Home AdExchanger Talks Betterment’s ‘Anti‑Marketing’ Machine

Betterment’s ‘Anti‑Marketing’ Machine

SHARE:
Kim Rosenblum, CMO, Betterment

Investment app Betterment is running what CMO Kim Rosenblum calls an “anti-marketing” playbook.

Her team oversees growth, and they spend a lot of time strategizing about user acquisition. But once someone becomes a user, it’s up to Rosenblum to keep them calm, hands-off and focused on the long term – which is hard to do in a world of meme stocks, instant gratification, tariffs and FOMO.

“Part of our job in marketing, which is a strange thing for a marketer,” Rosenblum says on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks, “is to say, ‘Do not engage.’”

Instead of nudging people to trade more or obsessively check their balances, Betterment wants customers to leave their money where it is while long‑term compounding does the work.

When Rosenblum first arrived in early 2021, however, the emphasis was on keeping customer acquisition costs low. But “just chasing the CAC,” as she puts it, isn’t a great recipe for retention.

By pursuing growth without factoring in lifetime value (LTV), Betterment ended up attracting people who would make small trial deposits, then quickly churn. Now, Rosenblum says, the company prioritizes return on ad spend, long-term value and strengthening Betterment’s relationship with existing customers.

For example, Betterment has gotten “much more comfortable” running promotional offers for longstanding users, she says, which it didn’t do in the past.

“If you were looking at CAC, you wouldn’t have done that, because you’re just spending money again on customers you’ve already acquired,” Rosenblum says. “But we really feel like loyalty [is] a more important measure of success.”

It’s a sharp contrast with much of fin tech, an industry that tends to gamify trading and pursue engagement.

But Betterment’s not about that, Rosenblum says. “There’s no FOMO here.”

Also in this episode: rebalancing Betterment’s media mix, how AI is shaping the app’s content strategy, why it was worth building its custom bidding script from scratch – and how Rosenblum handled a recent security breach from a communications perspective.

For more articles featuring Kim Rosenblum, click here.

Must Read

AdExchanger Senior Editors Anthony Vargas and Alyssa Boyle.

POSSIBLE 2026: AdExchanger's Hot Takes

AdExchanger Senior Editors Alyssa Boyle and Anthony Vargas share their takeaways from three days chatting about agentic AI at POSSIBLE.

Reddit Reports A 75% Boost In Q1 Ad Revenue As It Reaches For 100 Million Daily US Users

Generative AI search has pushed traffic off a cliff across most of the internet, but not on social platforms. Reddit included.

POSSIBLE 2026: Can AI Help Agencies Finally Break Down Those Silos?

Domenic Venuto, indie agency Horizon Media’s chief product and data officer, sat down with AdExchanger during POSSIBLE at the Fontainebleau in Miami to unpack the role of AI in today’s media and advertising landscape.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Google Touts Its AI Ad Tech Adoption And New AI Max Features

Google announced new features and ad types for AI Max, its AI-based bidding product for search and shopping or sponsored product ads. The company also touted “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers using AI Max.

Hand pressing blue AI button on keyboard. Digital collage of artificial intelligence interface.

Meta’s Ad Machine Is Purring, So Why Did Its Stock Drop?

Meta’s Q1 call sounded like an AI and hardware pitch, but under the hood it was still about one thing: investing in AI to squeeze more money out of its ads business.

Alphabet Exceeds $100 Billion In Q1 And Its Profits Almost Doubled

Alphabet earned $109.9 billion in Q1 this year, up from $90.2 billion a year ago. And that’s not even the truly gobsmacking number.