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Most home care agency owners eventually ask the same question:

How do we get more leads?

It feels like the right question. The phone is quiet. The website isn’t converting. Referral partners are polite but inconsistent. Caregivers need hours. Payroll is coming. Competitors are showing up in Google searches that should probably belong to you.

So the instinct is to buy more demand.

More ads. More directories. More networking. More content. More referral lunches.

Sometimes that works. Often it doesn’t, because the first problem isn’t lead volume. It’s that the agency doesn’t know which leads are worth paying for.

That is the better question:

Which leads actually pay back?

It’s less exciting than “get more leads”. But it is the question that separates agencies that grow profitably from agencies that spend more every year and still feel stuck.

Home care is not short of demand. Canada is aging. Ontario’s population over 65 is projected to grow by about 650,000 people in five years, and the province will need thousands more home care personal support workers simply to maintain current service levels. The broader Canadian home care market is also large and growing.

Families are looking. Adult children are searching late at night. Discharge planners are trying to get people home safely. Spouses are calling because a situation changed faster than expected.

The issue is whether your agency can capture the right demand, respond quickly, track the source, convert the family, staff the case, retain the client and earn a margin.

Many agencies spend real money to create demand, then lose visibility the moment the inquiry arrives.

They pay for Google Ads, directories, referral lunches, sponsorships, networking events, SEO, website redesigns and social media. Then a family finally calls, and the agency still cannot answer the questions that decide whether the spend paid back.

QuestionWhy it matters
Where did this inquiry come from?You cannot invest in a source you cannot identify.
How fast did we respond?Families in crisis often call several agencies.
Was an assessment booked?A lead is not revenue.
Did care start?An assessment is not revenue either.
How many hours did the client book?Lead quality matters more than lead volume.
Did the client stay past 30 or 90 days?Acquisition cost only pays back if the client stays.
What margin did we earn?Some sources create revenue but little profit.

That is acquisition cost leakage.

It happens when an agency spends money, time or relationship effort to generate inquiries but cannot trace those inquiries through to assessment, start of care, revenue, retention and margin.

When the system leaks, more lead volume usually just pushes more families through the same unclear intake, follow-up and conversion process.

Not sure where your agency is leaking revenue?

Most agencies do not lose profit in one obvious place. They lose it across intake, acquisition cost, pricing, labour percentage, shift coverage and delivery efficiency.

That is why we built the ConsidraCare Care Agency Profitability Diagnostic.

In under 10 minutes, it benchmarks your agency against stronger operators and shows where your biggest margin leaks may be hiding.

Take the free audit

The price of buying growth is rising

Acquiring home care clients is getting more expensive.

Activated Insights reported that customer acquisition costs in home-based care rose by $208 in one year to $800 per customer, the highest level in five years. Later industry coverage of the 2025 Activated Insights Benchmarking Report put median home care customer acquisition cost at $845 per client. For context, Activate Insights put median home care acquisition cost at $590 per client in 2017, which shows how sharply the cost has risen over the past several years.

That creates a hard commercial reality. Demand is growing, but so is the cost of capturing it.

Activated Insights benchmarking has also shown a large revenue gap between agencies that track every inquiry and those that track only some or most inquiries. Depending on the year, agencies that tracked every inquiry saw roughly $812,000 to $1.2 million more in median annual revenue.

That does not prove tracking alone caused the gap. Better-run agencies tend to track better. Still, the signal is hard to ignore.

The lesson is not that agencies should stop marketing. The lesson is that more spend should come after the agency can follow a lead from source to revenue.

What acquisition leakage looks like on a normal Tuesday

Acquisition leakage rarely looks dramatic. It looks like ordinary agency work.

The owner is on a care visit when the phone rings. A web form lands in an inbox. A referral partner sends a family, but the source never makes it into the client record. A Google Ads campaign produces calls, but no one knows which keyword drove them. A directory sends a lead, but the same family has already been sold to other agencies.

Then comes the assessment. Everyone feels positive. The family says they will “think about it”. No one follows up that evening with a clear next step. By the next morning, the family has booked another agency.

On paper, this looks like a marketing problem. In practice, it is usually an operating problem.

You can hear the same pain in our discuissions with agency owners.

One home care agency owner wrote, “The only source we have received clients from so far is Facebook and Nextdoor.” Another non-medical home services owner described “a rough patch with lack of clients.” Another owner warned that “google ads are the least effective but the most expensive.”

These are not formal studies. These experiences from the actual life of an agency owner: channel confusion, inconsistent lead flow, expensive clicks, weak follow-up and no clear view of what is working.

One operator put the attribution problem even more plainly: “We are losing roughly 50% of our paid ads attribution.” If you cannot see where calls came from, you cannot know what to fund, fix or stop.

The five places home care agencies leak acquisition cost

1. They do not track the real lead source

Every inquiry should have a source attached from the start.

Not “internet”. Not “referral”. Not “phone call”.

Those labels are too vague to support a decision. The source needs to be specific enough that the agency can compare what is working.

Weak source trackingBetter source tracking
ReferralDr. Smith, discharge planner, St. Joseph’s Hospital
GoogleGoogle Ads, dementia care campaign, Mississauga
WebsiteOrganic search, “home care Brampton” page
FamilyDaughter of current client, referral request sent March 3
CommunityParkinson’s support group presentation

If source tracking is weak, the owner is left guessing. The agency may feel busy. It may have calls, assessments and a few new starts. But it cannot answer the question that matters most: which channels produce paying, retained and profitable clients?

If you take our online audit, it reflects this directly. It asks whether an agency knows its cost per acquired client by source, where most new paying clients came from in the last 90 days and whether it uses low-CAC programs such as hospital referral relationships, community partners, family referrals, caregiver referrals, Google Business Profile, local SEO, old-lead reactivation and review generation.

Acquisition should not be measured by noise. It should be measured by source-to-start performance.

2. They run paid ads without conversion discipline

Google Ads can work for home care. They can also become an expensive way to discover that your intake system is broken.

Home care PPC estimates commonly range from roughly $75 to $150 per lead in vendor-reported examples. Other estimates suggest the true PPC cost per signed client can rise to $800 to $2,000 or more once lead quality and conversion leakage are included. These are not audited benchmarks, but they show the practical math owners face.

The mistake is measuring paid media only by cost per click or cost per lead.

A click is not a client. A form fill is not a client. A call is not a client. Even an assessment is not a client until care starts.

Paid ads should be judged by the full path.

MetricWeak questionBetter question
ClicksHow many clicks did we get?Which clicks became qualified calls?
LeadsWhat was our cost per lead?What was our cost per started client?
CallsHow many calls came in?How many were answered and booked?
AssessmentsHow many did we complete?How many converted to care starts?
RevenueHow much revenue came in?What margin and retention came from each source?

Home care also has keyword traps. Agencies can waste spend on searches for “care home”, “nursing home”, retirement homes, job seekers and general elder care queries. Without search-term reviews, negative keywords and call tracking, an agency can pay for people who never wanted in-home care in the first place.

The problem is not paid ads. It is paid ads run without source tracking, call discipline and conversion follow-up.

3. They treat referral partners as goodwill, not pipeline

Home care is a trust business. Referrals matter.

Benchmarks have repeatedly shown that referrals from current and past clients are among the strongest sources of new business. One study sample reported that referrals from current and past clients and their loved ones accounted for as much as 73% of 2019 revenue.

Referral sources can also include hospital discharge planners, social workers, physicians, clinics, pharmacies, community groups, senior residences, disease-specific associations, caregivers and former clients. Ontario Health atHome shows that referrals into home and community care can come from doctors, family members, caregivers, neighbours or patients themselves.

Yet many agencies still manage referral relationships informally.

The owner remembers who sent a client. The coordinator knows someone at the hospital. Someone drops off brochures. Someone attends a breakfast. But there is no pipeline.

A referral pipeline should track more than names.

Referral metricWhy it matters
Partner nameYou need to know who is active.
Partner typeHospital, clinic, senior residence, family, caregiver or community group.
Last touchReferral relationships fade without cadence.
Referrals receivedMeasures output, not politeness.
Assessments bookedShows referral quality.
Starts of careShows commercial value.
Revenue and hoursShows source quality.
RetentionShows fit and trust.

A referral partner becomes a real channel only when the agency tracks referrals, follows up consistently and reviews which partners create started care.

4. They treat reviews as reputation, not acquisition infrastructure

Many agencies think reviews are “nice to have”. They are more than that.

Google says local results are based mainly on relevance, distance and prominence. It also says complete and detailed business information helps match a Business Profile to relevant searches. Google does not say reviews guarantee higher ranking. No credible marketer should say that. But it is clear that prominence, business information and trust signals matter.

BrightLocal’s local consumer review research also shows that Google remains the main place where consumers read local-business reviews, and that consumers strongly prefer businesses that respond to reviews.

For home care, this matters because families are not buying a simple service. They are choosing who will enter a parent’s home, provide personal care and communicate during a stressful week.

Reviews reduce doubt before the first call.

Review weaknessRevenue impact
Few reviewsFamilies may skip the agency before calling.
Old reviewsThe agency looks inactive.
No responsesThe agency looks less attentive.
Generic reviewsFamilies see little proof of specific care situations.
No review request processHappy families never become public proof.

Reviews do not replace relationships. They do not guarantee rankings. But in local home care, they often influence whether a family calls your agency or the next agency on the page.

5. They depend on one channel

The riskiest agencies depend on one source of growth.

Only paid ads. Only the owner’s network. Only Facebook. Only word of mouth. Only a directory. Only hospital relationships.

That creates fragility. A stronger agency builds a portfolio of low-CAC channels and then measures which ones produce clients who stay and pay back.

ChannelBest use
Current and past client referralsHighest trust, often strong close rates.
Caregiver referralsCan create both client and staff leads.
Hospital and discharge planner relationshipsHigh-intent post-discharge needs.
Senior residencesFamilies often need supplemental private care.
Clinics and pharmaciesLocal trust and repeat visibility.
Community groupsDisease-specific and family support networks.
Google Business ProfileLocal search visibility and review proof.
Local SEO pagesCity and service-specific demand capture.
Old-lead reactivationConverts demand you already paid for.
CRM follow-up automationKeeps leads from going cold.

Growth comes from managing several channels together, then knowing which ones produce profitable care.

The operating metrics every agency should track

The goal is not perfect attribution. Home care will always have messy buying journeys. A daughter may find you on Google, ask a friend, read reviews, call twice and then speak to a discharge planner.

That is normal. But “messy” is not an excuse to manage growth from memory.

At minimum, track this:

MetricReview cadenceQuestion it answers
Inquiry sourceWeeklyWhere is demand coming from?
Response timeWeeklyAre we fast enough?
Inquiry-to-assessment rateWeeklyAre inquiries becoming real opportunities?
Assessment-to-start rateWeeklyAre qualified families choosing us?
Cost per started clientMonthlyWhich channels pay back?
First 30-day revenueMonthlyWhich sources create meaningful cases?
Average weekly hours by sourceMonthlyWhich sources create deeper care relationships?
90-day retentionMonthlyWhich sources create sticky clients?
Gross margin by sourceMonthlyWhich sources create profit?
Referral partner activityMonthlyWhich relationships are alive?
Reviews requested and receivedMonthlyIs reputation becoming a system?

A practical acquisition dashboard should follow the full path: inquiry source, cost by source, response time, inquiry-to-assessment conversion, assessment-to-start conversion, cost per started client, first 30-day revenue, average weekly hours, 90-day retention, gross margin by source, referral partner activity and reviews requested versus received.

That is a sensible standard for any agency trying to grow without wasting money.

How technology helps: from marketing activity to operating visibility

Technology does not fix acquisition leakage just because an agency buys a CRM, scheduler or ad dashboard.

The value comes when technology connects the full operating loop:

source → inquiry → follow-up → assessment → contract → first shift → revenue → retention → referral

That is where home care agencies often break. Marketing sits in one tool. Intake sits in another. Scheduling sits somewhere else. Billing and payroll live in spreadsheets. Reviews are requested manually, if at all. Referral relationships live in the owner’s head.

An operating system should connect those handoffs.

ConsidraCare is being built around that idea. Our platform supports direct intake, web-form intake and referral-organization intake, with referral attribution attached to the client record. It also includes a client funnel from Intake to Coordinator Assigned, Assessment Booked, Assessment Completed, Contract Sent, Onboarded and Ended.

That matters because the agency can see where a lead stalls.

If five paid leads reach intake but only one reaches assessment, the ad may not be the first problem. The handoff may be. If hospital referrals book assessments but do not start care, the issue may be pricing, care-plan fit, staffing capacity or follow-up. If Google leads start care but churn after two weeks, the issue may be expectation-setting or caregiver matching.

ConsidraCare also includes referral organization tracking. Client and caregiver records can be tied back to source-of-business analytics. That is the difference between saying “I think referrals work” and knowing that a referral partner created six starts, 140 weekly hours and strong retention.

The platform’s reporting library covers client reports, revenue, churn, assessment-to-onboard time, revenue by service category and margin analysis.

This is not software as a marketing gimmick. It is growth made visible enough to manage.

A 90-day fix for acquisition leakage

Most agencies do not need a complex attribution system on day one. They need discipline.

Days 1-30: create one source of truth

Track every inquiry in one place.

FieldExample
Inquiry dateMay 27
SourceGoogle Business Profile, client referral, hospital, paid ad
Contact personDaughter, spouse, social worker
Care needDementia, discharge, respite, companionship
Response time8 minutes
Assessment booked?Yes or no
Assessment completed?Yes or no
Care started?Yes or no
First scheduled hours10 hours a week
First 30-day revenueDollar amount
Reason lostPrice, timing, no caregiver, chose competitor

Do not wait for perfect software. Start tracking.

Days 31-60: fix the biggest leak

Look for the first major break.

SymptomLikely leak
Clicks but no callsAd targeting, landing page, phone setup
Calls but no assessmentsIntake script, response speed, qualification
Assessments but no startsPricing, trust, follow-up, staffing availability
Starts but low hoursPoor fit, weak care plan, wrong source
Revenue but poor marginPricing, travel, labour percentage, overtime
Good clients but few referralsNo referral ask or review process

Fix one leak before buying more demand.

Days 61-90: build three low-CAC engines

Choose three and run them consistently:

  1. Client and family referral process.

  2. Caregiver referral process.

  3. Google Business Profile and review-generation process.

  4. Hospital and discharge planner outreach cadence.

  5. Senior residence relationship cadence.

  6. Old-lead reactivation process.

  7. Local SEO pages for priority cities and services.

  8. CRM follow-up sequence for inquiries that do not book immediately.

Review results every month. Stop channels that produce low-quality leads. Improve channels that produce qualified inquiries but weak conversion. Invest more in sources that produce profitable, retained clients.

Before spending more on ads, answer these questions

QuestionYes or no
Do we know our cost per started client by source? 
Do we track every inquiry source? 
Do we know our average response time? 
Do we know inquiry-to-assessment conversion by source? 
Do we know assessment-to-start conversion by source? 
Do we know first 30-day revenue by source? 
Do we know 90-day retention by source? 
Do we know gross margin by source? 
Do we review referral partner activity monthly? 
Do we request reviews after positive care moments? 
Do we have a follow-up sequence for old leads? 
Do we know which sources bring clients we can actually staff? 

If most answers are “no”, the agency first needs better visibility into where inquiries come from, where they stall and which sources produce profitable care.

Before you spend more on leads, find the leak

If your agency does not know which sources produce assessments, starts of care, retained clients and healthy margin, more marketing spend can simply push more inquiries into the same leaky system.

Before launching another campaign, get a clearer view of where revenue is escaping.

Take the ConsidraCare Care Agency Profitability Diagnostic. It benchmarks your agency across six revenue-leak areas:

  • intake;

  • acquisition cost;

  • pricing;

  • labour percentage;

  • shift coverage;

  • delivery efficiency.

You will get instant benchmarked results and a prioritized action plan based on your agency’s numbers.

Take the free audit

Frequently Asked Questions

What is acquisition cost leakage?

Acquisition cost leakage is the money, time and effort lost when an agency generates inquiries but cannot convert or trace them through to profitable care. It includes missed calls, slow follow-up, poor source tracking, weak assessment conversion, untracked referral partners and paid ads measured only by clicks or leads.

There is no universal number. CAC depends on geography, care type, payer mix, wages, hourly billing rate, retention and average weekly hours. Activated Insights reported $800 per customer in its 2024 benchmarking findings. Later industry coverage cited $845 in 2024 data. Use benchmarks as a reference, but calculate your own CAC by source.

Use this formula:

CAC = total sales and marketing cost for a source ÷ number of started clients from that source

For paid ads, include ad spend, agency fees, landing page costs and intake labour. For referrals, include relationship-building time, events, materials and staff time. The most useful number is not cost per lead. It is cost per started client.

Yes, but only with discipline. Google Ads can work when the agency has fast intake, call tracking, keyword control, negative keywords, strong landing pages, enough budget to learn and the ability to measure cost per started client. It is risky when the agency cannot answer calls quickly or does not track beyond form fills.

Often, yes. Referrals begin with trust. But referrals still need tracking. A referral source should be managed like a pipeline: partner name, last touch, referrals sent, assessments booked, care starts, revenue and retention.

Very important. Google says local results are based mainly on relevance, distance and prominence. Reviews also help families judge trust before they call. They do not guarantee ranking, but they are part of the local acquisition system.

Track inquiries by source, response times, assessments booked, assessments completed, starts of care, open opportunities, missed calls and new reviews. Weekly tracking catches leaks while they are still fixable.

Track CAC by source, first 30-day revenue, 90-day retention, average weekly hours, gross margin by source, referral partner performance, review volume and Google Business Profile performance.

Many agencies optimize for lead volume instead of profitable starts of care. A cheap lead that does not convert is expensive. A costly lead that becomes a long-retained, high-hour client may be profitable.

Start tracking every inquiry source. Then find where the funnel breaks: inquiry to assessment, assessment to start, start to retained client, or retained client to profitable margin. The fastest win is usually not a new channel. It is fixing the handoff that already exists.

Picture of Tauseef Riaz
Tauseef Riaz
Tauseef Riaz is the CEO of ConsidraCare, where he leads the company’s work on technology, operating systems, and AI-supported workflows for home care agencies, nonprofits, and community care programs. He brings an MBA, CFA charter, and engineering background to the practical challenges of aging at home, caregiver operations, compliance, family communication, and field-service accountability. His writing focuses on home-based care, agency growth, care delivery systems, reporting, and the tools organizations need to deliver safer, more reliable care.