39
votes

I would like to know if it's possible to force the "XXXXX would like to send you push notifications" popup from within an app, after an initial decline. The use case is as follows:

  • The user installs the app, gets the alert about push notifications, and declines because they don't know/trust the app yet.

  • They use the app and proactively request within the app to be alerted when something happens (say for example something they want to buy is sold out so they want to be alerted when it is back in stock).

  • So now the user has asked the app to notify them about something specific but has push notifications disabled at the operating system level.

  • So if the user requests an alert, but I detect that they declined alerts on first run, I need to notify them of this and have them turn push notifications on for the alert to work.

  • Ideally, I would like to force the "XXXX would like to send you push notifications alert" at this point (a second time since they installed the app).

  • I guess plan b would be to show them my own message telling them they have to go into their system settings and turn it back on manually in order to receive the alert they want. This is far from ideal.

Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.

3
Note - there are some comments on the net that if you simply delete the app, wait 24+ hours, and reinstall, in fact it gives you a second chance. Hope it helps.Fattie

3 Answers

53
votes

You can't make iOS show the alert again. Here's a better approach:

  1. Keep a flag in your NSUserDefaults indicating whether you should register for push notifications at launch. By default the flag is false.
  2. When you launch, check the flag. If it's true, register immediately. Otherwise, don't register.
  3. The first time the user does something that would cause a push notification, register for push notifications and set the flag in NSUserDefaults.

This way, when the user gets the push notifications alert, he has some idea why he's getting it, and might actually say yes.

4
votes

I am also facing a similar kind of issue. After searching so much, I decided to do what you call Plan B. That is, show the user my own alert saying that push needs to be enabled for better experience, or something like that.

To check that required push types are enabled, use this method:

- (UIRemoteNotificationType)enabledRemoteNotificationTypes

UIApplication reference

I think that this is the clean solution. Consider a case where after accepting the request at first, the user turns off push, this thing will work even in that scenario.

3
votes

The best way to do it would be to (if you're making a game) ask them a preemptive question (e.g. Do you want us to notify you when your crops are ready to be harvested? -Yes -No), and when they answer "yes", then fire the native iOS push popup. then you can layer in multiple questions along the user funnel, and you'll eventually catch them all.