Paid AcquisitionMarTechSeries Abeginner

Paid Acquisition for MarTech at Series A

A step-by-step playbook for implementing paid acquisition at a Series A-stage MarTech company. This guide covers everything from initial setup and team requirements to execution, measurement, and optimization — tailored specifically for MarTech companies with meaningful growth budget to deploy strategically and first dedicated growth or marketing hires. Includes specific KPIs, recommended tools, common pitfalls to avoid, and expert insights from Ehsan Jahandarpour.

Timeline: 1-2 months

Prerequisites

  • Established product with proven product-market fit
  • Analytics infrastructure capturing key user events
  • GDPR and CCPA compliance is critical for marketing data processing — ensure compliance before scaling
  • Landing pages optimized for conversion
  • Unit economics model with target CAC defined

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Define unit economics guardrails

Calculate your target CAC, target CPA by channel, and maximum acceptable payback period. These numbers are your spend limits. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: Your target CAC should be less than 1/3 of your LTV — otherwise paid growth is unsustainable. In the MarTech context, also consider: tool consolidation pressure.

2

Build and test creative assets

Create 5-10 ad variations per channel with different angles, formats, and messages. Test static vs video, emotional vs rational, problem vs solution. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: Video ads under 15 seconds outperform everything on Meta. On Google, match ad copy to search intent exactly. In the MarTech context, also consider: proving marketing ROI.

3

Set up conversion tracking and attribution

Install pixels, set up server-side tracking, and configure your attribution model. Without accurate tracking, you are flying blind. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: Use UTM parameters religiously and set up offline conversion imports for longer sales cycles. In the MarTech context, also consider: data privacy restrictions.

4

Launch campaigns on 2-3 channels

Start with Google Search (high intent) and one social channel (Meta or LinkedIn depending on audience). Allocate 70% of budget to the highest-intent channel. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: Start with small daily budgets ($50-100/day) and scale winners, not averages. In the MarTech context, also consider: integration complexity across tools.

5

Optimize landing pages

Create dedicated landing pages for each campaign with matching messaging. Test headlines, social proof, form length, and CTA copy. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: Remove navigation from landing pages — every link that is not your CTA is a leak. In the MarTech context, also consider: tool consolidation pressure.

6

Scale and diversify

Once you find a profitable channel, increase spend gradually (20% per week max). Add new channels to reduce platform dependency. For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, this step is particularly important given building a repeatable, scalable growth engine.

Pro tip: When CPA rises above target, create new audiences and creatives before increasing budget. In the MarTech context, also consider: proving marketing ROI.

Expected Outcomes

  • CAC within target range for MarTech segment within 60 days
  • ROAS above 3:1 on primary paid channels
  • 25-40% of monthly pipeline consistently sourced through paid channels
  • Landing page conversion rates above 5% for targeted campaigns

KPIs to Track

  • Conversion rate
  • CAC payback period
  • Quality score
  • Cost per click (CPC)
  • Cost per acquisition (CPA)

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Scaling spend before proving unit economics
Not testing creative variations aggressively
Sending paid traffic to your homepage
Relying on a single acquisition channel

Ehsan's Growth Commentary

MarTech paid acquisition is the most competitive in B2B because every MarTech company understands digital advertising and bids aggressively on the same keywords. Google Ads CPCs for "marketing automation," "email marketing tool," and "CRM software" range from $20-80 — making profitability nearly impossible for companies with sub-$5K ACV. The MarTech paid acquisition strategy: do not compete on category keywords. Compete on comparison and migration keywords ("HubSpot alternative," "Mailchimp migration," "ActiveCampaign vs [your product]"). These queries have 5-10x lower CPCs and 3-5x higher conversion rates because the searcher has already decided to buy — they are choosing between options. Build dedicated landing pages for every competitor comparison, addressing specific pain points of each competitor's users. One comparison landing page converting at 8% from a $10 CPC generates more revenue than a category landing page converting at 1% from a $50 CPC.

Your best-performing ad creative will fatigue every 2-3 weeks. Build a creative production cadence, not a one-time batch. In MarTech, LinkedIn ads are expensive but often have the best lead quality for B2B. Test with small budgets first. Always run brand search campaigns — competitors will bid on your brand name, and the CPCs are low.

EJ

Ehsan Jahandarpour

AI Growth Strategist & Fractional CMO

Forbes Top 20 Growth Hacker · TEDx Speaker · 716 Academic Citations · Ex-Microsoft · CMO at FirstWave (ASX:FCT) · Forbes Communications Council

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to see results from paid acquisition in MarTech?
For MarTech companies at the Series A stage, expect to see early signals within 4-8 weeks and meaningful results within 3-6 months. The timeline depends on your current baseline, team capacity, and meaningful growth budget to deploy strategically. Focus on leading indicators early and shift to lagging indicators (revenue, retention) over time.
What budget should a Series A MarTech company allocate to paid acquisition?
At the Series A stage with meaningful growth budget to deploy strategically, allocate 10-20% of your growth budget to paid acquisition. For MarTech specifically, this means investing in HubSpot and Salesforce Marketing Cloud and dedicating at least one team member 50%+ of their time. Start small, prove ROI, then scale investment proportionally.
What are the biggest risks of paid acquisition for MarTech companies?
The primary risks are: (1) spreading too thin across tactics instead of going deep on one, (2) not adapting the approach to MarTech-specific dynamics like tool consolidation pressure, (3) measuring vanity metrics instead of business outcomes, and (4) giving up before the tactic has time to compound. Mitigate these by setting clear success criteria and committing to a 90-day minimum test period.
Can paid acquisition work alongside other growth strategies?
Absolutely — and it should. paid acquisition is most powerful when combined with complementary tactics. For MarTech at Series A, pair it with content marketing for top-of-funnel, and a strong activation flow for conversion. The key is to avoid diluting focus: master one tactic before adding another. Think of it as stacking growth loops, not running parallel experiments.
How do I measure the ROI of paid acquisition in MarTech?
Track both leading indicators (engagement, traffic, activation) and lagging indicators (pipeline, revenue, retention). For MarTech companies, the most important metrics are CAC from this channel, conversion rate at each funnel stage, and LTV of customers acquired through paid acquisition. Set up proper attribution using UTM parameters, cohort analysis, and ideally a multi-touch attribution model. Report ROI monthly to stakeholders.