If you’ve ever wished you could just talk to your ASO tools instead of clicking through endless menus, this update is for you.
Dock 2.2 introduces MCP Server support, allowing Claude AI to connect directly to your app data. You can analyze metadata, get optimization suggestions, and push changes to Dock — all through a natural conversation.
I’ve been using this internally for weeks, and it’s completely changed how I approach ASO. Today, I’m making it available to everyone.
What is MCP?
MCP stands for Model Context Protocol. It’s an open standard developed by Anthropic that enables AI assistants like Claude to communicate with external applications in a secure, structured way.
In practical terms: Claude can read your app’s ASO data from Dock, understand it, and write new metadata back. No copy-pasting between windows. No manual data entry. Just a conversation that gets things done.
Why This Matters
ASO involves a lot of repetitive analysis: checking keyword rankings, comparing competitors, rewriting descriptions, testing new titles. Necessary work, but time-consuming.
With MCP Server, you can offload much of this to Claude. Ask it to analyze your current metadata, identify weak keywords, suggest improvements, or draft a new description based on your target keywords. When you’re happy with the result, tell Claude to save it — and Dock updates automatically.
The workflow becomes: think, ask, review, save.
Setting It Up
Configuration takes about a minute.
Open Dock and go to Settings, then MCP Server. Enable the feature and copy the configuration.
Open Claude Desktop. Go to Settings, select Developer, then Edit Configuration. Paste the MCP Server configuration into the file and save.
Restart Claude Desktop, and you’re connected.
What You Can Do
Here are a few examples of how I use this daily:
Quick app analysis. I ask Claude to pull the ASO data for one of my apps and give me a health check. It reviews title, subtitle, keywords, and description — flagging issues and suggesting improvements.
Keyword brainstorming. I describe my app and the audience I want to reach. Claude generates keyword ideas and checks which ones I’m already using versus which are missing.
Description rewriting. I share my current description and ask Claude to rewrite it with specific keywords in mind. If I like the result, I tell Claude to save it directly to Dock.
Competitor comparison. I ask Claude to compare my metadata against a competitor’s app using App Intelligence data, highlighting gaps and opportunities.
Localization support. I provide my English metadata and ask Claude to adapt it for another language, keeping keyword intent while adjusting for local relevance.
These are just starting points. The real power is that you can combine requests, iterate on results, and build workflows that fit how you actually work.
A Note on Philosophy
I built Dock because I needed it. Every feature exists because I use it to manage my own apps on the App Store.
MCP Server is no different. I wanted a faster, more fluid way to work on ASO — one that didn’t interrupt my thinking with manual steps. Connecting Claude to Dock was the answer.
This isn’t about replacing your judgment. It’s about removing friction so you can focus on the decisions that matter.
Try It Today
MCP Server is available now in Dock 2.2.
If you prefer a visual walkthrough, I’ve published a video tutorial showing the full setup and a live demo.
Download Dock — connect Claude — and see how it fits into your workflow.
I’d love to hear what you build with it.