Definition · Logistics & Supply Chain

LTV/CAC for Logistics & Supply Chain

Lifetime Value to Customer Acquisition Cost ratio — applied to Logistics & Supply Chain. B2B demand-gen via LinkedIn + content + Search.

  1. LTV/CAC ≥ 3 is the healthy threshold; ≥ 5 in mature SaaS.

  2. Use Gross Margin LTV and fully-loaded CAC.

  3. Logistics & Supply Chain band: CPC 35–280 ₹ · CAC 4,000–40,000 ₹.

Definition

LTV/CAC is the ratio of customer lifetime value to customer acquisition cost. It tells a business whether the cost of acquiring a customer is justified by the value they bring. A healthy ratio sits at 3 or above; below 1 means the business is unprofitable per acquisition. For Logistics & Supply Chain specifically, this metric sits inside the unit-economics envelope of CPC 35–280 ₹ and CAC 4,000–40,000 ₹, constrained by long sales cycles and category education.

Formula

LTV/CAC equals lifetime value of a customer divided by the cost of acquiring that customer. Use Gross Margin LTV (not gross revenue) for a true reading.

LTV/CAC = Gross Margin LTV ÷ Fully-loaded CAC

India LTV/CAC benchmarks

Common LTV/CAC mistakes (Logistics edition)

Context

How LTV/CAC actually behaves in logistics & supply chain

LTV/CAC compresses unit economics into one number. Investors live by it. Below 1: every customer loses money. 1–3: marginal — works only if you can drive LTV up rapidly. 3–5: healthy. 5+: usually means under-investing in growth. The key trap: people use gross-revenue LTV (inflated) and media-only CAC (under-counted). Always strip to honest numbers — gross margin × fully-loaded CAC including agency fees, tooling, creative cost.

For logistics & supply chain specifically, LTV/CAC is influenced most by these 4 primary channels — each shifts the metric in a different way: LinkedIn Ads (b2b + saas demand-gen with abm-grade targeting.); SEO Services (compounding organic growth — pillar/cluster, programmatic, and ai-engine-cited.); Content Marketing (editorial + programmatic — built to be cited by ai engines.); Google Ads (search, shopping, youtube, and performance max — engineered for indian unit econ).

Channel adaptations

How LTV/CAC moves per primary channel for logistics & supply chain

30-min audit

Want this LTV/CAC review scoped to your Logistics business?

30 minutes, no slides. We'll examine your ltv/cac setup against Logistics-specific benchmarks and tell you the highest-leverage move to make first.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What's a typical LTV/CAC for Logistics & Supply Chain?

Logistics & Supply Chain LTV/CAC runs in the band 35–280 ₹ CPC / 4,000–40,000 ₹ CAC. Wider India benchmarks: Indian D2C beauty year 1: 1.4–2.2x; Indian D2C beauty year 3: 3.5–5x. Logistics-specific drivers: long sales cycles, category education.

How does Logistics change how you optimize LTV/CAC?

Logistics businesses optimize LTV/CAC via linkedin-ads, seo-services, content-marketing primarily. The category's unit economics — average CAC 4,000–40,000 ₹, repeat-purchase dynamics, and long sales cycles — constrain which levers move LTV/CAC fastest. Generic LTV/CAC advice ignores these constraints.

Which Logistics LTV/CAC mistakes does Frameleads see most?

Across Logistics & Supply Chain engagements, the top recurring mistakes are: Using gross-revenue LTV inflates ratio 2–3×.; Excluding agency / tooling / creative cost from CAC underprices acquisition.; and treating LTV/CAC as an isolated number rather than connecting it to LTV and CAC.

What's the fastest way to improve LTV/CAC for a Logistics business?

Three levers move LTV/CAC for Logistics: (1) tighter ICP definition so paid spend hits the right audience; (2) creative supply pipelines tuned to Logistics-specific buyer norms; (3) retention plumbing so each acquired customer compounds the metric. The 30-min audit identifies which of these three is the bottleneck in your specific funnel.

Deeper reading

Long-form guides on related topics

Related terms

Pair this with

Linked content

More Logistics & Supply Chain metrics & definitions

Linked content

LTV/CAC for other industries

Sources & references

Cited primary and analyst sources. Independent of Frameleads' own data.

  1. IBEF — India Brand Equity Foundation: Indian Industry ReportsIBEF (Ministry of Commerce & Industry)

    Sector-level market size, growth, and policy context for Indian industries.

  2. IAMAI — Internet & Mobile Association of IndiaIAMAI

    Digital advertising industry body; reports on India internet user base, ad spend, and platform shares.

  3. MoSPI — Ministry of Statistics and Programme ImplementationGovernment of India

    Primary source for India macro-economic indicators (CPI, GDP, household consumption).

  4. ASCI Code for Self-Regulation of Advertising in IndiaAdvertising Standards Council of India

    Mandatory baseline for all advertising claims in India — including digital, influencer, and comparative ads.

Last reviewed: by Frameleads Editorial TeamRefreshed quarterly from live client data