Marketing Efficiency Ratio

Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER) compares revenue to marketing expenses to assess campaign effectiveness.
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What is the Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER)?

Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER) is a broad performance metric that measures the overall effectiveness of your marketing spend by comparing total revenue to total marketing expenses.

Here’s how MER can help you improve your marketing performance:

  • Holistic view: Tracks the overall performance of marketing efforts, not just individual ads.
  • Budget control: Helps e-commerce businesses ensure ad spend aligns with revenue growth.
  • Scalability indicator: A consistently positive MER signals potential to scale campaigns profitably.

💡 MER vs ROAS: Unlike ROAS, which focuses on specific campaigns, MER evaluates how efficiently your entire marketing budget drives sales.

How to calculate MER?

Formula

Marketing Efficiency Ratio = Total Sales Total Marketing Spend

What do the results mean?

  • MER > 5: Strong efficiency. Your marketing drives significant revenue growth.
  • MER between 3-5: Solid but could be optimized.
  • MER < 3: Marketing spend is high relative to sales, requiring strategic adjustments.

Example

An e-commerce store spends $20,000 on marketing and generates $100,000 in sales.

MER = 100,000 / 20,000 = 5

This means for every $1 spent, the store earns $5 in return.

How can you use MER to measure marketing performance effectively?

Here are our advices to use MER so you can get a full view of your marketing picture:

  • Track overall performance: MER gives a holistic view of all marketing efforts, including SEO and organic growth, not just paid campaigns.
  • Focus on trends, not details: Use MER to spot trends from budget changes or new channels, but rely on specific KPIs (like ROAS or CAC) for detailed performance tracking.
  • Combine MER with other metrics: Pair MER with conversion tracking, ROAS, and CAC to separate organic growth from paid efforts and get a full view of marketing efficiency.

When should you not use MER?

In some specific cases, MER may not be the right metric:

  • New product launches: MER might seem low during initial launch phases when spend outpaces returns.
  • Short-term campaigns: For brief sales or promotions, focus on ROAS or CPA for clearer insights.
  • High-volume brand awareness campaigns: MER may undervalue long-term brand-building efforts that don’t immediately drive sales.
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