Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
The total cost of acquiring a new customer, including all sales and marketing expenses.
What is Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)?
Customer acquisition cost is the total amount you spend to acquire a new customer. The basic formula is simple: take your total sales and marketing spend over a period and divide it by the number of new customers acquired in that period. If you spent $100,000 on sales and marketing last quarter and acquired 20 new customers, your CAC is $5,000.
But the basic formula hides important nuance. A more accurate calculation includes salaries for sales and marketing teams, software costs (CRM, marketing automation, advertising tools), content production costs, paid advertising spend, event costs, and agency fees. Most companies undercount because they exclude headcount or software costs.
CAC becomes meaningful when compared to customer lifetime value (CLV/LTV). The CAC to LTV ratio tells you whether your growth is sustainable. A ratio of 1:3 (you spend $1 to acquire a customer who generates $3 in value) is a common benchmark. Below 1:1, you''re losing money on every customer. Above 1:5, you might be under-investing in growth.
CAC also varies by channel, segment, and deal size. Your organic leads probably have a much lower CAC than your paid leads. Enterprise deals have a higher CAC but (hopefully) a higher LTV. Tracking CAC by segment lets you make smarter allocation decisions instead of treating all acquisition as equal.
Learn how Prometheus Agency helps teams put this into practice through AI Enablement Services, CRM Implementation, and our Go-to-Market Consulting programs.
Why it matters for middle market companies
CAC is one of the few metrics that directly connects marketing spend to business outcomes. If your CAC is rising and your LTV isn''t, your growth model is breaking. If your CAC is falling while revenue grows, you''re building something durable.
For mid-size companies, the biggest CAC problem is usually lack of visibility. They know how much they spend on ads but not the fully loaded cost of acquiring a customer. That means they can''t tell which channels, campaigns, or segments are actually profitable — and they end up optimizing for vanity metrics instead of real economics.
The path to reducing customer acquisition cost starts with measurement. Know your fully loaded CAC by channel and segment. Then focus on the highest-impact levers: improving conversion rates (so you get more customers from the same spend), increasing organic traffic (which has near-zero marginal cost), building referral programs, and using lead scoring to focus sales effort on prospects most likely to close. If your CAC is a mystery or heading in the wrong direction, our CRM implementation services include building the reporting infrastructure to track it accurately.
Frequently asked questions
Customer acquisition cost (CAC) is the total expense of acquiring a new customer, encompassing all sales and marketing costs. The CAC to LTV ratio is a critical indicator of growth sustainability. Tracking CAC by channel and segment enables smarter budget allocation. Prometheus Agency helps mid-market companies build the CRM reporting infrastructure to accurately measure CAC and identify the most cost-effective acquisition channels.
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