CAC and Full Payback Period
If rates are up, cheap capital is out. Your GTM has to fund itself. That means knowing three things cold: CAC, full payback period, and lifetime value
Why this matters now
When borrowing gets expensive, sloppy growth hurts twice. You cannot bank on the next round. You need CAC under control, full payback inside a window you can live with, and LTV that clears the bar with room to spare
Define it the way finance will
CAC
All-in cost to acquire a customer. Include media, programs, tools, people, and a fair slice of shared GTM costs
Full payback period
Months to recover CAC plus the average cost to serve. That includes Customer Success headcount, CS software, support marketing, and a reasonable allocation of R&D and G&A. Some teams only include a portion of R&D and G&A. Be explicit and be consistent
Lifetime value (LTV)
Gross margin dollars over the life of the customer. Track it at the customer level and roll it up by cohort, anchored on contract start or real product usage start
The spread between LTV and your full payback period return is your profit pool after smaller ancillary costs. If you do not include cost to serve, your model will lie to you
Dashboards that people use
Reports do nothing without owners. Build dashboards with the people who run the work and keep the metrics in front of them daily
CAC by channel, by rep, and by cohort
Full payback period trend lines and distribution
LTV by cohort with renewal rate and gross margin assumptions called out
What to do when numbers move:
CAC spikes
Rebalance channel mix, fix routing and scoring, review offer and pricing
Payback stretches
Audit onboarding, adoption, and retention motions. Improve time to value. Check discount creep and CS coverage
LTV drifts
Stop using one-size estimates. Use realized payments by cohort and align forecasting to contract terms and customer type
Wildly different payment schedules and prices across segments will break simple LTV math. Cohorts keep you honest
Comp that points people at the right work
Tie incentives to metrics people can actually move and make the plan teachable and predictable
Incentivize the metric they truly impact and close loopholes that fight company goals
Make sure they know how to move that metric with clear plays and ownership
Make payout math obvious so people can forecast their own earnings
What to track every month
CAC by rep and by acquisition cohort
Full payback period with the cost to serve included
LTV by cohort and whether your forecast method matches your revenue model
Profitability signals from the spread between LTV and payback
Comp alignment to the metrics each team moves
Get these right and you get a business that grows without praying for cheaper money.