Marketing payback interval

The concept

The payback interval is the amount of time it takes to break even on a given marketing investment. When managing cash in a startup or other early-stage business, the time value of money plays an especially important role, given the level of operating risk under which most young businesses operate. This can be especially true with regards to paid marketing. The faster that the money you spend turns into new customers and new orders, the faster you can redeploy that money into more marketing and thus more growth. Marketing spend that takes less time to pay back the initial investment can have a significant positive effect on the business, even though the total return may be lower per investment.

The example

Let’s say it’s January, and you are deciding between spending $1000 on search advertising or social network advertising, for a business with a 50% profit margin per order. After running some experiments, you are able to produce the below table:

MonthSearch RevenueCumulative Search RevenueCumulative Search ProfitSocial RevenueCumulative Social RevenueCumulative Social Profit
Jan1000100050010010050
Feb6001600800100200100
Mar40020001000200400200
Apr20022001100200600300
May200240012004001000500
Jun200260013004001400700
Jul1002700135080022001100
Aug10028001400100032001600
Sep1002900145060038001900
Oct1003000150020040002000
Nov1003100155010041002050
Dec1003200160010042002100

As you can see, you got $2100 back in Social ($1100 net of $1000 investment) after a year and only $1600 ($600 net) in Search, a difference of 31% (83%). But you achieved profitability in Search by March and in Social by July, less than half the time.

The math

Let’s put together a table of cumulative profit for each ad type, net of the $1000 initial investment. Let’s also add some columns for reinvested $1000 investments, that you can only make when you get your initial $1000 back from the prior investment.

Here is the cumulative profit table for Search:

Month1st investment2nd investment3rd investment4th investment5th investment6th investment
Jan-500
Feb-200
Mar0-500
Apr100-200
May2000-500
Jun300100-200
Jul3502000-500
Aug400300100-200
Sep4503502000-500
Oct500400300100-200
Nov5504503502000-500
Dec600500400300100-200

Here is the cumulative profit table for Social:

Month1st investment2nd investment
Jan-950
Feb-900
Mar-800
Apr-700
May-500
Jun-300
Jul100-950
Aug600-900
Sep900-800
Oct1000-700
Nov1050-500
Dec1100-300

As you can see, because the payback interval for Search is so much faster than the interval for Social, you are able to reinvest so many more times (6 vs. 2 over the course of a year). As a result, the cumulative return by December for Search is more than double that of Social ($1700 vs. $800), despite Social’s superior cumulative return per investment ($1100 vs. $600).

Conclusion

Shorter payback intervals allow you to grow your business at an accelerated rate relative to longer intervals. The earlier the business is in its life cycle, the more impactful the acceleration. For mature businesses with cash reserves, there is some benefit to diversifying into greater returns, but for most young businesses, payback is key.

Note - article was ported from a deprecated version of this blog