ROAS vs ROI Differences
ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) and ROI (Return on Investment) are similar but have crucial differences. ROAS measures revenue generated per dollar of ad spend, using the formula Revenue/Ad Spend. Example: $1,000 ad spend generating $4,000 revenue yields ROAS of 4.0 or 400%. ROI measures profit, calculated as (Revenue-Costs)/Costs. In the same example, if product costs are $2,000, ROI is ($4,000-$1,000-$2,000)/$3,000 = 33%. ROAS measures marketing efficiency while ROI measures overall profitability. A ROAS of 4.0 may look good, but if costs are high, actual ROI could be low. Digital marketers prefer ROAS for quick campaign optimization. However, for overall business decisions, ROI is more important. Break-even ROAS is 1+(Non-marketing costs/Revenue). If cost of goods is 50% of revenue, break-even ROAS is 2.0. Always understand your profit margins when setting ROAS targets.