
For many dispensary operators, growth has historically come from location, product assortment, pricing, and community loyalty. Marketing performance often gets evaluated in a very straightforward way.
A new customer walks in.
They spend $72.
Attribution shows $72 in revenue.
That becomes the assumed return.
But that is not the real return.
As competition intensifies across mature cannabis markets, dispensaries can no longer afford to measure success based only on the first transaction. When we begin working with operators who are focused on expanding market share or entering new trade areas, one of the first conversations we have is about how they calculate the value of a new customer.
Initially, the thinking often sounds like this:
“If we drive a visit and the average basket size is $72, then that visit is worth $72.”
On the surface, that feels logical.
In reality, it dramatically undervalues the customer.
Cannabis is not a one-time purchase category. It is habitual, preference-driven, and highly behavior-based.
If a campaign is designed to attract net-new consumers rather than retarget existing loyalty members, the first transaction is simply the starting point. The real question is:
What is that customer worth over time?
To answer that, we look beyond the initial basket and examine deeper behavioral metrics:
When you model these variables together, the economics of acquisition change quickly.
Let’s walk through a simplified example using modeled dispensary data.
Average spend per visit: $72
Percentage of first-time visitors who return: 55%
Average visits per returning customer per year: 14
Average customer lifespan: 2 years
Attrition rate after year one: 30%
Now let’s calculate.
Every newly acquired customer spends $72 on their initial visit.
Initial value = $72
Out of 100 new customers:
55 return
45 never come back
For the 55 returning customers:
Year 1
14 visits × $72 = $1,008 per returning customer
Year 2
30% attrition reduces active returning customers
55 × 70% = 38 continuing customers
14 visits × $72 = $1,008 per customer
Revenue from first visit (100 customers):
100 × $72 = $7,200
Year 1 returning revenue (55 customers):
55 × $1,008 = $55,440
Year 2 returning revenue (38 customers):
38 × $1,008 = $38,304
Total 2-Year Revenue from 100 New Customers:
$7,200 + $55,440 + $38,304 = $100,944
Now divide by the original 100 new customers acquired:
Lifetime Value per Acquired Customer = $1,009
Not $72.
Over $1,000.
If your cost to acquire a new cannabis customer is $120 and you are only attributing the first $72 transaction, your campaign looks upside down.
But if that customer is realistically worth approximately $1,000 over two years, the conversation changes entirely.
This is where many dispensaries underinvest in acquisition. They evaluate marketing using short attribution windows without considering:
Cannabis is a high-frequency category in competitive markets. Failing to calculate lifetime value leads to conservative spend decisions that stall growth.
In mature states, customers have options. They are comparing:
Proximity
Promotions
Brand assortment
Experience
If your strategy focuses on net-new acquisition rather than simply reactivating your existing database, your return is not static.
It develops.
It compounds.
It builds long-term store preference.
And unless you intentionally calculate lifetime value, you will consistently undervalue your marketing performance.
If you are evaluating a new customer acquisition campaign based only on:
You are likely misjudging the effectiveness of your investment.
Real growth analysis requires asking:
Because cannabis marketing is not about the first basket.
It is about building durable customer relationships in a regulated and competitive environment.
When you understand the lifetime value of your customers, acquisition stops feeling risky.
It starts looking strategic.
And that is when you can confidently scale.