I once watched a startup founder pitch his unit economics to a room full of investors. "Our cost per acquisition is only $12," he said, beaming. One investor leaned forward and asked, "Does that include your engineering team's salary? Your office rent? Your AWS bill?" The founder went quiet. His real cost per acquisition, once you factored in total costs, was closer to $85.
This happens constantly. Marketers and founders cherry-pick the costs they want to see and ignore the rest. Total costs don't let you do that. It's the sum of everything, the full financial picture, and it's the starting point for every honest conversation about profitability, pricing, and growth.
Total costs represent the complete sum of all expenses a business incurs to produce, market, and deliver its products or services. The formula is as straightforward as it gets:
Total Costs = Fixed Costs + Variable Costs
Fixed costs are expenses that stay the same regardless of how much you produce or sell: rent, salaried employees, insurance, software subscriptions, loan payments. Variable costs move in proportion to activity: raw materials, sales commissions, shipping, payment processing fees, and per-unit packaging.
The concept comes from microeconomics and cost accounting, where understanding the total cost function is essential for pricing decisions, break-even analysis, and profit optimization. It's not a new idea. Manufacturers have been tracking total costs since the Industrial Revolution. What's changed is how the composition of those costs has shifted, especially for digital and service businesses.
Let me break this down in a way that actually maps to how modern businesses operate.
| Cost Category | Type | Examples | Marketing Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent & Facilities | Fixed | Office lease, warehouse | Overhead allocation to marketing dept |
| Salaries (non-commission) | Fixed | Marketing team, leadership | Major fixed marketing cost |
| Software & Tools | Fixed | CRM, analytics, ad platforms | MarTech stack is a growing fixed cost |
| Insurance & Legal | Fixed | Business insurance, compliance | Usually allocated across departments |
| Raw Materials | Variable | Product inputs, packaging | Affects COGS and pricing |
| Sales Commissions | Variable | Rep payouts, affiliate fees | Directly tied to marketing-sourced deals |
| Ad Spend | Variable | PPC, social, display | The most visible marketing variable cost |
| Shipping & Fulfillment | Variable | Logistics, last-mile delivery | Affects customer acquisition margins |
| Payment Processing | Variable | Stripe, PayPal fees | 2-3% of every transaction |
Notice how marketing straddles both categories. Your team's salaries are fixed. Your ad spend is variable. Your agency retainer might be fixed, while performance bonuses to that agency are variable. Getting this classification right is essential for calculating contribution margin and understanding the real cost of growth.
Economists describe total costs as a function of output quantity. At zero units produced, total cost equals fixed costs (because you still pay rent and salaries even if you sell nothing). As output increases, total costs rise by the marginal cost of each additional unit.
TC(Q) = FC + VC(Q)
Where TC is total cost, FC is fixed cost, Q is quantity, and VC(Q) is variable cost as a function of quantity.
This matters for marketers because it changes how you think about scaling. If your fixed costs are $500,000 per month and your variable cost per unit is $15, producing 10,000 units costs $650,000 ($65 per unit) while producing 50,000 units costs $1,250,000 ($25 per unit). The average cost per unit drops as volume increases, which is the entire logic behind economies of scale.
This is why volume-based marketing strategies (penetration pricing, aggressive customer acquisition) can work even when early-stage unit economics look bad. If you can see that scaling volume will drop your average total cost below your selling price, the initial losses are an investment in reaching that crossover point.
Here's where I think most marketing leaders get sloppy. When someone asks "what does our marketing cost?" the answer should include everything, not just ad spend.
Marketing costs encompass all expenses incurred to promote, sell, and distribute products. A complete marketing total cost picture includes: