Ecommerce Brain Unit Economics Optimization Model

Document Type: Framework
Status: Structural
Version: v1.0
Authority: HeadOffice
Applies To: Ecommerce Brain, Experimentation Brain, Finance Brain, AIBS Brain
Parent: Ecommerce Brain
Last Reviewed: 2026-04-12


Purpose

This framework defines how ecommerce optimization decisions should be evaluated through the lens of unit economics.

It exists to prevent:

• optimizing metrics that do not improve profitability
• prioritizing vanity metrics
• increasing conversion without improving margin
• scaling inefficient acquisition economics
• focusing on isolated metrics instead of system profitability
• running experiments disconnected from financial outcomes

Optimization should improve the economics of the business, not just interface performance.

The course material emphasizes that experimentation decisions should consider revenue impact and economic leverage rather than conversion rate alone.


Scope

This framework applies to:

• ecommerce growth optimization
• experimentation prioritization decisions
• pricing optimization decisions
• retention optimization decisions
• acquisition efficiency improvements
• product bundling strategies
• lifecycle optimization strategies

It governs:

how optimization opportunities are evaluated financially
how prioritization decisions connect to profitability
how performance improvements are interpreted

It does not govern:

financial accounting standards
bookkeeping structure
financial reporting methodology

Those are governed by:

Finance Brain accounting standards
MWMS CLV CAC and Payback Framework


Definition or Rules

Core Principle

Optimization should improve profit-generating capability.

Not just surface-level metrics.

Unit economics describe how revenue and cost interact at the transaction and customer level.

Improvements should positively influence:

revenue per customer
cost efficiency
lifetime value
contribution margin

The course material emphasizes understanding how conversion, spend, and frequency influence profitability.


Core Unit Economics Variables

Unit economics are typically influenced by several core variables:

Conversion Rate
Average Order Value
Customer Acquisition Cost
Purchase Frequency
Gross Margin
Lifetime Value

Changes in one variable influence others.

Optimization decisions should consider system-wide financial effect.


Variable 1 — Conversion Rate

Conversion rate measures how efficiently traffic becomes customers.

Improving conversion increases revenue per visitor.

However:

conversion improvements that rely on heavy discounting may reduce margin quality.

Conversion must be evaluated alongside profitability impact.

The course material highlights conversion as one component of economic performance.


Variable 2 — Average Order Value

Average order value influences revenue per transaction.

AOV improvements may include:

bundling strategies
cross-sell strategies
upsell strategies
pricing structure optimization

Higher AOV can improve contribution margin efficiency.

The source material highlights AOV as a key economic lever.


Variable 3 — Customer Acquisition Cost

Customer acquisition cost influences profitability of growth.

Acquisition efficiency may be influenced by:

conversion improvements
value proposition clarity
targeting improvements
landing page optimization

Reducing CAC improves return on marketing spend.

The course material emphasizes acquisition efficiency as part of optimization thinking.


Variable 4 — Purchase Frequency

Purchase frequency influences lifetime value.

Frequency improvements may include:

post purchase communication
subscription structures
lifecycle messaging
loyalty programs
product usage education

Higher purchase frequency increases total revenue per customer.

The source material highlights repeat purchase as a major driver of growth.


Variable 5 — Gross Margin

Gross margin influences how much revenue translates into profit.

Optimization decisions should consider margin structure.

Examples:

discounting strategies may increase conversion but reduce margin
bundle strategies may increase AOV and margin efficiency
pricing clarity may improve margin quality

Optimization must consider margin sustainability.


Variable 6 — Customer Lifetime Value

Customer lifetime value measures total revenue contribution per customer.

CLV increases when:

purchase frequency increases
AOV increases
retention improves
churn decreases

Optimization strategies should consider long-term customer value rather than single transaction metrics.

The course material highlights long-term value as an important perspective.


Economic Leverage Principle

Some improvements create larger financial leverage than others.

Example:

small improvement in retention may produce larger total revenue increase than small improvement in conversion.

Optimization prioritization should consider leverage magnitude.

The course emphasizes evaluating which lever produces the largest economic improvement.


Interaction Effects Between Variables

Variables interact.

Examples:

higher AOV increases CLV
higher retention improves CAC efficiency
improved conversion reduces CAC pressure
improved margin increases profitability sustainability

Optimization decisions should consider interaction effects.

System thinking improves prioritization quality.


Profitability-Oriented Experiment Design

Experiment success criteria should consider financial effect.

Example evaluation questions:

does this improvement increase revenue per visitor?
does this improvement increase lifetime value?
does this improvement improve margin efficiency?
does this improvement reduce acquisition pressure?

Experimentation should connect to economic outcomes.


Governance Role

This framework ensures:

optimization decisions improve financial performance
experimentation logic aligns with business sustainability
prioritization considers economic leverage
performance metrics connect to profitability

Finance Brain provides economic interpretation support.

Ecommerce Brain applies optimization logic.

Experimentation Brain validates hypotheses.


Relationship to Other MWMS Standards

This framework interacts with:

MWMS CLV CAC and Payback Framework
Ecommerce Brain Optimization Pillars Framework
Ecommerce Brain Experiment Prioritization Framework
Experimentation Brain Structured Testing Protocol

Optimization pillars define opportunity areas.

Unit economics define financial evaluation logic.

Experimentation validates hypotheses.

Together these frameworks align optimization with profitability.


Drift Protection

The system must prevent:

optimizing metrics without financial impact
prioritizing vanity metrics
increasing conversion through margin destruction
ignoring lifetime value
ignoring acquisition efficiency
interpreting experiment success without financial context

Optimization drift occurs when metrics disconnect from business performance.


Architectural Intent

Ecommerce Brain Unit Economics Optimization Model ensures that experimentation and optimization activity supports long-term financial health.

Financial alignment improves sustainability of growth.

Optimization discipline improves economic resilience.

Growth must remain profitable.


Change Log

Version: v1.0
Date: 2026-04-12
Author: HeadOffice
Change: Initial creation.


Change Impact Declaration

Pages Created:

Ecommerce Brain Unit Economics Optimization Model

Pages Updated:

none

Pages Deprecated:

none

Registries Requiring Update:

MWMS Architecture Registry
MWMS Document Registry

Canon Version Update Required:

No

Change Log Entry Required:

No