--- id: ins_skok-ltv-cac-as-cross-functional-diagnostic operator: David Skok operator_role: General Partner Matrix Partners; founder For Entrepreneurs blog source_url: https://www.forentrepreneurs.com/saas-metrics-2/ source_type: essay source_title: "SaaS Metrics 2.0 — LTV:CAC Diagnostic" source_date: 2015-09-01 captured_date: 2026-05-05 domain: [leadership, strategy, growth-demand] lifecycle: [unit-economics, strategy-bets, cross-functional-alignment] maturity: applied artifact_class: framework score: { originality: 3, specificity: 4, evidence: 4, transferability: 5, source: 5 } tier: A related: [ins_ltv-cac-ratio-and-cash-flow-trough, ins_skok-churn-reduction-doubles-ltv] raw_ref: raw/expert-content/experts/david-skok.md --- # A declining LTV:CAC ratio is a diagnostic, not a metric, it tells you something is wrong upstream ## Claim A declining LTV:CAC ratio is not just a financial signal; it is a cross-functional diagnostic that something is wrong upstream, in product (rising churn → falling LTV), in sales (rising CAC), or in market fit (worse customer mix on both sides of the ratio). The metric forces a cross-functional investigation rather than a finance-only response, because the right fix depends on which of the three causes is dominant. ## Mechanism LTV:CAC compresses two distinct quantities into a single ratio. When it declines, the operator must split the cause: - **Falling LTV** with stable CAC → product / churn / customer-success problem. - **Rising CAC** with stable LTV → sales-efficiency problem (saturated channels, weakening fit, longer cycles). - **Both moving wrong** → market-fit drift; the company's ICP is no longer matching the market or the offer. A finance-only response (cut spend) fixes the wrong problem in two of three cases. The metric's value is forcing the cross-functional dialogue: product, sales, and PMM all have to weigh in because each owns one of the levers. ## Conditions Holds when: - LTV and CAC are tracked with fully-loaded costs (not just direct ad spend). - The org has functional separation that makes "which side is moving" attributable. - The team can do the diagnostic without it becoming a blame exercise. Fails when: - LTV and CAC are calculated inconsistently (e.g., excluding sales hire cost from CAC), the ratio is misleading. - The company has no clear ownership for the levers and no one is accountable for the diagnostic. - The market is genuinely shifting (a category collapse) and the LTV:CAC decline is the symptom of a strategic problem the metric itself cannot resolve. ## Evidence > "A declining LTV:CAC ratio is not just a financial signal but a diagnostic that something is wrong in product, sales, or market fit." · see `raw/expert-content/experts/david-skok.md` line 17. ## Signals - Quarterly metric reviews split LTV:CAC into the LTV and CAC components, with separate ownership for movement. - Cross-functional response when the ratio declines: product, sales, and PMM all participate, not finance alone. - Diagnostic includes cohort analysis (recent vs. older cohorts) to surface whether the issue is current motion or accumulated drift. ## Counter-evidence For early-stage companies, LTV is mostly forecasted rather than realised, and the ratio can swing from cohort to cohort with limited diagnostic value. Skok's framework is most operative once the company has 2+ years of cohort data to compute LTV credibly. ## Cross-references - `ins_ltv-cac-ratio-and-cash-flow-trough`, the foundational ratio. - `ins_skok-churn-reduction-doubles-ltv`, when the LTV side is the problem, this is the lever.