Customer acquisition cost
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) is the cost of winning a customer to purchase a product/service. As an important unit economic, customer acquisition costs are often related to customer lifetime value (CLV or LTV).
With CAC, any company can gauge how much they’re spending on acquiring each customer. It shows the money spent on marketing, salaries, and other things to acquire a customer. Keep an eye on CAC so it doesn’t get out of control. For example, no rational company would spend $500 to acquire a new customer with an expected LTV of $300 because it would drain $200 of value per customer acquired.
CAC, combined with LTV is a frequently compared metric, particularly for SaaS companies. They can manage their expenses, see their growth, predict their future moves, and expand if the business allows.[1]
Calculating Customer Acquisition Costs
There is a simple and complex method for calculating acquisition costs.
Simple Method
The simple method divides the total marketing costs to acquire new customers by the total number of customers acquired in a defined period.
- CAC = Customer Acquisition Cost
- MCC = total marketing cost for acquiring customers (not regular customers)
- CA = total customers acquired
Complex Method
In addition to the costs incurred in marketing, the complex method includes sales and marketing wages, software costs for sales and marketing, all additional professional services such as designers, consultants, etc., as well as other overhead costs.
- CAC = Customer Acquisition Cost
- MCC = total marketing cost for acquiring customers (not regular customers)
- W = wages connected with sales and marketing
- S = all the marketing and sales associated software cost (inc. E-Commerce-Platform, automated marketing, A / B-testing, analytics etc.)
- PS = every additional professional service in marketing / sales (Designer, consultant, etc.)
- O = other overheads associated with marketing and sales
- CA = total customers acquired
Bold text==Customer acquisition costs in relation to customer lifetime value==
Customer lifetime value expresses the monetary value that a customer is worth to the company in the course of a customer relationship. If the ratio of LTV to CAC is now calculated, different values can result.
- 1:1 The company loses money with every acquisition.
- less than 1:1 The company gets into financial difficulties because more is paid for customers than they are worth.
- 3:1 is a very good level because the customer relationships are solid and customers are acquired for the right price.
- higher than 3:1 means the company has untapped growth potential to acquire customers.
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Customer acquisition costs in the environment of start-ups and venture capital
In the approach and review phase of venture capital companies to start-ups, the CAC and LTV ratios are of great importance. They show venture capital firms the efficiency of the start-up business model.
See also
References
- Chen, Pei-Yu (Sharon); Hitt, Lorin M. (2020-04-22), "Switching Cost and Brand Loyalty in Electronic Markets: Evidence from On-line Retail Brokers", Switching Cost and Brand Loyalty in Electronic Markets: Evidence from On-line Retail Brokers, Proceedings of International Conference on Information Systems
- Natalie, Luneva (2020-07-28). "Must Track SaaS Metrics to Grow Your Software Startup in 2020".
- Domingos, Pedro; Richardson, Matt (2008-11-02), "Mining the Network Value of Customers", (PDF), Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, ACM Press, pp. 57–66 http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/pedrod/papers/kdd01a.pdf Check date values in:
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- Botteri, Philippe (2008-03-02). "Measuring sales and marketing effectiveness of SaaS companies: The CAC Ratio".
- Botteri, Philippe (2008-11-02). "One Number to Manage Your SaaS Sales &Marketing Spend: The CAC ratio" (PDF). Bessemer Venture Partners. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-07-17. Retrieved 2013-01-21.
- Skok, David (2010-02-17). "SaaS Metrics – A Guide to Measuring and Improving What Matters".
- Hsu, William (2012-08-23). "New Rules For E-Commerce". Forbes.com.
- Haden, Jeff (2011-12-27). "4 Business Metrics You Can't Afford to Ignore". Inc.com.
- Gruher, Scott (2011-09-24). "Go to Market Strategy: How Much Are Your Customers Worth?".
- Rouse, Margaret (March 2010). "Customer acquisition cost". TechTarget.
Specific
- "Natalie Luneva: Growth and Team Performance Coaching for Bootstrapped SaaS Founders". www.natalieluneva.com. Retrieved 2020-07-28.