The Three NEVERs
Once you see the tax, you need a doctrine. Three principles. Three failures they address. Three commitments that change everything.
NEVER is not a framework designed to win an argument. It’s a creed designed to change behaviour — in budgets, in measurement, and in partnerships. Each NEVER exists because martech, as practiced, failed at something fundamental. And each has a direct economic consequence: less waste, more compounding, more profit.
Never Lose Customers — The Mission
The failure: Martech doesn’t maintain attention. It sends messages and hopes. It measures delivery and opens and clicks, but it rarely manages the underlying relationship as a living thing that drifts, strengthens, weakens, and sometimes dies. Most systems track campaigns, not transitions. They see “active” and “inactive” but miss the in-between — the gentle fade before disappearance.
The cost: As CRR reveals, about 80% of engaged customers go quiet each quarter. Not through unsubscribes. Through silence. This is the worst kind of loss because it’s invisible until you’re paying to reverse it. By the time a customer appears in a “win-back” segment, they’ve already completed the journey to dormancy. The intervention window has closed.
The principle: Never Lose Customers doesn’t mean zero churn in the literal sense. It means systematic attention management: track attention like you track inventory. Detect drift early. Treat silence as a leading indicator, not a shrug. Monitor the transitions. Reverse the transitions.
The implication: You need to manage the BRTN segments — Best, Rest, Test, Next — and intervene at the moment of drift. Your goal isn’t to send more messages. It’s to build habits of engagement that compound. This is how brands MAX the LTV: not by squeezing more from customers, but by staying present enough that relationships compound instead of decay.
Never Pay Twice — The Problem
This is the principle that turns NEVER from doctrine into movement, because it names the pain marketers already feel.
The failure: Martech loses customers; adtech monetises the loss. The moment a customer drifts beyond your attention perimeter, the platform treats them as “reachable” only through payment. You are charged to regain access to someone you already had access to.
The cost: The Reacquisition Tax. A large share of “acquisition” spend isn’t acquisition at all — it’s recovery. And because recovery converts well, it’s celebrated. The disease looks like success.
The principle: Any conversion from customers you can already reach should cost close to nothing. Paid should be for discovery — for genuinely new customers — not for recovering customers you failed to keep. Exhaust free before spending cheap. Prevent before you need to recover.
The implication: Owned channels must be exhausted before paid. Retention must be designed as a default growth engine, not a support function. The brand must develop “anti-drift” systems — daily, weekly, and lifecycle interventions that prevent customers from going dark. This is how brands ZERO the CAC: not by negotiating better CPMs, but by eliminating the need to buy reach repeatedly.
Never Pay Twice gives CMOs a sentence they can say in the boardroom without sounding defensive. It reframes the conversation from “marketing wants budget” to “marketing refuses waste.”
Never Pay Fixed — The Mechanism
Capability is everywhere now. Tools are abundant. AI features are multiplying. But accountability is still rare. And rarity is where value lives.
The failure: Most martech vendors get paid the same whether your retention improves or collapses. Pricing is tied to inputs (messages, contacts, seats) rather than outcomes (retention, engagement, profit). In a system designed to leak, input pricing quietly profits from leakage.
The cost: Misalignment. Brands bear downside; vendors collect upside. When times get tough, brands cut what they can measure least — retention programmes — which increases drift, which increases reacquisition, which increases AdWaste. The vendor still gets paid.
The principle: Never Pay Fixed demands outcome-based pricing: Beta (baseline) + Alpha (uplift above baseline) + Carry (shared upside over time). Vendors make more only when brands make more. The model forces accountability that contracts and good intentions never could.
The implication: The question every vendor conversation should start with: “What happens to your revenue if our retention improves?” If the answer is “nothing changes,” the vendor isn’t a partner. They’re a supplier. And suppliers are not designed to end the Reacquisition Tax.
How the three connect:
“Never Lose Customers” is the mission — what we want. “Never Pay Twice” is the problem articulation — what’s broken, and why people join. “Never Pay Fixed” is the mechanism — how we enforce accountability.
NEVER is how brands ZERO the CAC and MAX the LTV.
This isn’t a tagline. It’s a refusal to fund growth the old way.
If you remember only one thing: Ask your vendors one question: “What happens to your revenue if our retention deteriorates?” The answer tells you whose side they’re on.