Definition
Customer acquisition cost is the total cost to acquire a new customer, often including marketing spend plus sales and operational costs tied to closing.
Key Takeaways
- CAC is most useful when it includes admissions effort, not only ad spend.
- Track CAC by program and level of care when possible.
- Use CAC alongside capacity and length-of-stay to understand profit per admit.
Why It Matters for Treatment Centers
CAC helps leadership understand how much it costs to fill beds or programs and whether marketing and admissions operations are working together efficiently.
Treatment Lens: Building a Realistic CAC
Include paid media, agency fees, call tracking, CRM, and admissions labor tied to screening and scheduling. If you can, separate CAC for residential vs outpatient or mental health vs SUD.
How to Use CAC
Compare CAC against revenue per admit and the number of qualified leads needed per admit. This turns marketing reporting into a capacity planning tool.
Common Mistakes
- Treating CAC as only ad spend and ignoring admissions workload.
- Not separating by channel, program line, or location.
- Overreacting to short-term CAC swings without enough data.
Related Terms
Cost Per Acquisition, Return on Investment, Lead Scoring, Attribution Model
FAQ
How do we calculate CAC if we have multiple locations?
Track per location where possible, then roll up to a blended view for leadership.
Is CAC useful for organic traffic?
Yes, but include your content and SEO costs in the calculation.
What CAC is acceptable?
It depends on payer mix, program costs, and revenue per admit. Use your margin model to set targets.
If you want CAC reporting that leadership can actually use, we can map your funnel, define the right cost inputs, and connect marketing and admissions data.
