Stakes & Outcome
Stakes: If you’re still running demand creation and demand capture at a 60/40 split because “that’s what the industry says,” you’re risking wasted budget, missed pipeline, and a forecast your CFO won’t sign. The classic 60/40 rule (60% brand/demand creation, 40% demand capture) is under pressure: market cycles, AI-driven buying, and compressed risk premiums mean the old math doesn’t always pencil out. The outcome we’re solving for: provable, board-grade lift in pipeline and CAC payback, not just “awareness.”
What’s at risk:
- Overfunding brand: CAC payback stretches, pipeline stalls, CFO pulls back spend.
- Underfunding brand: Pipeline dries up in 2-3 quarters, sales cycles lengthen, NRR drops.
- Wrong split: You lose both ways—no near-term revenue, no future demand.
Specific outcome: A model to decide—by segment and channel—when demand creation actually pays off, with a 2-3 week pilot plan to prove it.
Model/Framework
Assumptions
- CAC payback target: ≤12 months (board standard for B2B SaaS, adjust for your sector)
- Gross margin: ≥70%
- Sales cycle: 90 days (adjust for enterprise)
- Incremental pipeline needed: $1M per $250K in demand creation spend (4:1 pipeline-to-spend ratio)
- Baseline conversion rates: 1.5% lead-to-opportunity, 20% opportunity-to-close
Framework
- Demand Creation = Brand + Out-of-Market Activation (Think: LinkedIn video, podcasts, category education, not just “brand ads”)
- Demand Capture = In-Market Activation (Think: SEM, review sites, retargeting, intent-based outbound)
Decision Tree
- Is your in-market demand saturated?
- If yes: incremental $1 in capture returns <1x pipeline, shift to creation.
- If no: keep funding capture until marginal returns drop below 1x.
- Can you measure pipeline lift from creation?
- Use holdout regions or segments. If not, don’t scale.
- Does creation shorten CAC payback or improve NRR?
- If yes: keep. If no: kill or reallocate.
Sensitivity Table (example)
| Variable | Base Case | Sensitivity (+/-20%) | Impact on CAC Payback |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lead-to-opp conversion | 1.5% | 1.2% / 1.8% | +2 mo / -2 mo |
| Pipeline-to-spend ratio | 4:1 | 3.2:1 / 4.8:1 | +3 mo / -3 mo |
| Gross margin | 70% | 56% / 84% | +4 mo / -4 mo |
Data & Benchmarks
What’s Normal
- 60/40 split: Originated from Binet & Field (IPA, 2013), but based on CPG, not B2B SaaS.
- B2B SaaS reality (2024-2026):
- Top quartile: 50/50 split, but only after capture channels saturate (Morgan Stanley, 2025)
- Median CAC payback: 14 months (target ≤12)
- Pipeline-to-spend ratio: 3.5:1 (creation), 6:1 (capture) source: PGIM, 2025
- NRR uplift from brand: +5-10% over 12 months, but only if tracked with holdouts
What’s Exceptional
- Creation pays off when:
- In-market capture returns <2:1 pipeline-to-spend
- Brand campaigns drive >10% lift in direct traffic or branded search (measured via incrementality, not last-touch)
- CAC payback improves within 2 quarters of increased creation spend
Show the Math
- Example:
- $250K in demand creation
- Generates $1M pipeline (4:1)
- 20% close rate = $200K revenue
- CAC payback = $250K / $200K = 1.25 years (15 months)
- If NRR is 110%, payback drops to 13.6 months in year 2
Pilot Plan (2-3 Weeks)
Objective
Test if incremental demand creation spend delivers pipeline lift and CAC payback improvement.

The 60/40 Rule Revisited: When Demand Creation Actually Pays Off
Steps
- Select 1-2 segments or regions with flatlining capture returns.
- Allocate 20% of total demand budget to creation (e.g., LinkedIn video, podcast sponsorship, category guides).
- Set up holdout group (no creation spend).
- Track:
- Direct traffic
- Branded search volume
- Pipeline sourced from creation channels (use UTM, CRM attribution)
- CAC payback by segment
- Run for 2-3 weeks.
- Review:
- Pipeline lift vs. holdout
- CAC payback delta
- NRR signals (if available)
Success Metric
- ≥4:1 pipeline-to-spend ratio from creation
- CAC payback ≤15 months (target ≤12)
- Statistically significant lift vs. holdout (p<0.1, directional is fine for pilot)
Risks & Mitigations
Risks
- Attribution contamination: Creation spend gets misattributed to capture (fix: use holdouts, not just last-touch)
- Lag effect: Brand takes 2-3 quarters to show up in pipeline (fix: track leading indicators—direct traffic, branded search)
- Overfunding creation: CAC payback stretches, CFO pulls plug (fix: cap pilot at 20% of budget, kill if no lift in 4 weeks)
- Sales not enabled: Pipeline generated isn’t worked (fix: align with Sales, set SLAs for follow-up)
Mitigations
- Model before you scale: If pilot doesn’t hit pipeline or CAC targets, reallocate to capture.
- Document assumptions: Board-grade means every number has a source and a sensitivity.
- Share results cross-functionally: If it works, codify into SOP; if not, document and move on.
Bottom Line
Don’t default to 60/40. Model your own pipeline math. Fund demand creation only when capture is saturated and you can prove lift in pipeline and CAC payback. Run a 2-3 week pilot, track with holdouts, and kill fast if it doesn’t move the forecast. CFOs don’t buy “brand”—they buy provable, math-backed revenue acceleration.
If you can’t show the math, don’t spend the money.
References
- Morgan Stanley, “Rebalancing Portfolios as Risk Premiums Drop,” Dec 2025
- PGIM, “The Paradox of Diversification: The 60-40 Portfolio’s Future,” 2025
- LOM Financial, “Revisiting the 60/40 Portfolio,” 2025
- IPA, Binet & Field, “The Long and the Short of It,” 2013
Model or it didn’t happen. Run the numbers, run the pilot, and bring your CFO the proof.