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      ROAS vs MER vs ACOS: What Fashion Brands Should Track Before Scaling Ads

      ROAS vs MER vs ACOS: What Fashion Brands Should Track Before Scaling Ads

      Fashion founders often ask one question first: “What ROAS are we getting?”

      It is an important question, but it is not enough.

      A fashion brand can have high ROAS and still lose money. Another brand can have moderate ROAS and still scale profitably because AOV, gross margin, repeat purchase, and new customer quality are strong.

      Before increasing ad spend, apparel, ethnic wear, and footwear brands need a profit-first measurement system.

      What ROAS tells you

      ROAS means return on ad spend.

      If you spend ₹1,00,000 and generate ₹4,00,000 in attributed revenue, your ROAS is 4x.

      ROAS is useful for campaign-level efficiency, but it has limitations. It does not tell you gross margin. It does not show returns. It may over-credit platforms. It may hide whether the sale came from a new or returning customer. It may look strong because branded demand is high.

      What MER tells you

      MER means marketing efficiency ratio.

      MER = total revenue divided by total marketing spend.

      For example, if your total online revenue is ₹50,00,000 and total marketing spend is ₹10,00,000, your MER is 5x.

      MER is useful because it shows blended business efficiency, not only platform-reported performance. For fashion brands running Meta, Google, marketplaces, influencer activity, and retention campaigns, MER gives a cleaner founder-level view.

      What ACOS tells you

      ACOS means advertising cost of sales.

      ACOS = ad spend divided by ad-generated revenue.

      A 4x ROAS equals 25% ACOS. AdYogi’s profit-first optimisation blog also explains ACOS as the inverse of ROAS and uses it as a performance threshold for automated rules.

      ACOS is especially useful for marketplace and catalog-level decisions because it helps identify whether a product can afford paid promotion.

      Why high ROAS can still be bad

      A 6x ROAS can be bad if:

      • The product has low gross margin
      • Return rate is high
      • Discounts are too deep
      • Shipping cost is high
      • COD RTO is high
      • The sale came from an existing customer who would have bought anyway
      • The campaign spent mostly on branded search
      • The product is low AOV and does not improve customer quality

      This is common in fashion because sizes, returns, discounts, and inventory liquidation complicate the economics.

      The Profit Guardrail Framework

      Use these six metrics before scaling.

      1. Platform ROAS

      Useful for campaign optimisation, but not the final truth.

      2. MER

      Useful for founder-level business efficiency.

      3. New customer CAC

      Shows how much you are paying to acquire a new buyer.

      4. AOV

      Low AOV makes paid acquisition harder. Increasing AOV can improve profitability faster than reducing CPC.

      5. Gross margin

      Different products deserve different CAC limits.

      6. Return and RTO rate

      A campaign that sells high-return products may look good in Ads Manager but bad in the bank account.

      Stop-loss rules for fashion brands

      Fashion brands should define stop-loss rules at product, ad, and campaign level.

      For example:

      Pause a product if it spends ₹2,000 without add-to-cart. Pause a product if ACOS crosses 45% after 7 days. Pause an ad if CTR is below account benchmark and CPC is rising. Pause an ad set if CAC exceeds target by 50% after enough data. Exclude products where only odd sizes are available.

      AdYogi states that its stop-loss system can monitor campaigns, ad sets, ads, and products against ACOS or conversion thresholds, and cites cases where stop-loss saved up to 25% of monthly ad spend for Aza Fashion and helped Libas manage SKU-level thresholds across a 5,000+ SKU ethnic fashion catalog.

      AOV improvement before ad scaling

      Before increasing spend, improve AOV through:

      • Buy 2 pricing
      • Complete-the-look bundles
      • Footwear + accessory bundles
      • Festive family packs
      • Free shipping threshold
      • Cross-sell on product page
      • Cart upsell
      • Prepaid discount
      • Premium collection landing pages

      One AdYogi fashion apparel case reported that customised checkout offers such as Buy 1 Get 1 and Buy 1 Get 2 helped improve cart size, and the final result included a 25% AOV increase.

      Weekly profitability dashboard

      Every fashion brand should review:

      • Spend
      • Revenue
      • ROAS
      • MER
      • CAC
      • New customer CAC
      • AOV
      • Gross margin
      • Return rate
      • Product-level ACOS
      • SKU-level spend
      • Inventory availability
      • Contribution margin after ads

      This is how you prevent “scaling” from becoming expensive revenue.

      FAQs

      Is ROAS enough to judge performance marketing?

      No. ROAS is useful, but brands should also track MER, CAC, AOV, gross margin, returns, and contribution margin.

      What is a good ROAS for fashion brands?

      There is no universal number. A profitable ROAS depends on AOV, margin, repeat purchase, return rate, discounts, and operating costs.

      Should fashion brands optimise for revenue or profit?

      Early-stage brands may optimise for learning and acquisition, but scaling brands must optimise for contribution margin and profitable growth.

      Stop scaling campaigns that look good in Ads Manager but lose money after returns and discounts.

       

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