Performance Marketing Glossary for DTC Brands
This performance marketing glossary defines the essential terms DTC founders and marketers need to understand when running paid acquisition campaigns, optimising creative, and measuring true marketing efficiency.
Last updated: February 2026Table of Contents
- Overview
- Core Concepts
- Benchmarks and Data
- When to Use Each Approach
- Implementation Guide
- Common Mistakes
- Key Takeaways
- FAQ
Overview
Understanding this topic is foundational to DTC marketing success in 2026. The landscape has shifted significantly: Meta's algorithm has matured, iOS 14 changed attribution permanently, and creative quality has become the dominant performance lever. Brands that understand first principles make better decisions about where to invest and how to optimise.
The core insight: no single approach is universally correct. What works depends on your brand's stage, category, audience, and budget. This guide provides a framework for making the right decision for your specific situation.
Core Concepts
For DTC brands, the fundamental marketing challenge is acquiring new customers profitably while retaining the customers you already have. Every channel, format, and strategy should be evaluated against this dual objective.
Key principle: Optimise for the metric closest to actual business health. Platform-reported ROAS, CTR, and impressions are useful diagnostics but not end goals. New customer acquisition, LTV, and Marketing Efficiency Ratio are the metrics that determine whether your marketing is building a sustainable business.
The most common mistake DTC brands make is optimising for platform metrics (ROAS reported by Meta or Google) rather than business metrics (net contribution per customer, LTV:CAC ratio). These are correlated but not identical, and the difference becomes critical at scale.
Benchmarks and Data
Performance benchmarks in 2026:
| Metric | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meta CPA (varied by vertical) | |||
| Meta ROAS | 1.5x | 3x | 6x |
| Email open rate | 15% | 28% | 45% |
| Landing page CVR | 1% | 2.5% | 6% |
| LTV:CAC ratio | 1.5:1 | 3:1 | 6:1 |
When to Use Each Approach
Decision framework:
Prioritise paid acquisition when:- You have a proven offer that converts
- Product-market fit is established
- You have budget to sustain a 60-90 day learning curve
- Gross margins support your target CPA
- CPA is climbing (decreasing returns on new customer acquisition)
- Email and SMS are underutilised
- LTV is below industry benchmark for your vertical
- Budget constraints require lower-cost growth levers
- Direct response performance is plateauing
- CPMs are rising due to reduced differentiation
- Long-term CAC reduction is the strategic objective
Implementation Guide
Step 1: Establish your key performance targets
- Maximum CPA (based on gross margin and LTV)
- Target ROAS (based on above)
- Target new customer acquisition per month
- Meta Pixel + CAPI for paid social
- Google Analytics 4 for website tracking
- Post-purchase surveys for multi-channel attribution
- Monthly MER calculation
- Under K/month: Meta Ads only, Advantage+ Shopping
- K-K/month: Meta + email automation
- K+/month: Meta + Google + email + TikTok testing
- One variable at a time (creative, audience, offer)
- Minimum 7 days before evaluating campaign changes
- Use statistical significance for creative tests (500+ conversion events per variant)
- Increase budget on proven campaigns gradually (20-30% per week)
- Maintain creative refresh cadence as you scale
- Monitor CPA for signs of audience saturation
Common Mistakes
Starting too many channels simultaneously: Focus compounds. Brands that master Meta before adding Google, TikTok, and YouTube consistently outperform brands that spread thin budgets across five channels from the start. Optimising for the wrong metric: Brands that optimise for CTR get ads that attract clicks but do not purchase. Brands that optimise for ROAS over-invest in retargeting. Always optimise for the metric that represents your actual business goal. Ignoring unit economics: CPA is only meaningful in the context of gross margin and LTV. A CPA might be excellent or terrible depending on your numbers. Know your break-even CPA before setting targets. Not testing creative systematically: Most DTC brands test 2-3 creative variants and pick a winner too quickly. High-performing brands maintain 8-15 active creative variants per campaign and test new concepts continuously. Underestimating creative production: The biggest constraint on DTC performance in 2026 is not media buying skill or targeting sophistication; it is creative volume and quality. Invest in creative production infrastructure before adding media spend.Key Takeaways
- Always connect channel and format decisions to your specific unit economics
- CPA, ROAS, and channel metrics should be evaluated against your gross margin and LTV targets
- Creative quality is the primary performance lever; media buying is table stakes
- Build measurement infrastructure before scaling spend
- MHI Media combines creative strategy with media buying to deliver below-target CPA for DTC brands
FAQ
What should a DTC brand focus on first: creative or targeting?
Creative. In 2026, Meta's algorithm handles targeting more effectively than most advertisers can manually. The primary variable in your control is creative quality. Build a strong creative testing process before optimising targeting.
How do I know if my DTC paid media is working?
Evaluate against your break-even CPA. If CPA is below your calculated maximum, the channel is working. Track new customer acquisition rate month over month. If new customers are growing at your target rate with CPA at or below target, you are scaling effectively.
How does MHI Media help DTC brands with their paid media?
MHI Media combines founder-led creative strategy with Meta advertising expertise to help DTC brands acquire customers profitably. We manage campaigns, develop creative briefs, produce or direct content production, and optimise performance continuously. Book a free audit to discuss your brand.