Direct definition
Listing asset workflow is the operating process that connects store metadata, screenshot direction, review checkpoints, localization, and submission readiness into one system. It is more than a folder of drafts. A real workflow also defines ownership, approval state, QA status, and what is safe to submit.
Why it matters
Teams often think they have a workflow when they only have multiple files. That is not enough. A workflow matters because it keeps the asset package legible as it moves through review, localization, QA, and launch preparation.
Workflow map
| Workflow layer | What it covers | Why it matters | | --- | --- | --- | | Metadata | Title, subtitle, description, keywords | Establishes the discovery promise | | Screenshot direction | Narrative, frame order, proof points | Supports conversion and visual clarity | | Review checkpoints | Approval moments and owners | Prevents endless open-ended feedback | | Localization | Cross-locale parity | Keeps the same strategy visible in each language | | Submission readiness | QA and freeze state | Makes launch decisions safe and explicit |
Common misunderstanding
Teams often confuse “a collection of assets” with “a workflow”. Assets only become a workflow when someone can explain what changed, who approved it, what still needs review, and which package is current.
Operating rule
If screenshot copy, descriptions, approvals, and release checklist live in unrelated places, the team does not have a listing asset workflow yet. It only has scattered assets.