What Is a Good Return On Ad Spend for Startups?
You launched your ad campaign, spent $15,000 in month one, and generated $60,000 in revenue. That 4:1 ROAS tells investors your growth engine works, and it opens doors to more funding.
Why Return On Ad Spend Matters for Startups
Investors want unit economics proof. ROAS shows that your customer acquisition pays for itself, making your business model investable.
Burn rate management depends on it. Knowing your true ROAS prevents overspending before you have product-market fit.
Scaling requires profitable acquisition. Every dollar spent should return more than a dollar, or you are just burning cash.
Competitive timing matters. Hitting your ROAS targets early lets you capture market share before competitors scale.
How to Check in GA4
Implement e-commerce or conversion tracking. Set up Enhanced Measurement to capture key startup metrics like signups and purchases.
Link all advertising platforms. Connect Google Ads, Meta, LinkedIn, and any other channels to GA4.
Create cohort analysis. Look at how different acquisition cohorts perform over time, not just in the first week.
Track both direct and assisted revenue. Some users convert after multiple touches, and you need the full picture.
The Easier Way
Startups move fast and do not have time for complex GA4 setups. ClawAnalytics automatically aggregates all your ad data and shows clear ROAS for every campaign.
You might ask: Which campaign delivers the cheapest profitable users? Or: Should we pivot from paid to organic growth? Or: What will our ROAS be at double the spend?
ClawAnalytics answers in real-time, keeping your team focused on growth, not data entry.
Quick Wins
Start with a 3:1 minimum ROAS. Adjust based on your gross margin and customer lifetime value.
Separate paid and organic channels. Comparing them helps you understand true acquisition costs.
Track to the first transaction, then to repeat purchases. Early ROAS tells one story; long-term tells another.
Test frequently, analyze weekly. Startup advertising requires rapid iteration.
Document everything. What works today might not work next month, and notes save future experiments.