Thinks 1997

Noah Smith: “My interview with Azhnyuk clarified exactly why drones are in the ascendant as the universal modern weapon of war. The reason is cost. Drones are simply so cheap to produce in huge numbers that they can overwhelm any more expensive system.” [via Arnold Kling] More from Arnold: “If the defensive goal is to repel an invader, then as of now drones create a big advantage to the defender. An invasion requires large, visible forces. These can be mauled by low-cost drones. If the defensive goal is to protect civilian infrastructure and military bases, then drones give the attacker the advantage. As a defender, you have to bury and/or disguise your important assets.”

John Doerr: “[The latest AI revolution is the ] biggest thing ever. Since everything. It has been underhyped. We don’t know how AI is going to shape the new world of education, employment, healthcare—life as we know it. But I do know there is an insatiable hunger and appetite for electrons, and as in previous tsunamis, there will be winners and there will be losers. My job as an investor is to help these entrepreneurs find, fund and accelerate their success.” More: “What I look for first [in an entrepreneur] is, would I mind getting into trouble with them? Because no matter how successful these ventures look from the outside, the truth is you take the lid off the can and inside it’s a can of worms. It’s a struggle to build any of these companies. The most amazing entrepreneurs see the world differently than everyone else. They are fluent in using technology to change that world, to realize that new world. They have a sense that it takes a team to do something extraordinary, so they’re very good at recruiting. And finally, I find that they’re good at selling. They’re selling their vision, they’re selling their teammates, they’re selling their customers.”

Axios: “Google’s overhaul of the search bar…washes away one of the last vestiges of the internet’s halcyon era — when search tools felt empowering, social media and swiping were novel, and popular disillusionment had yet to set in…The AI era and the TikTok-ification of social media have produced a digital world that’s responsive to the market demands of today and unrecognizable from a decade ago…The blue links that colored the Google user experience for decades have been demoted to a secondary offering as zero-click answers get top billing.”

Marc Andressen: “The obvious next step: the bots will start running their own bots. one human in charge of 20 bots, each in charge of 20 more bots. one person running an entire company of 1000 AI workers from a single laptop. this is months away, not years.” [via Ole Lehmann]

NeoMarketing: The 3+3 Alpha Playbook

How a CRM team gets to Alpha by compressing transaction time and cutting transaction tax — three plays on the grid, three on its edges.

1

The Two Levers — Time and Tax

For two decades, marketing’s unit of work has been the campaign: build a list, send to the list, report what was opened and clicked. That model is quietly failing, and the dashboards that run it cannot see why. Acquisition costs rise every year. Repeat revenue leaks into paid media, where the brand pays a platform tax to win back customers it already owned. The most valuable customers drift silently — purchase intervals stretch, engagement softens — and the P&L only learns about it months later, when the customer reappears as a retargeting line item.

This playbook describes the operating system that replaces the campaign model. Its unit of work is not the campaign; it is the customer’s movement through a grid — and the Alpha that movement produces above a baseline. There is one diagnostic instrument, six plays, and four key numbers a CMO needs to track.

**

Alpha is incremental contribution above a Beta baseline — the revenue a brand would have earned anyway. It comes from exactly two places, and a move that touches neither is not Alpha, however busy it looks. The first lever is time: how long a customer takes to do the next thing. The second is tax: how much it costs to make that thing happen. Everything in this playbook is one of those two levers pulled deliberately.

Take time first. Transactions take time because customers drift, and drift is invisible until it is expensive. A customer who used to buy every six weeks slips to ten, then twelve, then stops opening messages altogether. Each stretch is margin foregone and a step closer to the retargeting pool. The time lever has two halves: speed the build — move a customer from Next to Test to Best faster — and slow the drift — delay the slide from Best to weakening to Lost. Compress the gaps on the way up; defend against the gaps on the way down.

Now tax. Every transaction reaches the customer by a route, and every route carries a tax. Organic costs almost nothing. Owned CRM is cheap on paper — five to ten per cent — until you add the discounts, coupons and loyalty burn that bought the sale, at which point a brand’s ‘cheap’ revenue can be running adtech-like economics through its own list. Paid media takes a fifth of revenue; marketplaces take more than a third. And the most expensive tax of all is the one no dashboard names: paying paid media to re-buy a customer the brand already owned. The tax lever means moving revenue down that ladder — fewer transactions on the expensive rungs, more on the cheap ones.

These two levers are the whole game. Less time, less tax, measured against a baseline, equals Alpha. The rest of the playbook is the instrument that shows where the time and tax are leaking, and the six plays that pull the two levers in the places it leaks most.

2

TAT: The Grid to Build

Standard segmentation is recency, frequency, monetary value — RFM. It looks backward, because it is built from transactions alone. The Transactions-Attention Table (TAT) looks forward, because it adds the one axis RFM ignores: attention. Attention is the signal that tells you a customer is drifting before the revenue loss appears. The TAT crosses it with transaction depth, and every customer lands in exactly one cell.

Rows are depth: zero orders, one to two, three or more. Columns are attention recency: strong (engaged in the last 30 days), weakening (30 to 90), lost (90 days or more). Both axes run to eternity, and that is the design choice that matters. Transaction depth counts a customer’s whole history; the ‘lost’ column has no upper bound. So the customer who has never bought and has not engaged in a year is not some separate ‘dormant’ category that lives off the grid — it is simply the top-right cell, zero transactions and attention lost.

That corner cell is usually the largest on the grid, and naming it honestly is the first useful shock. Most of what a brand calls its ‘identified base’ is people who never bought and are no longer listening. That number is a vanity metric; the reachable base is a fraction of it. The corner is a cost-and-compliance question — repermission a scored slice, suppress the rest — not a place to spend Alpha. Putting it on the grid rather than in a footnote keeps a CMO from mistaking list size for reach.

Nine cells are right for an analyst and too many for a first conversation, so they collapse to four. Do they buy, by do they still pay attention.

The first cut is buyers versus prospects, not best versus the rest, and the reason is diagnostic. That single cut is what separates a retention problem from a conversion problem. A brand whose grid is mostly buyers who are drifting has a retention disease; a brand whose grid is mostly prospects who never convert has a conversion disease. The same instrument reads both. The four-cell view flags which one a brand has; the nine-cell view tells you whether a drifting cohort is cheap to protect or expensive to recover.

3

Grow, Protect, Recover: The 3 Grid Plays

The three attention columns are not just states; they are the three actions a brand can take, and they already have names: sell when attention is strong (Grow), relate when it is weakening (Protect), recover when it is lost (Recover). So the three Grid Plays map cleanly onto the three columns. That alignment is the spine of the whole playbook.

Grow runs the strong column. When a customer is engaged, the job is to transact with them on an owned route — and to do it before paid media claims the credit. That means three things at three depths: convert an engaged prospect to a first purchase, accelerate a one-or-two-time buyer to the next, and own the repeat of a proven buyer rather than letting retargeting re-sell them their own intention. Grow is where the time lever and the tax lever meet — it compresses the journey and keeps the transaction off the expensive rungs. It carries two numbers, one per lever — Time-to-Next-Transaction for the time it compresses, Paid Repeat Leakage for the tax it cuts — and it serves Never Pay Twice.

Depth Grow’s job at that depth
0 orders · Next Convert the first purchase on an owned route, while attention is live
1–2 orders · Test Accelerate the next purchase; compress the gap between orders
3+ orders · Best Own the repeat; keep it off paid media so adtech cannot re-sell the customer their own intention

Protect runs the weakening column. These are customers with purchase proof whose attention is fading — the cheapest intervention on the entire grid, because catching a customer here costs a fraction of recovering them once they are gone. The play is counter-intuitive: pause the promotional pressure, lead with utility, recognition and service, and restore relevance before the relationship breaks. Its number is the Weakening Pool (proven buyers in the weakening column = B + T, the Best and Test who are drifting), and it serves Never Lose Customers. Most brands do the opposite — they discount harder at a drifting customer, accelerating exactly the loss they fear.

Recover runs the lost column. Attention is gone, so the sequence is attention first, transaction second — restore engagement before asking for a sale, and do it before defaulting to paid retargeting. Its number is Rest Recoverable Value: the historical revenue sitting in former Best and Test customers who have gone dark. It serves Never Pay Twice, because every customer recovered through restored attention is one not re-bought at full adtech price.

The column tells you which play to run; the row tells you how hard to run it.  A Best customer who is weakening earns more protection investment than a never-buyer who is drifting. Attention sets the action; depth sets the intensity. That is the entire logic of the Grid Plays.

4

Capture, Acquire, Monetise: The three Edge Plays

The three Grid Plays act inside the grid, moving and holding customers by column. The three Edge Plays are different in kind: they act on the grid’s edges. They bring customers onto the grid, or they extract value off it. That is why they are Edge Plays — not because they matter less, but because they operate at the boundary rather than within the lifecycle.

Capture Identity brings buyers onto the grid as known customers, and it has two surfaces. The first is the intermediated buyer — a marketplace customer who is platform-owned for life until the brand captures a direct identity. The second is the anonymous visitor — traffic, often paid-acquired, that lands on the brand’s own site and leaves unidentified; for a D2C brand that second leak is often the larger one. The play adds value-exchange capture before checkout and post-purchase capture afterwards — a sample for an email, a QR code on the packaging, a warranty that requires registration, a reason to log in. Its number is Identity Capture Rate, and for a marketplace-heavy or paid-traffic-heavy brand it is the single most consequential play in the book. That is the point worth stressing: an Edge Play is named for where it acts, not for how much it matters. For some brands the most urgent move is an Edge Play.

Acquire brings genuinely new identified customers onto the grid without paying the full adtech tax. This is NeoNet — cooperative recovery and acquisition across brand boundaries, where one brand’s lapsed customer is another’s warm prospect. It is the only honest way to grow the base that does not route every new customer through a platform that will then charge the brand to reach them again. Concretely: a premium skincare brand can pick up a high-intent beauty buyer through a complementary fashion brand’s NeoMail — a one-tap sample request, at a fixed transfer fee — instead of renting that same buyer back through Meta at auction price.

Monetise Attention extracts revenue from attention that is not transacting. The drifting and lost cells still open some emails; that attention has value even when the customer is not buying. ActionAds across owned surfaces turn it into revenue, which funds the recovery layer that works on those same cells. It is the one play that pays for the others. Run as a structural test first — its economics are unproven in some categories — but the principle is sound: attention is an asset whether or not it transacts today.

5

Who Runs Them — CRM 1.0, CRM 2.0 and Progency

A playbook that cannot say who does the work on Monday is a philosophy, not a plan. Almost all of it stays with the brand’s own people. The CRM team runs Grow and Protect; the acquisition team runs Acquire. Only one play leaves the building — and only one. Progency, the outcome-priced recovery business, takes the lost column and nothing else. It is deliberately post-CRM and pre-Adtech: it works the gap the CRM team cannot reach and stops the brand falling through to paid media, where the reacquisition waste happens. It is an aid to the CRM team with skin in the game, not a threat to anyone’s job.

Start with what the CRM team does today, because most brands are here. CRM 1.0 is a marketing automation platform, staffed by the vendor’s customer-success managers, pushing batch campaigns through owned channels, measured on opens and clicks, paid for as a fixed software fee. Its unit of work is the campaign sent. It is competent at delivery and blind to movement; it can tell you what was opened but not which customers are weakening before the revenue falls.

CRM 2.0 is the same team with a better operating system. The marketing automation platform is enhanced with M-Agents (Insights, Audience, Content, Decisioning). The vendor’s customer-success managers become Martech Growth Engineers with proactive assistance; batch channels become interactive Channels 2.0; the engine underneath is the shared Context Graph; and the measure changes from opens and clicks to velocity, Real Reach, and Click Retention Rate (CRR). The economics shift from a flat fee to a fee plus upside, because the work is now accountable for movement, not activity. This is what Agentic Marketing offers the in-house team: not a rip-and-replace, but a re-pointing of the same people at the two levers.

Two of those in-house plays lean on a shared engine designed to pay for itself. Atrium is the attention engine — NeoMails as the Relate vehicle (today email, extensible to WhatsApp and beyond), ActionAds as the monetising unit inside them, and NeoNet as the network that places those ActionAds. Its design goal is to be self-funding: at scale, the ActionAds pay for the NeoMails on a ZeroCPM basis and return the residual to the brand, so Protect approaches zero operating cost and Acquire — through NeoNet — brings new identified customers without the full adtech tax. The early-pilot test is narrower: whether attention yield can cover a meaningful share of sending and content costs. The ambition is that the brand eventually writes no cheque for Atrium because the attention pays for itself — stated as a target the pilots must prove, not a fact assumed.

Progency is the one piece the brand buys as an outcome rather than runs as a capability, and the question it must answer is blunt: how will it recover lost customers better than the CRM team could? The answer is two engines working as one inside a black box. Atrium earns the attention — the same self-funding NeoMails, now aimed at the lost. Meridian converts it: a proprietary model with an Alpha Agent that turns earned attention into transactions — the Alpha Agent being the artifact that has internalised the judgement of the best CRM operators and MGEs, built up over time. Meridian is never sold and never shown, the way a quant fund’s model is the secret it is paid for, not a product it ships; what ships are the M-Agents inside CRM 2.0. And it is priced purely on what it provably delivers: a share of the incremental transactions it converts, measured against a held-out control and benchmarked at a fraction of what adtech charges to reacquire the same customer — no fixed fee. The test of whether a partner believes its own numbers: ask whether it will hold back a control group and take its fee only on the lift.

CRM 1.0 · today CRM 2.0 · brand team Progency · done-for-you
Support CSMs (vendor) MGEs (vendor) MGEs + Alpha Agent
Stack Channels 1.0 + Martech Channels 2.0 + M-Agents Atrium + Meridian
Engine Rules and segments Context Graphs BrandTwins, TwinFactory
Focus Campaigns sent Next → Test → Best velocity Recover the lost
Measure Opens, clicks Velocity, Real Reach Alpha Generated
Economics Fixed SaaS fee Fixed + upside Share of proven lift
The job Sends campaigns Moves customers Owns the outcome

6

The Numbers that Prove It

A framework that cannot be measured cannot be defended, and this one rests on three layers of number. The first layer is the four diagnostic numbers, each of which triggers exactly one play.

Paid Repeat Leakage is the share of repeat revenue bought back through paid media; it triggers Grow. The Weakening Pool is the count of proven buyers losing attention; it triggers Protect. Rest Recoverable Value is the historical revenue in lost Best and Test customers; it triggers Recover. Identity Capture Rate is the share of intermediated buyers and anonymous visitors converted to known customers; it triggers Capture. Four numbers, surfaced on the first Alpha Audit, that turn a vague sense of ‘marketing could be better’ into a board-ready slide titled ‘how much of last quarter’s spend was structurally avoidable.’

The second layer is the governance number: Alpha above Beta. Beta is the revenue trajectory the brand would have earned anyway; Alpha is the incremental contribution the plays produce above it. The discipline that keeps Alpha honest is measurement against a pre-agreed baseline with matched controls — not Alpha against zero, which is the oldest deception in marketing. Every play in this book is run as a test against a held-out cohort, and only the lift that survives the control is counted.

The third layer is the number that actually moves a budget, and it belongs to the CFO. It is the ratio between what a Progency-recovered dollar returns and what an adtech dollar returns — because recovery and adtech compete for the very same reacquisition budget.

Run Progency to roughly twice the return of adtech on the same lapsed customers — a ten against a five — and every reacquisition dollar moved from the paid channel to recovery creates net value. The claim is not asserted but measured: the three-arm holdout puts Progency and adtech against one shared control and reports the cost per incremental recovery for each. The gap is durable and widening — adtech returns erode under auction inflation and signal loss, while recovery improves through restored attention, lower offer tax, and the suppression that stops paid media claiming credit for customers who would have returned anyway. It survives a sceptical CFO only if it is net of offer tax, incrementally proven against the control, fully costed, and framed as a measured result rather than a promised multiple. And the sequence is non-negotiable: exhaust the owned channel first, then recover through Progency, and only then spend adtech — the reacquisition dollar should reach the cheapest proven route before the most expensive one.

7

Getting Started — the Data and the First Move

The system begins not with a campaign but with a classification, and that needs data the marketing team rarely holds alone. The first job of the CMO is to convene finance, commerce and engineering for the data the audit requires — and if that convening is impossible, that is itself the first finding.

Data source Fields required Likely owner
Orders Order ID, customer ID, date, revenue, channel, platform Commerce / Data
Customer master First order date, lifetime orders, lifetime revenue, contactability CRM / CDP
Paid media Campaign, spend, prospecting vs retargeting, customer match Growth
CRM events Opens, clicks, push taps, WhatsApp reads, app sessions, timestamps CRM / Martech
Offers Coupon, discount, cashback, free shipping, loyalty burn Finance / CRM
Intermediaries Commission, discounts, identity availability Marketplace

With the data joined, the first thirty days are diagnostic, and they compress to five steps. Build the transaction file. Classify every transaction by route and tax. Compute the effective tax, route plus offer, so the cheap channels stop pretending to be cheap. Build the TAT by joining each customer’s last attention event to their transaction history. Surface the four numbers. Perfection is not the goal at this stage; consistency is. Lock the attribution rule and the attention-event definition for a quarter, document them, and refuse to relitigate them every time a number looks ugly.

Then run one play, not six. Start with the half of Grow that owns the repeat: suppress your active customers from retargeting and redirect the saved spend to owned channels. It is the fastest result in the book — the mechanic is mechanical, remove an audience and measure the lift, with first signal in 30 to 45 days — and it pays for the entire Alpha Audit. It is also the safest place to start a negotiation with a sceptical performance team, because it settles the argument with a suppression test rather than an opinion. Do not start with campaigns. Start with classification, then the one play that pays for itself, and let the proof earn the right to the next five.

That is the whole playbook on paper — two levers, one grid, six plays, four numbers, and a first move that funds the rest; what it looks like in a real quarter is a story best told through the person who has to run it.

8

Maya’s journey from Beta to Alpha

Maya had run marketing at the skincare brand for three years, and by every measure on her dashboard she was winning. Revenue was up, acquisition was scaling, the campaigns shipped on time. The board nodded each quarter. And yet the contribution margin kept thinning, and she could not say why.

The Alpha Audit took three weeks and the numbers landed like a diagnosis. Thirty-eight per cent of her repeat revenue was being bought back through paid media — she had assumed it was under fifteen. Her ‘cheap’ CRM revenue, once she added the discounts, was running at an effective tax near a quarter. Half her identified base had not engaged in a year. And a fat band of her best customers — the ones who had bought three times or more — were sitting in the weakening column, drifting, months before any transaction report would have caught them.

The hardest conversation came first, and it nearly stopped her. ‘If you pull my actives out of retargeting, revenue will fall — and it will be on you,’ her performance lead said. Maya did not argue the claim. ‘Then the control will prove it,’ she said. Ninety-day-active customers were pulled from the retargeting audience, the saved budget redirected to owned reactivation, and — the move that made it safe — a matched group was held back, untouched, as the measuring stick. Thirty-five days later the answer was on the table: the held-out group came back almost as often as the retargeted one. Most of that ‘incremental’ spend had been buying customers who would have returned anyway. The performance lead went quiet; the number was his own. That was Grow, owning the repeat, and it paid for the whole audit by the end of the quarter.

She did not stop there. She ran Protect on the drifting Best cohort — paused the discounts that were training them to wait, replaced them with relationship messaging — and watched the open rates stabilise first, the transactions follow at sixty days. For the lost column she did not staff a team; she handed it to Progency, on a baseline-plus-Alpha arrangement with no fixed fee, and let the recovery engines do work her CRM team was never built for. The marketplace identity problem went into a capture programme: a QR code on the carton, a reason to register.

At the ninety-day board review, Maya presented one number she had never had before. Not revenue, not ROAS — Alpha, measured against an agreed baseline, with the controls that proved it was real. The CFO, who had spent the quarter sceptical, asked the only question that mattered: if Progency delivers twice what an adtech dollar returns, why are we still spending the adtech dollar? Maya had the sequencing answer ready — CRM, Progency, and then Adtech.

What changed was not Maya’s effort. It was her unit of work. She had stopped running campaigns and started moving customers, and she could prove what the movement was worth. Her old job had been to send more; her new job was to lose less, own more, and recover before paying twice. The thinning margin the P&L had felt for years finally had a name on the dashboard — and three rules to fix it: Never Lose Customers. Never Pay Twice. Never Pay Fixed. That became Maya’s mantra.

***

NeoMarketing creates Alpha by compressing customer time, cutting transaction tax, and recovering customers before adtech makes the brand pay twice. Three Grid Plays — Grow, Protect, Recover. Three Edge Plays — Capture, Acquire, Monetise. Two levers, one North Star Metric: Alpha above Beta. Stop running campaigns; start moving customers.

Thinks 1996

WSJ: “As corporate America looks to redesign the workplace for the AI age, there’s a new kind of team gaining traction: the “pod.” Smaller than a traditional engineering group, pods are designed to move faster to build and iterate on products. They’re also more cross-functional, including not just engineers but also designers and applied scientists. And critically, all that expertise is concentrated in just a handful of human workers (anywhere from one to eight), as well as AI agents. For years engineering teams have been slowly favoring smaller and smaller teams in the name of speed and agility, but the growing capabilities of AI coding assistants and other agents that can potentially reduce the time-to-ship are allowing for even smaller pod-size structures. With AI agents doing more of the actual software development, including coding and testing, it takes fewer human workers to build products at scale.”

Scott Sumner: “The story of the 21st century is the Great Forgetting. We’ve forgotten the new Keynesian critique of activist fiscal policy. We’ve forgotten why nationalism is an evil ideology. We’ve forgotten the lessons of Orwell’s 1984. We’ve forgotten that statist economic policymaking is counterproductive. We’ve forgotten that integrity and competence are important attributes for a politician or media figure.”

Charlie Warzel: “I’ve written previously that one of AI’s enduring cultural impacts is to make people feel like they’re losing their mind. Some of that is attributable to the aggressive fanfare or the way that the technology has been explicitly positioned to displace labor. But lately, I believe, it’s the accelerated nature of the AI boom that’s driving people everywhere mad. Both the conversation around the technology and its implementation are governed by an exponential logic. Intelligence, revenues, capabilities—all of it is supposed to hockey stick, say the boosters. New, supposed breakthroughs are touted but then immediately couched with the reminder that this is the worst the technology will ever be. Because AI systems have bled into every domain of our culture and economy, it’s exceedingly difficult to evaluate the effect of the technology outside of a case by case basis. That you can’t begin to wrap your mind around the AI boom or orient yourself in it is a feature, not a bug, for those building the technology. But for anyone just trying to adapt, it’s difficult not to feel resentful or alienated. Silicon Valley is trying to speedrun the singularity, and it’s polarizing the rest of us in the process.”

FT: “A lot of guff is written about how dull and exhausting small talk can be. In social situations, maybe. But it is an entirely different matter in the office. A large amount of work consists of person A trying to get person B to do something even though both report to person C. Much is gained if A can keep up with B’s latest half-marathon times, and whether they prefer to holiday in Cornwall or Devon.  Also, the smartest leaders know that breaking the ice is just one element of small talk. It also offers the chance to learn a lot of useful stuff.”

The Breakthroughs of NeoMarketing

From a retention thesis to an Alpha Operating System — what is genuinely new, what is sharp synthesis, and what has evolved

1

14 Innovations

Every new framework borrows from the past. NeoMarketing is no exception. It builds on familiar ideas — CAC, LTV, RFM, CRM, lifecycle marketing, retargeting, attribution, marketplace dependency, loyalty, discounting, win-back. None of these are new. What is new is the system that has emerged from combining them — and how that system has evolved in the past few months.

Over that period, the centre of gravity has shifted. The earlier work organised everything around recovery — how to stop losing customers and reduce reacquisition. The current work places recovery inside a much larger claim: every transaction has a tax, every customer has an attention state, and Alpha comes from moving both in the right direction. That is the Alpha Operating System.

This essay does what most framework essays avoid: it audits its own contributions. Some of NeoMarketing’s ideas are genuinely new. Many are sharp syntheses of existing pieces. Some are productisation moves that turn the framework into something a CMO can run. The honest reading separates the three.

Three thresholds organise the audit. Frame-level breakthroughs are genuinely new — no equivalent the literature seems to carry. Sharp syntheses are distinctive recombinations, where the components exist but the assembly is original. Operating innovations are the productisation moves — turning the framework into something runnable. The picture below summarises all fourteen across the three tiers.

Figure 1. The fourteen innovations of NeoMarketing, classified by strength of contribution.

Frame-Level Breakthroughs

Four contributions for which the literature does not appear to carry a clean equivalent. These are the moves where the framework has invented something, not recombined existing pieces.

  1. The Transactions-Attention Table (TAT) — a 2D customer-state grid. The rows measure transaction depth (0, 1–2, 3+). The columns measure attention recency (Strong, Weakening, Lost) — not transaction recency. RFM has been the working framework in direct marketing for sixty years. Its blind spot is that all three of its variables are transaction variables — a customer who has stopped opening, clicking, and visiting is invisible to RFM until the transactions also stop. The TAT names that gap. The decomposition produces nine cells and, in particular, the named weakening states — N–, T–, B– — that no existing lifecycle framework carries as managerial cells. B– in particular — a Best customer in the act of becoming Rest, flagged before any transaction signal would show it — is operationally distinctive. The single most original framework-level move in the system.
  2. The TAT as a velocity field, not a snapshot. Two competing forces act on every customer simultaneously. The brand’s CRM effort pulls customers downward through the grid (Next → Test → Best). Entropy pulls customers rightward (Strong → Weakening → Lost). Customer health is the net direction. A healthy operation produces high downward velocity (Convert and Accelerate plays) and resists rightward drift (Relate plays). This is a physics-inflected framing that does not appear in standard marketing literature, which mostly treats lifecycle states as static or transitions as discrete journey stages. Treating customer state as a vector with measurable net velocity is genuinely new. The CMO’s question becomes: are customers moving down faster than they are drifting right?
  3. Two-step recovery as separable engines. Recovery is not a single funnel; it is two structurally distinct jobs done by two different engines. Atrium restores attention — moves R1 to B–, R2 to T–. Meridian recovers the transaction — moves B– to B, T– to T. A customer who starts opening again has not yet been economically recovered. Attention is potential Alpha; the transaction on an owned route is realised Alpha. The dashboard counts the two contributions separately through the Recovery Conversion Rate. Existing reactivation literature collapses these into one funnel and one number. Separating them tells the brand which engine to fix — Atrium if attention is not restored, Meridian if restored attention does not convert.
  4. “Post-CRM, Pre-Adtech” as category coordinate. A new operating zone named by its position in the existing stack — the missing layer between owned channels and paid reacquisition. The coordinate does specific work: in five seconds, using only vocabulary the CMO already has, it locates the doctrine in a mental model that already exists. The naming is a positioning move, not a slogan — and it is what makes the category sellable. A category that cannot be named cannot be sold, measured, staffed, or governed. The mental model already exists; NeoMarketing simply fills the empty seat that was always there between the CRM team and the adtech budget.

Sharp Syntheses

Six contributions where the components exist in the literature but the assembly is distinctive. None of these is a single invention; each is a recombination that does work no individual ancestor was doing.

  1. The Revenue Tax Ladder and the 15-point Cliff. Routes ordered by their effective cost — Organic (0–5%), CRM (5–10%), Adtech (20–25%), Intermediated (30–40%+). Practitioners have long talked about channel CAC differences. What is distinctive here is the stack with explicit ranges and the gap between CRM and Adtech named as a structural absence — not a market efficiency. The cliff is not a bug; it is a missing engine — and the rung NeoMarketing claims to occupy. The simple line is powerful: revenue is not equal, and the route matters.
  2. Repeat Direct Adtech as the red-flag bucket. Isolating reacquisition-of-known-customers-via-paid-media as a distinct measurable category, sized at roughly $500B globally per year. Industry analysts gesture at this — Forrester and Gartner note incrementality problems with retargeting — but nobody has named or sized it cleanly. As far as the literature goes, this is the contribution worth claiming as a discrete invention. One of the clearest “aha” ideas in the framework: the same paid-media conversion can be growth or leakage depending on whether the customer was already known. The dashboard celebrates ROAS; the P&L should ask a harder question.
  3. Effective Tax = Route Tax + Offer Tax. Discount cost treated as economically equivalent to channel cost. The formula exposes a common D2C deception — a 5–10% CRM route tax plus an 18% subscriber coupon is not owned-channel economics; it is adtech economics wearing owned-channel clothes. The marketing-side framing — running adtech economics through your own email list — is distinctive. The underlying economic point (that discounts are tax) is known to pricing economists. The dashboard expression — visible at transaction level, comparable across buckets — is not.
  4. Seven Transaction Buckets via Three Questions. Mutually exclusive classification via Q1 (Direct vs Intermediated) → Q2 (Organic vs CRM vs Adtech for Direct) → Q3 (New vs Known). The categorical discipline is the contribution. Most attribution debates devolve precisely because they aren’t mutually exclusive. MTA literature, marketing mix modelling, and CRM segmentation have all gestured at most of these distinctions. The three-question hierarchy producing one bucket per transaction is what is tighter. The buckets themselves are not new; the discipline that produces them is.
  5. Alpha Pricing: Beta + Alpha + Carry. Hedge-fund pricing structure applied to marketing economics. Beta is the trajectory the brand was already on; Alpha is the uplift above; Carry is the vendor’s share of Alpha only. The measurement framing (incrementality testing) has been around for years. The pricing structure is distinctive — few martech vendors have built around it, and almost none have agreed to be paid only on Alpha. This shifts martech from selling software to underwriting outcomes.
  6. Sell / Relate / Recover doctrine. Action prescription column-mapped onto the TAT — Sell when attention is strong, Relate when weakening, Recover when lost. The doctrine itself is a sharp restatement of journey-stage marketing. What lands harder is the diagnostic observation underneath it: most CRM teams have only a Sell playbook with frequency dialled up — and most do not know they do not have a Relate playbook. That observation is diagnostically true and rarely named.

Operating Innovations

Four productisation moves — turning a framework into something a CMO can run, not just read. These are the additions since the first contribution audit.

  1. AOS as the umbrella operating system. The framework named as a system, not a collection of features. AOS consists of two diagnostic instruments (the Tax Ladder and the TAT), four intervention engines (Atrium, Meridian, NeoNet, ActionAds), seven operational plays (the Alpha Plays), and one governance instrument (the AOS Dashboard). The umbrella matters because brands and boards buy systems, not features. Until the umbrella existed, NeoMarketing read as four parallel products. With the umbrella, it reads as an operating model.
  2. The diagnostic-first 90-day playbook. “Start with classification, not campaigns.” Build the transaction file, classify every transaction into the Seven Buckets, compute Effective Tax, build the TAT, surface the leakage pools, choose two or three plays, install the dashboard rhythm. The sequencing is the operational doctrine — and the inversion of how most martech projects are run. Most martech adoption starts with software installation and ends, six months later, with a vague sense that something is supposed to be better. The 90-day playbook starts with measurement and ends with a defensible Alpha number.
  3. From lists to portfolios. Customer base treated as a portfolio of economic states with transition probabilities, not a list of rows operated on by rules. The shift renames the CMO’s job — from “ship the next campaign” to “manage the portfolio across states.” Each state is a different economic asset; the intervention that creates value in one can destroy it in another. Sending a Best customer the nurture sequence sent to a Drifting customer is not just inefficient — it misallocates attention from where it earns to where it leaks. The portfolio frame makes the misallocation visible.
  4. The Hard Questions discipline. A framework built with its own self-audit attached. The 10–15% NeoMarketing rung is asserted, not proven. Attention recency cannot be measured cleanly. The Seven Plays do not sequence equally. Beta has a benchmark-selection problem. The CMO often does not have the cross-functional authority AOS assumes. Naming these questions inside the framework — rather than waiting for sceptics to surface them — is itself a distinctive move. A framework that admits its weak points is more defensible than one that pretends to have none.

2

Thinking Evolution

The framework today is sharper than it was three months ago, and that sharpening matters more than any single new idea. The single most consequential shift is one of scope. The earlier framing organised everything around recovery of the lost or drifting cohort. The current framing places recovery inside a larger portfolio — where prevention (Protect Best from drifting to B–), acceleration (move N → T → B faster), and identity capture (convert Intermediated and Anonymous transactions into known customers) all generate Alpha alongside recovery. The picture below makes the shift concrete.

Figure 2. The earlier framing made recovery of Rest customers the primary wedge. The current framing puts an Alpha intervention against every customer state.

The full set of shifts is more granular. The table below tracks twelve dimensions where the framing has progressed.

Dimension Earlier framing Current framing What changed
Customer focus Rest recovery as the primary wedge Portfolio across all states — Best, Drifting, Rest, Test, Next, Reacquired From one use case to customer economics
Database model List of segments operated on by rules Portfolio of economic states with transition probabilities From rule-driven targeting to state-driven allocation
Customer-state model BRTN (4 states) TAT 9-cell with attention as separate axis and named (–) states Attention separated from transactions; weakening states named
Recovery model Win-back as a single funnel Two-step: Atrium restores attention → Meridian recovers transaction Attention recovery separated from transaction recovery
Tax accounting Route Tax (channel cost) only Effective Tax = Route Tax + Offer Tax Discounts become part of transaction economics
Channel framing CRM vs Adtech as binary Revenue Tax Ladder with NeoMarketing as the missing middle rung Channels reframed as economic rungs with a structural gap
AdWaste framing Vague concept of “wasted spend” Repeat Direct Adtech — a specific measurable bucket (~$500B globally) Waste becomes a line item with a number
Engine composition Atrium + Meridian + NeoNet + ActionAds as parallel products Composed inside AOS — diagnostic + engines + plays + dashboard From feature set to operating system
Positioning “Anti-martech” / “better marketing” “Post-CRM, Pre-Adtech” — a coordinate in the existing stack From slogan to category position
Pricing Outcome pricing as a concept Beta + Alpha + Carry — formalised hedge-fund structure From idea to commercial structure
Adoption path Big-bang transformation 90-day diagnostic-first playbook with a pilot trio From project to discipline
Framework character Prescriptive doctrine Self-auditing — Hard Questions built in Acknowledges its own unproven claims

Read across the table, the pattern is consistent. Each row moves from a narrower formulation to one that is more measurable, more defensible, and more operational. Alpha is a portfolio metric, not a recovery metric. That single reframe carries more economic weight than any new engine added in the same window.

What Remains Unproven

The caveats are not throat-clearing; they are part of the framework’s discipline.

  • The 10–15% NeoMarketing rung is asserted, not demonstrated. It depends on ActionAds funding the NeoMail rhythm, Atrium restoring attention at meaningful rates, and NeoNet replacing platform tax with cooperative surplus. None of these has been demonstrated at scale by an independent brand outside vendor pilots. The diagnostic half of AOS holds regardless — the Tax Ladder, TAT, Seven Buckets, and Dashboard are useful even if the recovery economics fail. The CMO can run the audit without buying the engine.
  • The Recovery Conversion Rate needs empirical baselines. The metric is well-defined but the industry has no benchmarks yet. Until enough pilots produce calibration ranges for Atrium recovery rates and Meridian conversion rates, the dashboard reports a number without a comparable.
  • The Beta baseline carries an unresolved benchmark-selection problem. Hedge funds have spent decades arguing about whether to use the S&P 500 or sector-specific indices. Marketing will replay the same argument. Last-year-same-period is defensible v1; rigorous incrementality testing is the long-term answer. Until that discipline matures, Beta-setting is procedural rather than analytical.
  • Attention recency cannot be measured cleanly across systems. Different teams will draw different lines on what counts as a meaningful attention event. The problem is procedural, not analytical — pick a definition, document it, lock it for a quarter, refine afterwards. The inconsistency cost of changing the definition mid-quarter is higher than the precision cost of picking an imperfect one.

Bottom Line

Four frame-level breakthroughs. Six sharp syntheses. Four operating innovations. One built-in self-audit. That is a real body of thought — not a marketing slogan dressed as a framework. The genuine contributions are narrow but defensible. The sharp syntheses do real work in a CMO conversation. The operating innovations make the system runnable. The unproven claims are named openly.

The breakthrough is not one isolated invention. It is the assembly into an operating system.

**

Every transaction has a tax.

Every customer has an attention state.

Every CMO needs an Alpha Operating System.

Every brand needs NeoMarketing.

Thinks 1995

Kyle Chayka: “I think A.I. is already changing how artists survive, because the way that these A.I. models work and the reason that they exist is because they have hoovered up all of human culture that all artists ever made already. And we put it into digital form. And so it could be mashed into a machine and turned into a trained model. The models that exist now do not exist without all of the human art and writing and culture that came before them. And I think that in automating all of that stuff, it has kind of made it even more difficult for artists to survive. And the artists are not profiting from the way that their work was digested into these machines.”

ET: “With an import bill of nearly $1 tn – about a quarter of its GDP – India remains deeply dependent on external supply chains for its most fundamental needs…Nearly 85% of India’s crude oil requirement is met through imports. Natural gas imports, particularly LNG, have grown to almost 50%. Even in coal, where India has abundant reserves, imports remain substantial for high-grade coking coal required in steel production. India also has a huge import dependence for metals and minerals. More than 90% of its copper concentrates are imported. All its lithium, cobalt and nickel are imported. Even modern materials, ranging from plastics to packaging to paints to polymers, largely depend on petrochemical intermediates as primary feedstock. Here, too, India is directly or indirectly reliant on imports by up to 90%. While the country is food secure, underlying reliance on import-dependent fertilisers tells a different story.”

Andy Kessler: “Thanks to capitalism, we are living in unprecedented good times. Space launches. Weight-loss wonder pills. Happy-hour-friendly autonomous cars. AI bots that will meet our every imaginable need. A more peaceful Middle East on the horizon. A resurging middle class around the globe. But that’s nothing that a few commies—er, democratic socialists—couldn’t destroy in a generation. Socialism adoration comes from brainwashing. A recent City Journal survey of 120 “prominent colleges and universities” showed that a grand total of zero schools required economics courses to graduate. Only 15% required some U.S. government or history classes, while half required diversity, equity and inclusion-like courses. Ugh. So bye to jobs, hello socialism. We need to educate our youth with a full-throated defense of capitalism and free markets because for too many, the most intelligent thing they say coming out of college is, “It’s like, whatever.””

Theo Baker: “We are the first college class of the A.I. era — ChatGPT arrived on campus about two months after we did. When we graduate [from Stanford], this technology will have altered our lives in very different ways. For some, it has opened the door to staggering wealth. But for many who came to Stanford — just four years ago! — when a degree seemed like a guaranteed ticket to a high-paying job, the door has been slammed shut. For all of us, A.I. has permanently changed how we think and behave.”

Inventory for Inbox Media: The World’s Largest Unmapped Attention Surface

Before inbox attention can be organised, it has to be recognised. The supply already exists in trillions of B2C emails — and some of it has to be created.

Overview

The inbox is the last major unmapped media surface. Search, social, commerce, video, games, and connected TV have all been organised as media. Email remains treated mostly as a communication channel, even though it is universal, identity-linked, habitual, and permissioned.

Inbox inventory is not the same as email volume. The unit is not the send; it is the trusted open. A sent-but-ignored email has no inventory value. An opened, read, and trusted email is a meaningful attention moment.

The inbox contains six distinct surfaces — Utility Inbox, Publisher Inbox, Transaction Inbox, Brand Promo Inbox, Brand Relationship Inbox, and Creator Inbox. Four already exist and need recognition. Two have to be created.

The immediate opportunity is not to invent a new channel, but to name and organise a surface already hiding in plain sight. The next major media category may not be waiting for a new platform. It may be waiting for a new name.

**

1

The Unmapped Surface

Every major digital surface has been organised as media — except one.

Search pages became Google Ads. Social feeds became Meta’s ad engine. Commerce pages became Amazon. Video streams became YouTube’s monetisation machine. Connected TV, mobile games, podcast feeds, app notifications, ride-sharing apps — each surface, in turn, was first a place where people spent attention and then, later, a place where that attention was organised as inventory and sold.

The pattern is consistent across every era of digital advertising. A surface emerges. People develop a habit on it. Someone recognises that the habit is an asset. Inventory units are defined. Pricing emerges. A marketplace forms. The surface becomes media.

Notice what the pattern does not include. It does not include a technology breakthrough. The web pages were already there before Google Ads. The social feeds were already there before News Feed ads. The commerce pages were already there before Sponsored Products. In every case, the surface preceded the inventory by years and sometimes by a decade. The work was not to invent the surface. The work was to recognise it as media and to give it a unit.

The inbox is the conspicuous exception. It is the most universal digital surface in the world. It is identity-linked, authenticated, recurring, and habitual. It carries trillions of B2C emails every month. It has been operational at scale since the mid-1990s. And it has never been mapped as media — except for the narrow case of newsletters, which constitute perhaps the smallest of the surfaces actually present inside the inbox.

The email inbox is the largest unmapped attention surface in marketing. Naming what is inside it is the work that this essay attempts.

The inbox has been miscategorised for thirty years.

From the moment email became a mass medium, it was framed as a communication channel. A way for one party to send a message to another. The vocabulary of the industry tells the story. The unit of work is the send. The platform that handles email is called an Email Service Provider — provider of the service of sending. The success metric for decades was deliverability — did the message arrive. The asset on every marketer’s balance sheet is the list — the set of addresses one is permitted to send to.

Every one of these terms is about the act of transmission. None of them is about the surface on the other side. None of them asks what happens once the email arrives, is opened, and is read. The opened email — the moment when attention is actually present — has no name in the standard email vocabulary. Open rate is a metric, but it is treated as feedback on the send, not as an asset in itself.

This is a category mistake of long standing. The inbox was filed under transmission rather than under attention, and the frame held for three decades. Every product, every metric, every job description, every pricing model in the email industry has reinforced the original miscategorisation. The largest attention surface in marketing has been organised, throughout its entire existence, as a logistics problem rather than as a media surface.

The miscategorisation is not a technology gap. It is a vocabulary gap. And vocabulary gaps are the easiest of all gaps to close.

The shift in perspective this essay rests on.

An opened email is not just a message delivered. It is an attention moment earned. The recipient, of their own volition, has looked at their inbox, recognised the sender, decided the email merited their attention, and opened it. In the moment that follows — sometimes thirty seconds, sometimes three minutes — the recipient is attentive, identified, and present. That moment is what every media surface in history has tried to capture and what every media planner has tried to buy.

Once the shift is made, the next question is no longer whether the inbox is a media surface. It plainly is. The next question is what counts as inventory inside it. Not every email is inventory. Not every opened email is inventory. Some surfaces inside the inbox are extraordinarily high-quality inventory. Some are restricted by trust or by law. Some do not yet exist and have to be created. Mapping them is the first step in organising the surface as media.

This essay is about that mapping. It does not address how the inventory is priced. It does not address what units are sold on each surface. It does not address the auction model, the targeting layer, or the economics of the network. Those are downstream questions, and they cannot be answered until the inventory is named.

The work of this essay is recognition. Everything else is downstream of recognition.

2

What Counts as Inventory

Inventory is trusted opens, not emails sent.

The temptation, when one realises that trillions of B2C emails are sent every month, is to multiply that number by an assumed open rate and to announce that the inbox is the largest media surface in the world. The number is large. It is also misleading.

Volume is not the unit. A million emails sent into a database that has not engaged in six months produces no inventory. The same million produces no inventory if the subject lines are ignored, the opens are reflexive, or the recipient closes the email within two seconds. The opens that count are the opens that carry attention — the recipient reads, the context is appropriate, and the relationship between sender and recipient permits some additional interaction without damage.

A useful corrective is to think in the opposite direction. A million ignored sends are not inventory. A hundred thousand trusted opens may be very high-quality inventory. The smaller number is the more accurate one. The unit of inbox media is the trusted open, not the send, and the size of the addressable surface is far smaller than the volume number suggests — and far more valuable, because each unit of it is qualified at the point of measurement rather than counted in aggregate at the point of dispatch.

Inbox inventory is measured by trusted opens. It is not measured by sends. That distinction does most of the analytical work in the rest of the essay.

Three conditions for an email to count as inventory.

The first condition is that the email reaches an identified recipient. Anonymous opens do not count, because the unit of inbox media — the trusted open — requires a known relationship between sender and recipient. Identity is what makes inbox attention different from web attention. The web monetises modelled audiences inferred from cookies and behavioural signals. The inbox can monetise actual identified individuals who have, at some prior moment, given the sender permission to reach them. That permission is the foundation of inventory. Without it, the open is not inventory; it is leakage from somebody else’s database.

The second condition is that the email earns enough attention to be opened and read. A subject line glance does not constitute inventory. A reflexive open followed by an immediate close does not constitute inventory. Inventory begins when the recipient is actually present inside the email, paying the kind of attention that allows them to absorb its content. Open rate is a coarse proxy for this; reading time is a better one; completion of the contained interaction is the best.

The third condition is that the email has context in which an additional interaction can fit without damaging the recipient’s trust. This is the most easily overlooked of the three. An opened email may be high-trust and high-attention, but if the email is a service notification about a delivery, then a third-party offer inside it breaks the contract under which the recipient gave permission. The surface is inventory only when an additional interaction is welcome within the existing context.

An email becomes inventory only when all three conditions hold simultaneously. Any single failure removes it from the map, regardless of volume.

The hierarchy of inbox attention.

A ladder helps. The bottom rung is the email that is sent but ignored — never opened, never read, never present. The send happened; the attention did not. This is not inventory of any kind. It is logistical exhaust. The next rung is the email that is opened but skimmed — present for two seconds, perhaps glanced at the top, immediately dismissed. This is weak inventory. Some signal is generated, but the attention is too thin to support any additional interaction.

The third rung is the email that is opened and read — the recipient is genuinely present, the content is absorbed, the relationship between sender and recipient is functioning. This is good inventory. An additional contextual interaction will land here, and the signal it generates is meaningful.

The top rung is the email that is opened, trusted, and acted on — the recipient is present, the email is welcomed, and the recipient is willing to take a further action inside or downstream of the email. This is high-quality inventory. It is the kind of moment that justifies premium pricing in every other media category.

The point of the ladder is not to assign prices to the rungs. It is to make visible that inbox attention is not a single quantity. It is a distribution, and most of the volume sits on the lowest two rungs while most of the value sits on the top two. The taxonomy of where inventory lives — the next section — is meaningful only against this hierarchy of what makes inventory inventory.

Figure 1 — The hierarchy of inbox attention. Inventory begins only when attention is earned.

The non-negotiable principle.

Inbox Media cannot be built on spam, clutter, or interruption. Every previous era of email — list-buying, blast campaigns, deceptive subject lines, manipulative dark patterns — has produced reputational damage that is still being repaired. Each of those eras treated the inbox as an interruption surface, where the sender’s interest in being noticed outweighed the recipient’s interest in being respected. Each of them, in the end, eroded the very attention they were trying to extract.

Inbox Media has to invert the relationship. The recipient’s trust is the asset that produces the attention; the attention is what makes the surface valuable as media. Any product, any unit, any monetisation model that consumes trust faster than it produces it is, by definition, dismantling the inventory.

This is not a moral observation. It is a structural one. The moment a surface trades trust for volume, it stops being inventory and becomes the thing inbox media was meant to replace. The temptation will be real and continuous. Every party in the value chain — senders, networks, advertisers — has short-term reasons to push more interactions, less context, more aggressive units, more frequency. The non-negotiable principle is the only thing that prevents the inbox from being strip-mined the way the open web has been.

Trust is the asset; everything else is downstream. That single line, taken seriously, sets the constraints inside which the inventory map is allowed to grow. Inventory that violates it is not inventory.

3

The Six Surfaces – 1

Figure 2 — The inbox is not one surface. It is six surfaces — four already existing, two that have to be created.

The inbox is six surfaces, not one.

A reader experiences the inbox as a single stream. Open the email app and a continuous list of messages appears, ordered by time, varying in sender and subject but visually undifferentiated. The reader does not consciously parse the list into categories. They open what is interesting, archive what is not, and ignore most of it.

A media planner who looks at the inbox sees, at most, one category — marketing emails — and dismisses the rest as not-media. Transactional emails are filed under operations. Newsletters are filed under content. Utility digests are filed under product. None of these is treated as inventory, because none of them is framed as media.

Both views miss what is actually there. The inbox is six distinct surfaces, stacked into one visual stream. Each has a different sender-recipient contract, a different attention profile, a different legal context, and a different fit for the kinds of additional interaction that inventory permits. Four of these six surfaces already exist as inventory today — meaning the emails are being sent, the attention is being earned, and the surface is operational — but only one of the four is currently recognised as media. The other two surfaces do not yet exist and have to be created.

  1. The Utility Inbox — the quiet giant.

LinkedIn weekly digests. Strava activity summaries. Duolingo streak emails. Credit-card monthly statements. Reddit and Quora digests. Airline tier-status updates. Loyalty programme summaries. Investment portfolio statements. Food delivery monthly recaps. Spotify yearly wrap-ups. Banking transaction alerts that aggregate the week. Subscription summaries from streaming services. Every platform a user is genuinely active on sends something in this category.

These emails do not fit cleanly into the standard taxonomies. They are not promotional — they are not selling anything. They are not transactional — they are not confirming a discrete event. They are not editorial — they are not authored. They are a category of their own, sitting between the three classical types, and they are the most powerful inventory pool in the entire inbox.

The defining traits are four. They are expected, in the sense that the recipient has consciously signed up for them and would notice if they stopped arriving. They are personalised, in the sense that the content is generated from the recipient’s own behaviour. They are recurring, in the sense that they arrive on a known cadence and the recipient develops a habit around them. And they are intent-rich, in the sense that the recipient often opens them with a specific motivation — to check progress, to review spend, to see what changed.

Open rates in this category routinely clear 60% — three to four times the average for marketing emails. The recipient is present, identified, and reading by choice. The context is well-defined. An appropriate additional interaction, carefully matched to that context, is a welcome extension rather than an intrusion.

The Utility Inbox is probably the most valuable surface in the inbox today, and the one without a name.

  1. The Publisher Inbox — the surface already recognised.

Media newsletters are the one inbox surface that the marketing industry currently treats as inventory. Substack, Beehiiv, Axios, Morning Brew, The Information, Stratechery, and the long tail of paid and free newsletters constitute a recognised category. The unit is the sponsorship — a placed message inside the newsletter, usually clearly labelled, priced on CPM or flat rate. Sponsorship economics are understood, agencies will buy against them, and a small but real industry has formed around the category.

This surface is useful for two reasons. The first is that it proves the inventory case for the inbox in miniature. If newsletters are media, the broader inbox is too — they are not a different surface; they are one of six. The second is that the unit transfers. A form-fill interaction or a contextual offer that works inside a newsletter will also work inside a utility digest or a relationship email. The newsletter category is a working demonstration of inbox media at small scale.

The limitations are equally clear. The newsletter category is dwarfed in volume by every other surface in the inbox. Premium publishers will continue to clear direct sponsorship rates that exceed any programmatic offer. And the long tail of small newsletters is competitive — Beehiiv Boost, Sparkloop, Letterhead, and direct deals already serve it. The Publisher Inbox is useful as proof. It is not where the volume lives.

  1. The Transaction Inbox — the highest-quality, most-restricted surface.

Order confirmations. Shipping updates. Statements. Renewals. Ticket confirmations. Appointment reminders. Booking receipts. Policy documents. Payment alerts. Travel itineraries. These are the emails that prompt the recipient to open them within minutes of arrival, because the email contains information the recipient needs and is actively expecting. Open rates of 70% to 90% are typical. The audience is in-the-moment. The identity is perfectly clean — the email reached the recipient because a transaction took place between them and the sender.

By every measure of attention quality, the Transaction Inbox is the highest-grade inventory in the entire inbox. It is also the most legally and ethically constrained surface in the entire inbox.

Anti-spam regulations in most jurisdictions — CAN-SPAM in the United States, GDPR in Europe, the corresponding regulations in Canada and elsewhere — treat transactional emails as a protected category. Adding promotional content can, in many cases, reclassify the email as commercial and subject it to entirely different rules. Beyond the regulation, there is the matter of trust. A recipient who opens a flight confirmation expecting flight details and finds a credit card offer experiences a kind of betrayal that is hard to recover from. The very thing that makes transactional emails valuable — the recipient’s unquestioning expectation of relevance — is what makes them fragile as inventory.

The clean position is that transactional emails are inventory only when the additional interaction is service-adjacent. A flight confirmation can surface an airport transfer or a travel checklist. An order confirmation can surface a warranty registration. A statement can surface a spend summary. A renewal can surface a coverage check. None of these is a third-party offer. Each is a contextually appropriate extension of the transaction itself.

In transactional inventory, trust is the asset. Anything that weakens trust destroys the inventory.

4

The Six Surfaces – 2

  1. The Brand Promo Inbox — restricted, not excluded.

Marketing emails are, by their nature, already ads. The sender has crafted a message designed to influence the recipient’s behaviour — to buy, to consider, to click. The recipient understands this; promotional emails are filed mentally under advertising, even when they arrive in the inbox rather than on a billboard. To insert a third-party offer inside a marketing email is therefore to put an ad inside an ad. The result is worse on three counts. It dilutes the sender’s own campaign. It signals to the recipient that the sender does not value their attention. And it makes the inbox feel more like the open web, which is precisely the experience inbox media exists to avoid.

The instinct, faced with this, is to exclude marketing emails from the inventory map entirely. The instinct is doctrinally correct and operationally wrong. Marketing emails constitute the largest single email pool in the world. Excluding them leaves the largest surface off the map.

The clean position is restriction, not exclusion. Marketing emails are inventory of a particular kind — restricted inventory, available only for certain classes of additional interaction. Same-brand cross-sell is permitted, because it extends the sender’s own commercial intent rather than competing with it. Preference capture and survey are permitted, because they strengthen the relationship rather than monetise it externally. Loyalty enrolment is permitted. Approved partner offers — chosen by the sender for category fit and category exclusivity — are permitted. Cooperative recovery, where one brand surfaces another brand’s offer to a drifting shared customer, is permitted because it serves the recipient and the network simultaneously. Open third-party demand is not permitted. Competitor offers are not permitted. Generic CPL units are not permitted.

The rule is simple. Marketing emails do not become billboards for strangers. They become controlled relationship surfaces when the next action strengthens, extends, or recovers the customer relationship.

  1. The Brand Relationship Inbox — the surface that has to be created.

Between the marketing email and the transactional email sits a space that is, today, almost entirely empty. The recipient who has bought from a brand once but is not currently shopping does not, in the standard pattern, receive any email from that brand other than the next promotional campaign and the occasional service notification. The relationship is not maintained; it is alternately mined and ignored. Six months of silence, a discount blast, three weeks of silence, a renewal reminder, more silence. The recipient drifts. The brand pays to reacquire them on Meta. The cycle repeats.

The space between the transaction and the next campaign is a surface by definition. It is the longest period in any customer relationship — months, often years. It is the period during which most attention is actually available, because the recipient is not under campaign pressure. And it is the period in which no brand currently sends anything.

The Brand Relationship Inbox is the proposed name for this surface. NeoMails are the proposed inventory — daily or weekly relationship emails that are useful, gamified, and worth opening on their own merits, independent of any transaction the brand is currently pushing. The point in this essay is not the product. The point is the vacancy. The surface exists by definition. The attention exists by definition. No brand currently fills it, because no brand has been taught to think of the inter-transactional period as a media surface rather than a quiet period.

The other inventory surfaces in this taxonomy harvest attention that is already being generated. The Brand Relationship Inbox manufactures attention that, today, is not being generated at all. This makes it different in kind from every other surface in the map.

  1. The Creator Inbox — the other surface that has to be created.

The largest population of new media producers in the world today are creators on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, and the other social platforms. Some have audiences in the millions. They produce content daily. Their followers are loyal, identified to the platform, and attentive. By every classical measure, these creators run media operations.

But the relationship they think they own, they do not in fact own. The platform owns it. Reach is mediated by an algorithm whose rules can change without warning. Monetisation is dependent on platform policy. Direct contact with their own followers — the basic capability that any newspaper, magazine, or broadcaster has always had — is not available to them. A single algorithm change can cut a creator’s reach by 80% overnight, and the creator has no recourse and no fallback.

The asymmetry is increasingly visible to creators themselves. Some have begun to move audiences off-platform — to Patreon, to Discord, to email. The shift is not complete and it is not fast, but it is happening. The strategic logic is straightforward. Use the platforms for discovery; use a permissioned channel for ownership. The platforms remain the funnel; the owned channel becomes the asset.

The Creator Inbox is the proposed name for the surface that emerges when this shift happens at scale. Most creators do not have newsletters today, so this is not a recruitment problem — the inventory is not already there waiting to be aggregated. It is a publisher-creation problem. The work is to build the product that makes it easy for a creator to capture emails, send a useful recurring email, and run it as a small media operation.

Discovery stays on social. Ownership moves to email. The Creator Inbox is the surface where that ownership lives.

5

The Inventory Map and its Quality Dimensions

Six surfaces. Four of them exist today as operational inventory — emails are being sent, recipients are opening them, and the attention is present. Only one of those four — the Publisher Inbox — is currently recognised as media. The other three — Utility, Transaction, and restricted Brand Promo — are operational but unrecognised. Two of the six — the Brand Relationship Inbox and the Creator Inbox — do not yet exist as inventory and have to be created.

Figure 3 — The inventory map. Six surfaces, different access paths.

The asymmetry is the point. The inbox is not a future opportunity that requires audience-building before it can become media. It is, today, mostly inventory. The work that the next phase requires is recognition rather than acquisition. The audiences are already opening the emails. The senders are already paying to deliver them. The relationships already exist. What is missing is the framing.

The two surfaces that have to be created are not exceptions to this principle. They are extensions of it. The Brand Relationship Inbox creates new attention out of the brand-customer relationship that already exists. The Creator Inbox creates new attention out of the creator-follower relationship that already exists. Both are recognition problems wrapped around small product problems.

The four structural advantages no other media surface combines.

The case for the inbox as a media surface is strongest when stated structurally rather than rhetorically. There are four properties that, taken together, no other media surface combines.

The first is authenticated identity. The recipient is a real, named, consented individual, not a modelled audience inferred from cookies or behavioural traces. Every interaction is attributable to a known person.

The second is permissioned delivery. The email arrives in the recipient’s inbox because the recipient has, at some prior moment, given the sender permission to reach them. Delivery is not mediated by an algorithm ranking the message against thousands of competitors. The sender’s content arrives intact.

The third is recurring presence. The relationship between sender and recipient is continuous. The recipient knows the sender, expects communication from them, and develops a habit of engagement. This is the opposite of the episodic interruption that defines display advertising and most social ads.

The fourth is first-party signal. Every open, every click, every form-fill, every interaction generates signal that flows back to the sender’s own first-party data systems. No third-party tracking. No cookie. No reliance on a platform’s identity graph. The signal belongs to the sender.

Each of these properties exists on some other media surface in isolation. Authenticated identity exists on logged-in social platforms. Permissioned delivery exists in podcast subscriptions. Recurring presence exists on streaming services. First-party signal exists in retail media networks. But no other surface combines all four. The inbox does. That combination is what makes inbox inventory structurally higher-quality than the surfaces it competes with — once it is recognised as a surface at all.

The Inventory Quality Score — what makes one open worth more than another.

The hierarchy distinguished between weak inventory and high-quality inventory. The six-surface taxonomy distinguished between surfaces. What is needed in addition is a way to score individual inventory units within and across surfaces. Not every open is equal even within the Utility Inbox; not every utility digest produces the same quality of attention.

Ten dimensions are independently observable on any opened email. Open rate, at the sender or campaign level. Read depth — how much of the email the recipient actually consumes. Sender trust — the recipient’s historical relationship with the sender, expressed as repeated engagement over time. Recipient intent — whether the recipient opened the email with a specific motivation. Context clarity — whether the email’s purpose at the moment of opening is well-defined. Frequency — how often the recipient receives email from this sender, and whether that cadence is sustainable. Personalisation — how much of the content is specific to the recipient. Brand safety — the appropriateness of the sender’s category for any contextual additional interaction. User tolerance — the recipient’s historical receptivity to additional interactions inside this sender’s emails. And the ability to support interactivity — whether the inbox client renders AMP for Email, or whether a fallback experience is required.

Figure 4 — The Inventory Quality Score. Ten independently observable dimensions.

Each dimension is measurable. Each can be scored. A composite score across the ten produces a single number that distinguishes a high-trust utility digest from a low-trust promotional blast, even when both produce comparable open rates. The Inventory Quality Score is how the inbox separates inventory from noise. It is also how, in time, pricing across the surface will resolve into something coherent.

Why timing makes the recognition urgent now.

Three forces are converging at the same moment, and all three point in the same direction.

The first is cookie deprecation. The decade-long migration away from third-party cookies on the open web has reached the point where most major browsers either block them by default or are committed to phasing them out. The identity graph that powered programmatic advertising for fifteen years is being dismantled. Advertisers are looking for replacement signal, and the answers — first-party data, authenticated identity, permissioned channels — describe the inbox exactly.

The second is privacy regulation. GDPR, CCPA, the corresponding regulations in India, Brazil, and elsewhere, and the ongoing tightening of consent rules across jurisdictions, are making surveillance-based advertising progressively more difficult, more expensive, and more legally risky. Permissioned channels, where the recipient has explicitly consented to receive communication, are the only surfaces that are getting easier to operate, not harder.

The third is AI flooding rented surfaces with low-trust content. Generative AI has made it trivially cheap to produce content at scale. The open web is increasingly polluted with AI-generated articles, listicles, and reviews of dubious provenance. Search results are degrading. Social feeds are degrading. Trust is migrating to surfaces where the sender is identified and the relationship is durable — which describes the inbox.

Figure 5 — Three forces make the recognition urgent now.

Each of these forces, individually, would make the inbox more valuable as media. The three together compound. The next major media category is unlikely to come from a new platform. It is more likely to come from naming a surface that is already there. And the moment for the naming is now, not later, because the open web’s degradation is accelerating and the alternative is becoming visible to advertisers in real time.

6

From Map to Market

The taxonomy is the unlock.

Inbox Media is not invented by building a new channel. The channel exists. It has existed for thirty years. What is missing — and what the recognition of the six surfaces unlocks — is a small set of pieces that, together, turn the surface into operational media.

The first piece is the inventory map itself — the recognition that there are six surfaces, not one, and that each has a different attention profile and a different fit for inventory. This essay is an attempt at the first piece.

The second is a way to qualify attention — the Inventory Quality Score or its successor — so that buyers can distinguish high-quality opens from noise. The third is a set of standards for what belongs on each surface — what kinds of interaction the Utility Inbox supports, what the Transaction Inbox forbids, what the restricted Brand Promo Inbox permits. The fourth is trust rules surface by surface, with enforcement that does not depend on the goodwill of individual senders. The fifth is creation engines for the two surfaces that do not yet exist — products that make it possible for brands to send NeoMails and for creators to run newsletters. The sixth is a network that connects the six surfaces over time, allowing demand and supply to discover each other across senders without breaking the doctrinal constraints.

Each of these pieces is real product work. None of them can be done before the inventory map is named, because each one depends on the map for its scope.

The real test.

The surfaces exist by inspection. Anyone who looks at their own inbox can see them. The Utility Inbox is there — every active user of LinkedIn, Strava, Reddit, or a banking app receives utility digests, and the open rates speak for themselves. The Transaction Inbox is there. The Publisher Inbox is there. The restricted Brand Promo Inbox is there. The two surfaces that have to be created are also identifiable by absence — every brand has the relationship from which the Brand Relationship Inbox would emerge, and every creator has the audience from which the Creator Inbox would emerge.

The real test is not whether the surfaces exist. It is whether brands, publishers, and creators will recognise them as inventory and treat them as such. Recognition is harder than it sounds. Thirty years of habit have trained every party in the email value chain to think of email as a logistics problem. Reframing it as media requires changes in how teams are structured, how budgets are allocated, how metrics are defined, and how senior leadership talks about the channel.

Once the recognition happens, the rest is product work. The unit definitions follow. The pricing follows. The marketplace follows. The standards follow. Until the recognition happens, the surface stays invisible and the inventory stays unrealised. The bottleneck is not technology. The bottleneck is the framing — and the framing is exactly what this essay is asking the reader to change.

The closing line.

Every major media category in the digital era was built on attention that already existed. Search queries, social feeds, commerce pages, video streams — none of them was new at the moment they became media. Each had been present, at scale, for years before someone named the inventory and gave it a unit. The breakthrough, every time, was recognition rather than invention.

The inbox is the surface where the pattern has not yet completed. The attention is there — trillions of monthly opens, billions of identified relationships, the cleanest first-party identity layer in marketing. The technology is there — AMP for Email, modern ESP infrastructure, decades of deliverability work. The senders are there. The recipients are there. The only thing missing is the name.

Six surfaces. Four of them exist as inventory today. Two have to be created. Together they constitute the largest unrecognised media surface in the world.

The inbox has always had messages. It has always had identity. It has always had relationships. It has always had attention. What it lacked was an inventory map.

The next major media category is not waiting for a new platform. It is waiting for a new name.

Thinks 1994

NYTimes: “El Niño is the name given to powerful shifts in Pacific Ocean winds and water temperatures that can drastically transform global weather patterns. Over the centuries these natural patterns have sparked epic droughts and heat waves, and have intensified epidemics…Right now, the world is entering a new El Niño phase. Researchers are warning it could be one of the strongest on record and are invoking this history as an admonition that natural forces, when they reach their highest magnitude, can lead to profound volatility and hardship. In general, El Niño makes for wetter conditions in some parts of the Americas while suppressing the Atlantic hurricane season. The phenomenon raises the risk of dryness in South and Southeast Asia, Australia, and southern Africa.”

FT: “British tech investor James Anderson has warned the curtain is falling on two decades of extraordinary growth among the top US software and internet stocks, as massive AI investments “implode” their cash flows to the lasting benefit of chipmakers such as Nvidia. The spoils of the trillion-dollar AI spending frenzy by the likes of Google, Meta, Amazon and Microsoft will flow disproportionately to a small number of dominant hardware suppliers such as Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and ASML, Anderson told the FT…“The near certainties of the 20-year dominance of the exponential platforms is over,” Anderson said in an annual letter to investors.”

NYTimes: “Just two years ago, Google looked like it was in trouble. In a desperate move to play catch-up with the OpenAI chatbot that had upended the tech industry, the search giant debuted an unpolished version of its artificial intelligence on Google.com. The A.I. spat out shoddy information, including advice for people to eat rocks and put glue on their pizza. Google’s reign over the internet seemed at risk. But today, consensus is forming in Silicon Valley not only that Google has recovered and caught up but that it could actually win the A.I. race, a testament to how so much can change in so little time…Instead of isolating Gemini, Google reinvented itself by blending A.I. into all of its most important products.”

WSJ: “Going back to grad school has long been the Plan B of young professionals who aspire to climb higher in their careers or struggle to get promoted in a tough job market. New data show that getting a master’s degree isn’t the guarantee it used to be. The unemployment rate for workers under 35 with a master’s degree has rarely been higher in the past 20 years, according to the Burning Glass Institute, a labor-market think tank focused on the future of work, which analyzed data collected by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics going back to 2003. At the same time, the unemployment rate for workers under 35 with a Ph.D., law degree or medical degree has rarely been lower.”

Running the Alpha Operating System: A CMO’s Playbook (Part 5)

Maya’s AOS Moment – 2

The setback

Six weeks into the pilot, Play 4 hits a wall.

The 30-day “no promotion” rule generates internal resistance Maya did not anticipate. Her e-commerce team panics about a perceived revenue dip from the test cohort during the promotional pause. The merchandising team escalates to the COO. The COO calls Maya: can we resume promotion to that cohort, just for the festive week?

Maya negotiates a compromise. Utility content alongside reduced promotional frequency, not zero promotion. The Play 4 pilot continues but with weaker conditions than the design called for. At 90 days, the B– cohort decline rate is 4% better than control — statistically present, but well below the 15–20% Maya had hypothesised.

She documents the learning. Play 4 worked partially. The structural issue was not the play; it was the governance. AOS assumed the CMO had unilateral authority over how a customer cohort is treated for thirty days. In Maya’s organisation, that authority is shared with merchandising and e-commerce. The play succeeded to the extent her authority allowed; it underperformed where the authority was diluted.

She takes the learning to the CEO. Not as a complaint about cross-functional friction — as a structural finding. “The reason this play underperformed was governance, not design. If we want to run AOS properly, we need to clarify which cohort decisions belong to marketing and which to merchandising. Here is the cost of the ambiguity.”

The CEO agrees to a cross-functional review.

The impact at six months

Play 6 has held. Paid Repeat Leakage at six months is 31%, down from 42%. Owned Repeat Ratio is 69%, up from 58%. The CFO has recalculated contribution margin against the new bucket distribution; the picture is meaningfully better than the old dashboard had been showing.

Play 5 is partial. The Atrium step worked: 9% of the R1 cohort returned to active attention within 30 days, comparable to industry benchmarks for daily-engagement programmes. The Meridian step worked unevenly: of the 9% restored to B–, 31% converted to B within the next 90 days. Recovery Conversion Rate of 31% is below Maya’s hypothesis of 45% but well above what the paid-retargeting control achieved. This split teaches the team something important: Atrium restored attention, Meridian converted value. Counting the first step as full recovery would have overstated Alpha. AOS forced the team to count potential Alpha and realised Alpha separately.

Play 4 is inconclusive at a transaction level but produced the most valuable structural finding of the pilot: AOS works in proportion to the CMO’s cross-functional authority.

Net Alpha Generated: $740K incremental contribution profit over two quarters, measured against the agreed Beta baseline. Most of it from Play 6; some from Play 5. Maya now has a credible AOS Dashboard, a renegotiated agency contract paying against Alpha rather than against ROAS, and quarterly board reviews structured around the ten AOS metrics. She has briefed the CFO of her sister brand in the holding company.

The board discussion changes. Instead of asking only about CAC and ROAS, the CEO asks about Paid Repeat Leakage. The CFO asks whether the B– governance issue has been resolved. The marketplace team gets a new quarterly target: identity capture rate. The CRM team stops reporting only campaign revenue and starts reporting customer movement across the TAT.

What Maya learned

Three things, distilled.

First, the diagnostic was more valuable than any single play. The 42% Paid Repeat Leakage number — by itself — would have justified the whole exercise even if every play had failed. Knowing the size of the problem turned every other conversation from opinion into negotiation.

Second, the play that underperformed taught her more than the play that succeeded. Play 6 confirmed what the diagnostic had implied. Play 4 surfaced a governance problem that AOS had assumed away. Both findings were valuable; the second was actionable in a way the first was not.

Third, AOS is a framework that admits its weak points. The 10–15% NeoMarketing rung claim is provisional. Her own Play 5 results came in below hypothesis. She did not have to defend AOS as flawless to her board; she had to defend it as a discipline that produces measurable results and honest critiques. That was an easier defence than the one her previous frameworks had asked of her.

*  *  *

The CMO Takeaway

AOS principle What the CMO does on Monday
Every transaction has a tax Build the seven-bucket revenue view
Every customer has a state Build the TAT and track movement
Every discount is an economic choice Add Offer Tax to CRM and paid performance
Every repeat paid sale may be leakage Measure Paid Repeat Leakage monthly
Every recovery needs sequencing Atrium restores attention; Meridian recovers value
Every outcome needs a baseline Measure Alpha above Beta, not against zero

The trilogy is now complete. The Tax-onomy essay showed how to see Tax and Time. The naming essay gave the system its umbrella: AOS. This CMO playbook shows how to run it. The work now moves from essay to audit, from audit to pilot, and from pilot to proof.

Maya did not run more campaigns. She ran a better operating system. The next CMO is reading the Tax-onomy essay this weekend. Their AOS audit starts Monday.

Buy New efficiently. Own Repeat completely. Recover before paying twice.

Thinks 1993

Rich Lesser writes [in a BCG newsletter] about How Change Really Works: Seven Science-Based Principles for Transforming Your Organization, by Julia Dhar, Kristy Ellmer, and Philip Jameson: “Leaders continue to face pressures to improve near-term performance while sustaining vitality and longer-term growth. They are also making enormous bets on technology and AI investments. How these programs are delivered will define their organizations and shape their legacies—and none of it works unless they also get the people side right. ”

FT: “[Chris] Hohn, 59, is perhaps the closest thing Britain has to Warren Buffett, the legendary US stockpicker. His Children’s Investment Fund (TCI) has become the fifth most profitable hedge fund of all time, last year bringing in more profits after fees than any other firm. Yet unlike its behemoth rivals Citadel and Millennium that employ thousands of people, his fund has done this with around half a dozen elite analysts and one all-powerful portfolio manager at the helm…Like Buffett, Hohn focuses on big companies with powerful moats that help them stave off competitors. He also holds his positions for an average of nine years, a timeline more akin to a private equity firm than a trader. But unlike Buffett, Hohn spurns a whole host of industries, including banks, utilities, media and insurers. Hohn says there are perhaps just over 200 companies in the world that are investable and, because of the uncertainties fomented by AI and climate change, that figure is decreasing.”

Paul Romer: “The set of things there are out there to discover, is just so incomprehensibly large that we’ve only begun to explore the tiniest subset of possible ideas or discoveries…Just ask yourself, how many mixtures could you make out of the periodic table? …there are more mixtures like that than there have been seconds since the Big Bang created the universe…There are more possible DNA sequences than there are elementary particles in the universe…For as far as you want to project into the future of humans, we won’t run out of new things to discover.” [via Arnold Kling]

WSJ: “One reason the U.S. boasts the world’s most valuable companies and promising startups is because the government doesn’t seek to punish success—or handcuff entrepreneurs with regulation as the Europeans do. China boasts enormous human capital, but Beijing’s financial markets are stunted by the desire for political control. See Alibaba’s Jack Ma. America also has the world’s deepest capital markets. U.S. public equity markets boast an aggregate market cap of some $70 trillion, more than twice as much as all of Europe’s stock markets. Who knows if Mr. Musk will every colonize Mars, but the surest bet is never to bet against American innovation.”

Running the Alpha Operating System: A CMO’s Playbook (Part 4)

Maya’s AOS Moment – 1

Maya is the CMO of a four-year-old direct-to-consumer skincare brand. Annual revenue $14M, growing 22% year on year. Customer base 380,000, of which 95,000 are active in the trailing 365 days. Marketing mix: ~40% Google and Meta paid, ~25% CRM (email and WhatsApp), ~15% influencer, ~20% organic and SEO. AOV $68. Gross margin 62%. Median purchase cycle 60 days. The CEO has been asking, quietly but persistently, why CAC keeps creeping up despite the revenue growth.

Before AOS

On paper, Maya is winning. Revenue is up. ROAS is green across the major campaigns. CRM revenue is healthy — last quarter it grew 18% year over year. Marketplace presence on Amazon and Nykaa is rising. The board is happy.

But something nags her. Every quarter, blended CAC is up. The performance marketing team explains it as auction inflation. The CRM team explains their growth as a sign of the lifecycle programmes working. The marketplace team celebrates the Amazon shelf placement. Each function is showing green; none of them is explaining the CAC creep.

She reads the Tax-onomy essay over a weekend. The line that bothers her is simple: a brand can grow revenue and still be paying for Beta on credit. The seven-bucket framework names something she has been feeling for two years: not all revenue is equal. She commissions a 30-day AOS audit with her senior analyst and her ESP partner.

The audit findings

Four weeks later, the findings land on her desk. They are worse than she expected.

Finding What Maya expected What the audit showed
Paid Repeat Leakage ~15% 42%
Effective Transaction Tax on CRM bucket 5–10% 23% after 18% average Offer Tax
Best customers sitting in B– Small issue 27% of the Best cohort
R1 historical revenue Unknown $8M
Time to second transaction 42 days historically 67 days now
Marketplace identity capture Not measured 4%

The detail behind each row matters. Paid Repeat Leakage at 42% means the retargeting campaigns the team had been celebrating as efficient repeat-revenue drivers were largely bringing back customers who were already in the database — paying Google and Meta to do what email should have done. Effective Transaction Tax on the CRM bucket of 23% — against the 7% the team had been reporting — hides 16 points of Offer Tax from an average 18% discount sitting in line items the channel-cost ledger never saw. Twenty-seven percent of her Best cohort sits in B–. Roughly 24,000 customers — proven repeat buyers — are weakening on attention before any transaction signal would have shown it. The team’s segmentation had been treating them as healthy Best because their transaction count is high. The TAT shows them drifting.

R1 represents $8M in historical revenue. Sixty-eight percent of that R1 cohort has not been reached through CRM in the last 120 days. The brand is not failing to recover them — it has stopped trying. Time to Second Transaction has stretched from 42 days to 67 days over the last 18 months. The lifecycle programmes the CRM team has been celebrating are not, in fact, compressing the second-purchase cycle. They are running alongside a slowdown. Identity Capture Rate on marketplace transactions is 4%. Of every hundred new buyers the brand acquires through Amazon, Nykaa, and Blinkit, four are ever brought into the owned database. The other ninety-six will, if they buy again, have to be paid for again — to the platform.

Maya schedules an emergency meeting with her CFO. She walks him through the numbers. The CFO’s first reaction is to challenge the methodology. The second is to ask whether the lifecycle programmes that have been showing growth are real or measurement artefacts. The third is the question Maya was waiting for: “You’re telling me 42% of our paid spend is structurally avoidable?”

Maya’s answer: “Possibly. I want to test it.” That sentence matters. She does not overclaim. She asks for a pilot.

The audit also changes how Maya sees her own team. Performance marketing is not the villain — it has been solving the problems the rest of the system handed to it. CRM is not innocent either — it has been celebrating revenue that often required heavy discounts. Marketplace is not merely distribution; it is revenue that may never compound unless identity is captured. The problem is not a person. It is the absence of an operating system.

The 90-day pilot

Maya picks three plays. She knows she should pick two; she picks three because she wants to test the full Atrium plus Meridian recovery sequence alongside the easier deployments.

Play 6 — Shift Repeat Adtech to Owned. Suppression rule applied to retargeting campaigns: any customer with a transaction in the last 90 days is excluded from prospecting and standard retargeting. Spend redirected to a new CRM reactivation flow targeting the same cohort. Matched control group retained on standard treatment. Two weeks to deploy.

Play 4 — Protect Best from Becoming Rest. The 24,000-customer B– cohort identified, segmented into a test group (12,000) and a control (12,000). Test group taken off promotional content for 30 days, replaced with utility content (skincare routine recommendations, ingredient education, founder voice notes). Test group held in a designated “Relate” stream, control held in standard treatment.

Play 5 — Recover Rest Before Adtech. Top 10,000 R1 customers by historical LTV. 30-day Atrium pilot: daily NeoMails with magnets (skin quiz, ingredient quiz, mini-stories from the founder) and no transaction ask in weeks one and two. Reactivation offers introduced gradually in weeks three and four. Matched control of 10,000 R1 customers retained on standard paid-retargeting recovery flow.

She agrees the Beta baseline with her CFO: same period prior year, adjusted for category growth. Any incremental contribution profit above that baseline counts as Alpha.