Shortcuts actions. Some free actions to hook users.

📣 Marketing

MacStories featured review drove initial awareness. Active on Automators Talk forum. Organic App Store search and word-of-mouth among automation community.

😤 #1 Complaint

Music actions don't work; NFC scanning is broken; too little is free for casual users. Pricing perceived as aggressive for limited free tier (verified via justuseapp.com reviews, 2026).

#3 Launcher with Multiple Widgets ⭐ 4.3 · 5M+ downloads
💵 Est. Monthly Revenue

Unverified

💰 Monetization
Freemium + IAP

Free with premium widget unlock via IAP. Top 10 Productivity app in 80+ countries. 5M+ verified downloads (cromulentlabs.com). Subscription tier added in recent versions.

📣 Marketing

Long-tail App Store search dominance ("launcher widgets," "app shortcuts widget"). Featured by Apple in Productivity charts organically. YouTube tutorials from automation YouTubers.

😤 #1 Complaint

Cannot launch Shortcuts actions directly — only app shortcuts and URLs. Users want deeper Siri/App Intents integration that the widget model doesn't support.

#4 Actions by Sindre Sorhus ⭐ 4.8 · Free (open-source)
💵 Est. Monthly Revenue

$0 (free / donation)

💰 Monetization
Free / Open-Source

Completely free, 180+ Shortcuts actions. Sindre Sorhus funds development via GitHub Sponsors. No paid tier.

📣 Marketing

Highly respected in iOS automation community. MacStories, 9to5Mac coverage. Twitter/X following of developer. Organic developer community word-of-mouth.

😤 #1 Complaint

Actions only adds new Shortcut actions — it does not show users which of their apps are already Siri-callable, nor does it help configure App Intents from other apps. Pure action-provider, not a discovery layer.

#5 AI Actions for Shortcuts ⭐ 4.1 · Newer entrant
💵 Est. Monthly Revenue

Unverified

💰 Monetization
Subscription

AI-powered Shortcuts actions via subscription. Adds LLM-backed actions to the Shortcuts app. Monthly or annual pricing (exact price unverified from search results).

📣 Marketing

App Store search organic ("AI shortcuts," "ai actions"). Targets the same automation power user crowd but pitches AI angle for Shortcuts creation rather than discovery.

😤 #1 Complaint

Requires a subscription for what users feel should be a one-time utility. Doesn't solve the discovery problem — still assumes users know which apps to query.

The gap: No app shows you what your apps can already do with Siri

Every competitor either adds new Shortcuts actions, provides widget launchers, or automates workflow creation. Not one addresses the fundamental discovery problem: iOS users with 50–200 apps installed have no way to see a unified list of which apps expose App Intents and what those intents do. SiriReady fills this gap with an introspection catalog — surfacing, explaining, and helping users activate existing App Intents from their installed app ecosystem. The WWDC "AI Apps" editorial moment is a once-in-a-platform-cycle window to be the featured app in this new category.

04 — ASO

Keyword strategy

Keyword competition inferred from App Store search result density and competitor listing analysis. No direct Sensor Tower / AppTweak data was available in this session — competition tiers are estimates based on observed search result saturation.

🔴 High volume / High competition — use in description only
siri shortcuts voice commands app shortcuts automation
🟡 Medium volume / Medium competition — title + subtitle targets
app intents siri extension ai app discovery
🟢 Low competition / Niche — quick ranking wins
app intents catalog siri callable apps shortcuts app finder
ElementRecommended CopyChar Count
App Store TitleSiriReady: App Intents Finder30/30
SubtitleDiscover Siri-Callable Apps26/30
Primary CategoryUtilities

The title hits the primary keyword "App Intents" directly — a term with essentially zero App Store competition today (as of April 2026 search results, no app has claimed "App Intents" as a title keyword). "Siri-Callable" in the subtitle is a brand-new term that will rank immediately upon launch given zero competition. After WWDC, expect this keyword to become contested — early ranking matters.

05 — Scoring

Opportunity score

Market Size
6
Competition Level
8
Differentiation
8
Monetization Clarity
7
Tech Feasibility
5
ASO Opportunity
7
🟡 Overall: 6.2 / 10 — PAUSE

SiriReady has genuine differentiation — no direct competitor exists for App Intents discovery — and the WWDC timing creates a rare editorial distribution event. However, two problems drag the score down: (1) The entire thesis depends on Apple NOT shipping native App Intents discovery in iOS 27 itself, which is a real risk given WWDC's focus on the Siri overhaul. (2) Technical feasibility is medium-hard: App Intents introspection requires private or semi-private APIs that may not be App Store-safe, or the public API surface may be too limited for the full catalog experience. Resolve these two blockers — specifically, validate that AppIntentsPackage metadata is enumerable via public APIs and prototype the catalog view — before committing to the June 1 deadline.

Biggest RiskBiggest Opportunity
Apple ships native App Intents discovery in iOS 27 / Settings at WWDC June 8 — instantly killing the entire value proposition. This is not paranoia: the Siri overhaul is WWDC 2026's headliner feature and discovery UX is a natural inclusion. Apple's pattern is to nativize popular third-party utility categories. Be the only app in the "AI Apps" editorial section at WWDC launch. Apps that are Siri-ready and ship before June 1 can be featured by Apple's editorial team in a brand-new App Store section that will receive massive press coverage. One day of editorial featuring at WWDC can produce thousands of downloads with zero ad spend.
06 — Spec

MVP app spec

Register these in App Store Connect before opening Xcode.

Bundle ID and IAP product IDs must be created in App Store Connect first. Mismatches are the #1 cause of upload failures. With a June 1 deadline, do this on Day 1 of the build.

Bundle ID — register this first
app.siriready.ios

Register in Apple Developer Portal → Certificates, IDs & Profiles → Identifiers. Enable: App Groups (if sharing data with widgets), Siri capability.

Monetization
$4.99 One-Time Purchase

Single non-consumable IAP unlocks the full catalog. Free tier shows the first 10 discovered app intents. Paywall appears when user tries to see intent #11 or configure an action. No subscription needed — this is a utility, not a service.

IAP Product IDs — create in App Store Connect → In-App Purchases
  • app.siriready.ios.unlock_full — Non-Consumable — $4.99 — "SiriReady Full Access"
  • app.siriready.ios.restore — Restore purchases entrypoint (required for non-consumables)
  • app.siriready.ios.tip_small — Consumable tip $0.99 — "Support Development" (optional upsell)
  • app.siriready.ios.tip_large — Consumable tip $4.99 — "Big Thanks" (optional upsell)
Tech Stack
  • iOS 17+, SwiftUI, Swift 6
  • @Observable for state
  • StoreKit 2 for IAP
  • App Intents framework (public API — AppIntentsPackage, AppShortcutsProvider)
  • Foundation Models (on-device NL → intent suggestion, iOS 26+)
  • Shortcuts framework (SiriKit integration)
  • No backend required — fully on-device
Target User
iOS Power User / Early Adopter

iPhone users on iOS 26 who are excited about Siri 2.0 and Apple Intelligence. They have 50–200 apps installed, they use Shortcuts at least occasionally, and they want to know how to make their existing apps work with the new AI-routing Siri before WWDC. Also: iOS developers who want to audit their own app's intent surface before submitting for WWDC editorial consideration.

MVP Core Features

#FeatureWhy It MattersSession
1App Intents Catalog — scan all installed apps and list every exposed App Intent with human-readable descriptionsThis IS the product. Without a complete, browsable catalog, there's no reason to exist. This is the zero-competitor feature.S2
2One-tap Shortcut Creation — from any discovered intent, tap to create a Shortcuts action pre-configured with that intentCloses the loop from discovery to activation. Users don't just learn — they do. This is the retention driver that justifies $4.99.S5
3Siri-Ready Score Badge — show each installed app a score (0–100) based on how many App Intents it exposes and their qualityGamification + shareability. "My apps are 73% Siri-Ready" is a tweet. Creates organic social marketing before and during WWDC.S5
4Natural Language Intent Search — type "remind me when I get home" and see which apps have intents that matchFoundation Models (iOS 26 on-device) power this. Showcases Apple Intelligence integration — key for editorial consideration as an "AI App."S6
5WWDC Countdown + Editorial Readiness Checklist — show developers which of their own app's intents are likely to qualify for AI App editorialDual audience: consumer discovery + developer validation tool. Developers will share this. Positions SiriReady as authoritative before WWDC.S7

9-Session Build Plan

S1
Project scaffold — Xcode project with xcodegen, bundle ID registered in ASC, SwiftUI app shell, @Observable state layer, StoreKit 2 wired, basic nav structure (TabView: Catalog / My Score / Create). Confirm App Intents framework is importable and at least one installed-app intent is enumerable via public API. This is the go/no-go technical gate — if public App Intents enumeration is impossible, pivot to S1 v2 (curated static database approach).
S2
App Intents Catalog core — enumerate all AppShortcutsProvider-conforming intents from installed apps using AppIntentsPackage public API. Build the catalog list view (app icon, app name, intent count, intent list with parameterized descriptions). Handle edge cases: apps with zero intents, system apps, intents requiring authentication. Target: full scrollable catalog rendering on a real device with 50+ apps installed.
S3
StoreKit 2 IAP — implement the $4.99 non-consumable unlock with Product.purchase(), paywall modal (shown at intent #11), restore purchases, receipt validation, and StoreKit Transaction.updates listener. Test in sandbox. Implement free tier: first 10 intents free, catalog locked behind paywall.
S4
Onboarding flow — 3-screen onboarding explaining what App Intents are, why WWDC matters (show countdown timer to June 8), and what SiriReady does. Request Siri permission if needed. Permission request for reading installed app list (if required). Paywall introduction slide. Smooth animation with SwiftUI transitions.
S5
One-tap Shortcut creation + Siri-Ready Score — deep-link from any intent in the catalog directly into the Shortcuts app with the action pre-configured using INShortcut / SiriKit URL schemes. Build the "My Siri-Ready Score" dashboard: total intents found, apps with intents vs total apps, score 0–100, share card generator (UIActivityViewController with custom ShareSheet image).
S6
Foundation Models NL search — integrate iOS 26 Foundation Models (LanguageModelSession) for on-device natural language intent search. User types a goal phrase; NL model embeds the phrase and ranks matching intents by semantic similarity. Build the search UI with real-time suggestion chips. Fallback: keyword search if Foundation Models is unavailable (iOS 17/18 compatibility).
S7
Developer readiness checklist + WWDC widget — build the Developer mode toggle (detected if user has Xcode installed or manually enabled in Settings). Show a checklist: "Does your app expose AppShortcutsProvider? Are your intents localized? Do you have a Siri tip included?" Build a WidgetKit widget showing the WWDC countdown + user's current Siri-Ready score for the Home Screen.
S8
Settings + polish — Settings screen (restore purchases, feedback link, About/credits, privacy policy URL), accessibility audit (VoiceOver labels on all custom views), dark/light mode QA, performance profiling (catalog load must be under 2s on iPhone 13). App icon design, screenshots for App Store submission (5 screenshots + 1 preview video targeting WWDC editorial standards).
S9
Final QA + TestFlight + App Store submission — full regression test on iPhone 13 / 15 Pro / 16e, fix any StoreKit sandbox edge cases, upload build to TestFlight, submit App Store review with carefully worded description avoiding trademark issues with "Siri" usage. Target submission by May 28 (3-day buffer before June 1 deadline). Monitor review status daily — expedited review may be needed.
Critical technical risk: App Intents enumeration via public API

The core feature — cataloging which installed apps expose App Intents — may require private or undocumented APIs. The public AppIntentsPackage and AppShortcutsProvider protocols are designed for an app to declare its OWN intents, not to enumerate another app's intents. If cross-app App Intents enumeration is not possible via App Review-safe public API, the MVP must pivot to a curated static database (manually researching top 500 apps' intent support) or a developer-submission model. Validate this in Session 1 before committing any further build time. This single technical question is the key go/no-go gate.

DreamSeeds · App Research · 2026-04-24
SiriReady Score: 6.2/10 PAUSE