Thinks 1984

NYTimes: “The 21st-century tech industry has accomplished a lot of cool things, but among the most remarkable may be a trick of language: It managed to make the word “smart” feel repulsive and the word “dumb” sound appealing… The smart things are paining us. The dumb ones are blessedly quiet — which, at this point, can feel like the more intelligent option.”

Bloomberg: “A brain-computer interface, or BCI, connects the brain directly to an electronic device, such as a computer, bypassing the rest of the body. The interface is designed to detect brain activity — for example, the electrical signals generated by neurons — and translate it into commands that can control machines. BCIs offer hope to people who’ve suffered damage to the nerves between their brain and various muscles. The interfaces could help them communicate if they’re unable to speak, or allow them to use their minds to control external devices if they’re paralyzed. This could improve the quality of life for stroke patients and individuals with debilitating neurological conditions such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (better known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease). BCIs can also stimulate the brain with information from the outside world. This could allow people with vision loss to see or those with hearing loss to hear.”

WSJ: “Data centers on the ground feature racks of servers in cavernous, temperature-controlled buildings. Orbital data centers will feature swarms of satellites laden with AI chips. They will need solar arrays to produce electricity to run the AI computing systems. The satellites are expected to fly in an orbit that roughly travels over Earth’s poles to maximize their exposure to sunlight.”

Arnold Kling: “The future should not be accessing a bank web site and looking at menus. The future should be that I can say what kind of transaction I want, and the bank software either tells me that it is not feasible or walks me through how to get it done. The future should not be looking at an airline’s web site to find a flight. The future should be that I can say where I am going and when I would like to go. Relevant airlines respond with proposals for flight times, prices, and terms. The future should not be professors trying to figure out “courseware.” The future should be that the university has data that connects students/courses/professors and you can get at that data through an English-language query.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 6)

The Seven Alpha Plays – 1

The framework now has all the pieces. The Revenue Tax Ladder shows where each transaction sits by cost. The seven buckets show whether revenue is being bought, owned, reacquired, or surrendered. The TAT shows where each customer sits by depth and attention. The missing rung supplies the recovery layer between CRM and Adtech.

What remains is action. Alpha is not created by analysis. It is created by movement.

There are only two movements that matter. The first is moving transactions down the Revenue Tax Ladder — from Intermediated to Direct, from Adtech to CRM, from CRM to Organic. The second is moving customers in the right direction on the TAT — leftward from Lost to Weakening to Strong, and downward from Next to Test to Best. Every Alpha intervention is one of these movements.

Seven plays cover the field.

Play 1 — Capture Identity From Anonymous to Identified, on every surface. Primary lever: Tax. NEVER served: Never Pay Twice.

A sale without identity is a transaction without a future. Identity leaks from two surfaces, and most brands underestimate the first one.

The own-website leak. A Direct Anonymous visitor who buys without identifying is the most expensive customer the brand will ever acquire — the brand paid the acquisition cost, owned the traffic, controlled the surface, and still walked away without an identity. Every future transaction with that person will have to be paid for again, because the brand has no way to reach them. This is the silent leak in the Tax-onomy: the customer landed on the brand’s own site, transacted, and the brand has no email, no phone, no name. The CRM Ladder cannot operate on someone the brand cannot address. Fixing this is mechanical, not aspirational — value exchanges before checkout (size guides, ingredient explainers, founder notes, early access, free samples), soft-gated content, identity-required loyalty membership, account-creation incentives at checkout, post-purchase warranty or replenishment registration. The principle: no transaction on the brand’s own surface should complete without an identity attached.

The intermediated leak. Marketplaces and quick-commerce platforms — Amazon, Flipkart, Nykaa, Blinkit, Zepto — are not bad. They create discovery, convenience, and immediacy. But if the brand never captures identity from those transactions, every future purchase with the same person remains platform-taxed. A customer who buys the product three times on Blinkit is a loyal user of the product, but not yet a customer of the brand. The mechanisms here are different from the own-website ones because the brand does not own the surface: QR codes on packaging, warranty registration, replenishment reminders, recipe clubs, care guides, member benefits, Mu offers, NeoMail subscriptions, community access. The brand has one moment — the physical product in the customer’s hands — to convert a platform transaction into a direct identity. Most brands waste it.

Why Play 1 is the foundational play. Identity capture does not reduce the tax on the first sale. It reduces the tax on the second, third, and fourth. The leakage compounds in two directions: every Anonymous Direct buyer becomes a future Adtech retargeting line item; every Intermediated buyer becomes a future platform-tax line item. Identity capture is the only play that pays for itself across the entire future LTV of a customer. It is the precondition for every other Alpha play in the framework — Plays 4, 5, and 6 cannot operate on customers the brand cannot identify. That is why Play 1 sits first in the list. The numbering is not arbitrary.

Play 2 — Convert Next to Test. From N or N– to T. Primary lever: Time. NEVER served: Never Lose Customers.

N customers have attention but no transaction. They have raised their hand — opened, browsed, clicked, installed, subscribed, or engaged. The job is to convert without defaulting immediately to paid media or heavy discounting. N– customers are more fragile: attention is weakening before they have bought. This is where most brands panic and increase promotional pressure. That may work for some, but it often accelerates fatigue. The better move is to create belief, trust, and usefulness before the conversion ask. For N, Sell may work. For N–, Relate may be needed first. The Alpha is in reducing the time from identity to first transaction while keeping the effective tax below New Direct Adtech.

Thinks 1983

WSJ: “As artificial intelligence makes life frictionless, we risk removing the very frictions that keep human beings healthy: effort, challenge, learning and forward motion. The next public-health crisis may be stagnation, not stress. The fix isn’t another pleasure. It’s progression. Progression is not simply about moving forward; nor is it about constant achievement or relentless productivity. It is about adaptation: the way a muscle grows stronger when challenged, or a mind becomes more flexible when it explores.”

Lindy Elkins-Tanton: “Metacognition refers to thinking about thinking: What’s your knowledge of your own thinking process? Metacognition involves planning, assessing, monitoring, strategizing, and evaluating. It sits above you, looks at you, and says, “How am I doing?” Every day, we all walk down familiar mental paths or processes that we’ve done over and over. Applying metacognition to these well-worn paths, thinking about how and why we do them the way we do, and how they can be better, is the way to constantly self-improve.”

Mint: “The more useful task, for scholars and policymakers, is to pay attention to entrepreneurial action: where it emerges, how it is enabled or blocked, and what it changes. If we can learn to recognize and support that action, the missing definition may not trouble us quite as much.”

SaaStr: “The companies that will win the next five years in B2B + AI are the ones still adding net new customers at a healthy clip. Ideally accelerating. That means the product is still compelling enough that people who have never used it before are choosing it over alternatives, including the new AI-native alternatives, and including doing nothing.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 5)

The Missing Rung — NeoMarketing as the Recovery Layer

Parts 2 and 3 ended with a question the framework had created but not yet answered. The Revenue Tax Ladder showed a 15-percentage-point cliff between CRM (5–10%) and Adtech (20–25%). The TAT in Part 4 surfaced the customers who fall into that cliff — the B– drifting toward R1, the T– drifting toward R2, the Lost-Lead pool that should never have been allowed to go dark. Two frameworks pointing at the same gap from different angles. Both implying the same conclusion.

The gap is not a market opportunity to be filled with better adtech. It is an engine missing from the brand’s marketing stack.

The current ladder reads:

Organic / Direct: 0–5% CRM / Owned channels: 5–10% Adtech: 20–25% Intermediated: 30–40%+

The brand has owned channels for customers who are still listening. The brand has paid channels for customers it has lost. What the brand does not have is a layer for the customers who are drifting but not yet lost — the middle column of the TAT, where attention is weakening but a relationship still exists. These customers cannot be reached through standard CRM because the very things CRM measures — opens, clicks, transactions — are starting to fail. They have not yet drifted far enough to justify the 20–25% adtech tax of treating them as a new prospect. They are in between, and the marketing stack has no in-between.

This is the rung the ladder is missing. A 10–15% recovery layer that operates on owned identity but uses different mechanics than standard CRM. A layer designed not to push transactions but to rebuild attention. A layer whose unit cost sits below paid media because it runs on the brand’s existing data and existing customer relationships, but above standard CRM because it does work standard CRM cannot do: it competes for the customer’s attention against everything else in the customer’s life, not just against the customer’s inbox.

Call this layer NeoMarketing.

With the missing rung inserted, the ladder now reads:

Organic / Direct: 0–5% CRM / Owned channels: 5–10% NeoMarketing Recovery: 10–15% Adtech: 20–25% Intermediated: 30–40%+

The exact percentage will vary by category and implementation. The point is not the number. The point is the existence of the rung. A brand that has only CRM and Adtech is forced to choose between cheap channels that no longer work and expensive channels that do. NeoMarketing changes the choice.

NeoMarketing is not a single product. It is the architecture that occupies the missing rung. It does for the B–, T–, R1, and R2 cells of the TAT what CRM does for the B, T, N cells — but with different mechanics suited to the different problem. CRM converts attention into transactions. NeoMarketing first restores attention, then hands the restored customer back to CRM to transact. The two layers are complementary, not competitive.

Four engines occupy the NeoMarketing rung, each addressing a different cell of the TAT.

Atrium — the attention recovery engine. Atrium operates on the right and middle columns of the TAT — the customers whose attention is weakening or lost. The unit of Atrium is not the campaign or the message; it is the daily attention episode. NeoMails are the primary surface — daily emails designed not to sell but to reward the act of opening, embedding interactive magnets (quizzes, polls, mini-games, predictions) that give the customer a reason to engage independent of any transaction. Atrium’s job is to restore attention to the weakening and lost cells — moving R1 back toward B–, R2 back toward T–, and holding B– and T– customers from drifting further rightward. Meridian then carries each restored customer the final step leftward when the next transaction lands on an owned route.

Meridian — the LTV maximisation engine. Meridian operates on the B cell — the brand’s most valuable customers who are still listening. Where Atrium rebuilds attention, Meridian deepens the value of attention that already exists. Meridian runs the personalisation, recommendation, velvet-rope, and premium-tier work that turns a strong-attention Best customer into a higher-LTV Best customer. It is the engine for Never Lose Customers — the doctrine that says holding a B from drifting into B– is cheaper than recovering an R1.

Atrium works where attention is scarce. Meridian works where value is high. Atrium asks: how do we make this customer listen again? Meridian asks: what is the next best decision for this specific valuable customer? Together, they cover the gap between CRM and Adtech.

NeoNet — the cooperative recovery and acquisition network. NeoNet operates across brand boundaries. When Brand A’s R1 customer is highly engaged with Brand B’s NeoMail, NeoNet allows Brand A to reach that customer through Brand B’s owned attention — deterministically, identity-matched, at a fraction of the cost of Google or Meta reacquisition. The same machinery acquires New customers for Brand A by surfacing them through Brand B’s audience without renting that audience from a platform. NeoNet replaces platform tax with cooperative surplus.

ActionAds — the monetisation layer that funds the rest. ActionAds are in-email ad slots that appear in NeoMails. They monetise the attention NeoMails earn from customers who are engaged but not transacting today — the Permanent Spectator population, the T- customers being held in a low-cost orbit, the B customer reading the daily email between purchases. ActionAds make the NeoMarketing rung structurally self-funding: the attention the brand earns from its own customers generates revenue from advertisers willing to pay for that attention. The economics close on themselves. The recovery layer pays for itself.

The four engines compose into a single operating logic. Atrium recovers attention. Meridian compounds it. NeoNet extends it across the network. ActionAds funds it.

The doctrinal shift is sharper than it first appears. Traditional CRM treats customers as campaign targets. NeoMarketing treats them as moving states on the TAT. Traditional CRM asks: what message should we send? NeoMarketing asks: what state is this customer in, and what action will move them leftward or downward on the TAT? Traditional CRM escalates from owned channels to paid media when CRM fails. NeoMarketing inserts a recovery layer before that escalation, so the cliff is no longer the only available route.

The framework Parts 2, 3, and 4 built is now complete. The Revenue Tax Ladder has five rungs, not four. The TAT has an answer for every cell, not just the easy ones. The cliff has been closed.

Without the rung, the brand can diagnose the cliff but not cross it. With the rung, Alpha becomes operational.

What remains is the playbook.

Thinks 1982

NYTimes: “There’s an ocean of distance between the “patient” that A.I. is analyzing and the patient that the human doctor or nurse is assessing. Navigating the gap is something writers also grapple with. When making a diagnosis, as it were, of good writing to publish in the literary journal I edit, I look for characters that are fully realized, with physicality that is palpable and an emotional complexity both visceral and vivid. These details aren’t always made explicit, but pieced together in hints and subtle cues. What I’ve realized over the years is this is not so different from what a doctor has to do when assessing her patient’s health. This is the inherent limitation of A.I. in medicine. It’s simply impossible — at least for now — for these tools to truly see the multidimensional patient.”

Donald Boudreaux: “Whenever economic change occurs, some particular workers lose jobs, and some particular locations lose business and population. Economic growth requires economic change and adjustment. It always has and always will. But the story of America is that ordinary people not only recover over time, but become wealthier. It’s an error to single out the freer trade of the past few decades as a unique source of economic change that justifies greater skepticism of globalization.”

Jack Clark: “I now believe we are living in the time that AI research will be end-to-end automated. If that happens, we will cross a Rubicon into a nearly-impossible-to-forecast future…The purpose of this essay is to enumerate why I think the takeoff towards fully automated AI R&D is happening. I’ll discuss some of the consequences of this, but mostly I expect to spend the majority of this essay discussing the evidence for this belief, and will spend most of 2026 working through the implications.”

McKinsey: “In time, AI will affect every industry, but it will not create value in the same way everywhere—or for everyone. The companies best positioned for this disruption will treat AI as a strategic inflection point. They will use productivity gains to stay in the game, innovation to expand and defend profit pools, and early, deliberate choices to shape emerging market structures and their role within them.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 4)

BRTN and the Transactions-Attention Table

Parts 2 and 3 mapped the Tax lever. Part 4 maps the Time lever.

The seven transaction buckets reveal where Tax is leaking. They show whether a brand is buying revenue, owning revenue, reacquiring revenue, or surrendering revenue to intermediaries. But Tax is only one half of Alpha. The other half is Time — the gap between one transaction and the next, the speed at which a customer climbs from Next to Test to Best, the rate at which Best customers drift silently into Rest. To see Time, the brand needs a different framework altogether — one that classifies customers, not transactions.

A customer relationship does not collapse in a single moment. It decays in stages. The customer does not wake up one morning and decide to leave the brand. They stop opening. Then they stop clicking. Then they stop visiting. Then the time since last transaction stretches. Only later does the brand notice the absence — usually when the customer has already drifted far enough that the only reliable way back is paid media at 20–25%, or worse, an Intermediated route at 30–40%+.

This is why Time between Transactions cannot be measured only by transactions. By the time the transaction gap becomes visible, the attention gap has already done the damage.

For four decades the working customer-state framework in retail and direct marketing has been RFM — Recency, Frequency, Monetary. When did this customer last buy? How often do they buy? How much do they spend? RFM was a remarkable framework for its era and still works as a basic diagnostic. But it has a structural blind spot that becomes more expensive every year: all three of its variables are transaction variables. Recency means transaction recency. Frequency means transaction frequency. Monetary means transaction value. RFM cannot see a customer who has stopped opening emails, stopped clicking on push notifications, stopped opening the app — until the transactions also stop.

A customer who bought three times and is still opening every week is not the same as a customer who bought three times but has ignored the brand for ninety days. Same purchase count. Different future. Same RFM score, perhaps. Opposite trajectory.

In a world where attention decays before transactions stop, RFM is a rear-view mirror.

BRTN: the four canonical states

The first refinement is to collapse RFM scoring into four states that match how a CMO actually thinks about the customer base.

Best are the brand’s most valuable customers — three or more transactions with current attention. They are the profit engine.

Rest are customers who once mattered but are now drifting or dormant. They are not dead. They are simply no longer paying attention to the brand’s owned channels.

Test are early buyers whose future value is still uncertain. They have bought once or twice, but the relationship has not yet become habit.

Next are the future customers — identified non-buyers and genuine new acquisitions waiting to be converted.

BRTN is powerful because it shifts the marketer’s question from “Who bought?” to “Who is still listening?” But BRTN by itself still carries the RFM blind spot in a softer form: it tells the brand where a customer currently is, not where they are about to go. To make BRTN operational, the CRM team needs a simple grid — the equivalent of RFM for an attention-first world.

The Transactions-Attention Table (TAT)

Call it the Transactions-Attention Table, or TAT.

The rows measure transaction depth. The columns measure attention recency. The critical point is that attention recency means days since last meaningful attention event, not days since last transaction. A meaningful attention event is an email open, click, magnet interaction, app open, push tap, WhatsApp response, product browse, or wishlist action — any signal that shows the customer is still reachable through owned channels.

Transactions ↓
Attention →
0–30 days
Strong
30–90 days
Weakening
90+ days
Lost
0 N N– L
1–2 T T– R2
3+ B B– R1

Nine cells. Each one a distinct managerial state with a distinct strategic prescription.

N — Next. Identified, no purchase yet, attention strong. The classic active lead. Convert.

N– — Weakening Next. Identified, no purchase, attention slipping. The brand still has a chance, but the strategy must shift. Another hard-sell campaign may accelerate the fade. This customer needs relevance, trust, utility — a reason to stay reachable before the lead goes cold.

L — Lost Lead. No purchase and no recent attention. This is not Rest. This person has never bought. Recovery investment should be low. Suppression, repermission, or low-cost attention rebuilding may be appropriate; heavy discounts and paid reacquisition rarely are.

T — Test. One or two purchases, strong attention. The acceleration cell. Drive the next transaction. This is where early-lifecycle marketing matters most — the second transaction is not just more revenue, it is evidence that the relationship may compound.

T– — Weakening Test. One or two purchases, attention slipping. A fragile state — proof of purchase, but not proof of habit. The wrong move is to keep shouting “buy again.” The right move is to preserve attention before pushing the next transaction.

B — Best. Three or more purchases, attention strong. The heart of the business. Best customers should receive the best personalisation, the best service, early access, recognition, and the deepest relationship investment.

B– — Weakening Best. The single most economically important cell on the grid. A high-value customer in the act of becoming Rest, flagged before the transaction signal would show it. The dashboard may still call them loyal because they have bought many times — but attention says something has changed. The cost of holding a B– is a fraction of the cost of recovering an R1. The brand that catches B– early avoids the AdWaste it would otherwise pay to recover them later.

R1 — Rest-1. Former Best customers who have lost attention. These are the most valuable recovery opportunities because the brand has proof of depth. They deserve priority recovery — winning them back protects the largest future LTV. Recovered R1 customers return to B– first — attention restored, transaction not yet re-proven — and graduate to B only when the next transaction lands on an owned route.

R2 — Rest-2. Lower-depth buyers who have lost attention. They matter, but the recovery economics must be more disciplined. Some will be worth low-cost reactivation. Some are better served by attention-monetisation if attention can be rebuilt. Some should simply be left alone. Recovered R2 customers return to T– on the same logic, graduating to T once the transaction follows.

Sell, Relate, Recover — the doctrine the table enforces

The power of TAT is not the labels. It is the action logic the columns impose.

Sell when attention is strong. The left column — N, T, B — is where transaction prompts pay off. The customer is listening. Move them forward: first purchase, second purchase, cross-sell, replenishment, upgrade, referral.

Relate when attention is weakening. The middle column — N–, T–, B– — is the danger zone. The brand must shift from Sell to Relate: fewer hard offers, more value, more utility, more recognition, more memory, more reasons to remain connected. The goal is not immediate conversion. The goal is to stop the attention slide. Most CRM teams do not have a Relate playbook; they have a Sell playbook with the frequency dialled up, which is exactly the opposite of what these cells need.

Recover when attention is lost. The right column — L, R2, R1 — is where the CRM channel has already failed. Recovery must be tiered: R1 deserves more investment than R2; Lost Leads deserve less than past buyers. A single grid prevents the common mistake of treating all inactivity as equal.

The one-line doctrine the table produces:

Sell when attention is strong. Relate when attention is weakening. Recover when attention is lost.

The grid is a velocity field, not a snapshot

A customer is never permanently in one cell of the TAT. Two forces act on every customer simultaneously, and they pull in different directions.

The brand’s CRM effort pushes customers downward through the grid — from N to T to B — by driving transactions. Each successful Sell play moves a customer down a row.

Entropy pushes customers rightward through the grid — from Strong to Weakening to Lost — by attention decay. Every day the brand does nothing, the entire customer base drifts rightward.

The job of a CRM team is to bend trajectories downward faster than entropy pulls them rightward. A healthy operation produces high downward velocity (Convert and Accelerate plays moving N → T → B) and resists rightward drift (Relate plays keeping customers in the Strong column). When the downward force wins, the brand grows LTV. When the rightward force wins, the brand grows AdWaste — because every customer who drifts into the Lost column becomes a candidate for paid reacquisition the brand will pay for next quarter.

This is what the Time lever from Part 1 means, operationally. Less Time between transactions is the downward arrow on the TAT. Compressing N → T → B is the lever in action. Less Tax per transaction is what the Revenue Tax Ladder from Part 2 governs — what each downward move actually costs when it happens.

A brand with many customers in B and T has momentum. A brand with too many in B– and T– has a silent attention crisis. A brand with a large R1 pool has allowed valuable customers to decay. A brand with heavy Repeat Direct Adtech and a large R1 pool is paying the price of having missed the warning signs months earlier — and is now paying the adtech tax to undo what cheap CRM attention could have prevented.

This is the hidden link between Part 3 and Part 4. The transaction taxonomy tells the brand what tax it paid. The TAT tells the brand why that tax may need to be paid again next quarter.

RFM looked backward: who bought, how often, and how much?

TAT looks forward: who bought, who is still listening, and who is about to be lost?

The answer determines the next action. And the next action determines whether the customer moves toward Alpha — or falls into AdWaste.

What the TAT does not yet describe is the intervention. The B– and R1 cells expose a structural problem the Revenue Tax Ladder also pointed to in Part 2 — the cliff between CRM (5–10%) and Adtech (20–25%) has nowhere economically viable for a brand to land a recovery transaction. The grid surfaces the customers who need that recovery. The ladder shows there is no rung to recover them onto. This is not a tactical gap. It is a missing engine. That is the work of the next part.

Thinks 1981

PwC: “Compared to the findings from last year’s Global CEO Survey, leaders are significantly less confident about their company’s revenue growth outlook over the next 12 months. Confidence in the three-year revenue growth outlook has also declined, although the decrease is less significant. What explains this ebbing confidence? Although CEOs remain generally optimistic about growth prospects for the global economy, they’re less confident in many countries about the local economic outlook. Industry cycles are also at work.”

Brian Halligan: “The next most important question isn’t “should we make everything legible.” It’s “how much legibility do you need for survival?” and how to avoid paying any more cost on top of that. Put another way: what specific things should deliberately stay out of the system? And as the company grows, how do we protect, maintain, and even strengthen those illegible advantages? The highest-value things to keep partially illegible are the things that make the company weird, specific, and hard to copy: taste, trust, timing, founder judgment, customer intimacy, negotiation instinct, informal power maps, and the contrarian beliefs that have not yet made it into the strategy.”

Ezra Klein: “I’ve been on a somewhat esoteric personal quest to read books in the liberal canon, as well as histories of liberalism, to try to think through what exactly in this long tradition is valuable for us right now. One of the books I came across in this search is “The Lost History of Liberalism” by the historian Helena Rosenblatt. One of the arguments she makes is that for thousands of years before we had the word “liberalism,” there was the tradition of being a liberal. Behind that tradition there was the virtue called liberality, and people thought this virtue was really important. As Rosenblatt writes, for almost 2,000 years, liberality meant “demonstrating the virtues of a citizen, showing devotion to the common good and respecting the importance of mutual connectedness.””

FT: “Why do you believe what you believe? Most of us know that the obvious answer — that you have good reasons and evidence — is naive. Our beliefs are shaped by all manner of non-rational, unconscious processes, including cognitive biases, genes, upbringing and environment. But how do we know that? Because of compelling scientific evidence. If human beings are bright enough to figure out how dim we are, maybe there is more to be said for our rationality after all. That is the hope that Turi Munthe feeds in his lively survey of the origins of our beliefs, Why We Think What We Think. In 2019 Munthe co-founded Parlia, which describes itself as an online encyclopedia of public opinion, because he wanted “to get the world to question their own ideas.” People loved sharing their view on Parlia but they weren’t that interested in examining the arguments they gave to support their opinions. This led him to ask what, then, really grounds our beliefs? This book sums up what he discovered and, more interestingly, what he thinks it tells us.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 3)

The Seven Transaction Buckets and the Offer Tax

Once the three questions are answered, every transaction can be placed into one and only one bucket. The classification is hierarchical — Q1 first, Q2 next, Q3 last — and it is mutually exclusive by design. A taxonomy is useful only if a transaction lands in exactly one cell. If the same sale can sit in Direct, CRM, Adtech, and Repeat all at once, the framework collapses into another attribution debate. That is not the goal here. The goal is managerial clarity — a single bucket per transaction, recorded the same way every week, comparable across quarters.

The hierarchy works like this. If the transaction happened on a marketplace, quick-commerce app, retailer, aggregator, or third-party commerce surface, it goes into Intermediated. Stop. Do not also classify it as Organic, CRM, or Adtech — those categories belong to Direct only. The money changed hands on someone else’s surface; that is the defining fact. If the transaction happened on the brand’s own site or app, it is Direct, and the next two questions decide which of six Direct cells it lands in: three demand drivers (Organic, CRM, Adtech) × two identity states (New, Known). Six Direct buckets plus one Intermediated bucket. Seven in total.

The seven buckets

Intermediated (30–40%+). Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, Nykaa, Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart, BigBasket, offline retail partners, social commerce platforms. The revenue is real but expensive — commissions, visibility spend, platform pricing pressure, controlled delivery economics, restricted customer data. The brand gets a sale and loses the relationship. Not bad revenue; just costly revenue, and structurally unable to compound.

New Direct Organic (0–5%). The best New customer a brand can acquire — first transaction from unpaid demand: direct visit, branded search, SEO, word of mouth, unpaid referral. Brand pull converted into revenue. Tax near zero, identity captured, relationship begins clean.

New Direct CRM (5–10%). A first transaction from someone whose identity was already in the database before purchase — a subscriber, lead, quiz participant, app installer, wishlist creator, cart abandoner — converted by owned-channel nurture. Higher tax than pure organic, far lower than paid. Proof that the brand can convert Zero to One without renting attention every time.

New Direct Adtech (20–25%). A first purchase generated by paid media — Google, Meta, paid social, paid search, affiliate, prospecting retargeting, influencer boost. This is legitimate CAC when the customer is genuinely new and CAC sits comfortably below gross-margin-adjusted LTV. It becomes dangerous only when the brand fails to convert this customer into lower-tax repeat revenue afterwards.

Repeat Direct Organic (0–5%). The purest repeat. A known customer returns on their own — through direct visit, app open, branded search, or habit. No platform was paid; no auction was needed; no journey was triggered. The brand relationship did all the work.

Repeat Direct CRM (5–10%). The strategic core of D2C. A known customer returns because the brand used owned channels well — email, WhatsApp, push, SMS, app notifications, loyalty, recommendations, replenishment reminders. Tax modest, identity owned, relationship compounding. This is the bucket every D2C business should want a large share of repeat revenue to sit in.

Repeat Direct Adtech (20–25%) — the red-flag bucket. A known customer bought again through paid media. The dashboard shows revenue. The ad platform reports ROAS. The campaign manager celebrates the conversion. But the P&L should ask a harsher question — why did the brand have to pay Google or Meta to bring back someone already in its database?

Not all Repeat Direct Adtech is waste. Some categories have long consideration cycles, some customers benefit from external nudges, some retargeting flows are honest reactivation. But when this bucket is large — and in most D2C categories past their first eighteen months, it is — the brand has a relationship problem disguised as a performance-marketing success. Globally, B2C brands spend roughly $500 billion a year on exactly this — re-buying customers they already owned. That figure is not a forecast. It is what is currently happening on the P&L every quarter.

Route Tax is only half the story. Offer Tax is the other half.

The seven buckets account for Route Tax — what the brand paid to create or control the transaction. They do not yet account for what the brand gave away to close it: discounts, coupons, cashback, free shipping, loyalty burn, bundled offers, marketplace-funded promotions that come out of brand economics later. Channel tax and discount tax appear on different lines of the P&L — channel tax shows up as cash paid to a platform, discount tax shows up as foregone revenue — but the operating margin per transaction does not care which line.

The cleanest formulation:

Effective Transaction Tax = Route Tax + Offer Tax

A few examples make the arithmetic concrete.

A Repeat Direct Organic order with no discount carries an effective tax of 0–5%. A Repeat Direct CRM order with a 10% coupon carries 15–20%. A New Direct Adtech order with a 15% discount carries 35–40%. An Intermediated order with platform commission, visibility spend, logistics, and a discount easily crosses 45%.

This is where many D2C brands deceive themselves. A “20% off for our subscribers” email feels like an owned-channel win. The campaign attributes to CRM. The dashboard shows a 5–10% route tax. But add the 20% discount and the effective tax is 25–30% — worse than New Direct Adtech. The brand believes it is running owned-channel economics; it is in fact running adtech economics through its own email list, paying itself the platform fee and handing it back to the customer as a discount.

The diagnostic test is simple. If removing the discount would have lost the sale, the discount is tax. If removing the discount would not have lost the sale, the discount is a gift the brand chose to give for no operating reason at all. When D2C teams run this test honestly across a quarter of promotional campaigns, most discover that a meaningful share of their CRM-driven repeat revenue is sitting on the adtech rung in disguise.

What the seven buckets reveal

Once the table is filled in, the brand can finally read its revenue the way a CFO reads a P&L — not by total, but by composition.

How much New revenue is being bought, and at what effective tax? How much Repeat revenue is owned, and how much is reacquired? How much revenue is trapped inside intermediaries the brand cannot retain? How much margin is being quietly given away through discounts hiding inside owned channels?

These are not marketing questions alone. They are profit questions. The seven buckets turn revenue from a single number into a map, and the map shows where the leak is. A brand that cannot read its revenue at the bucket level cannot tell whether it is creating Alpha — or simply paying for Beta on credit.

Thinks 1980

Ashu Garg: “Long-horizon autonomy is the third major inflection point that we’ve seen in AI in three years: first, the ChatGPT moment, which surfaced the power of pre-training and RLHF; then the o1 moment, which introduced inference-time compute as a second scaling law; and now the long-horizon agent moment, where models can plan, act, recover from failure, and persist until a job is done.”

Sarah L. Kaufman: “When we can appreciate how verbs really do stimulate our bodies, even in subtle ways that we may not be aware of, verb choices become even more important…If you’re telling a story, you can use the power of suggestion. It’s very, very powerful. Verbs lend themselves to great storytelling by enabling us to show rather than tell. So rather than a lot of wordy description, we can just use some verbs to really get right to the point.”

FT: “A few months ago a New York financier told me he had just experienced a “first”: his 2025 summer interns “were the first true AI natives I have seen”. This meant they had grown up not only among digital tech, but AI too. So how did it go? He winced. While those wannabe masters of the universe initially seemed wildly impressive, when senior financiers later probed their ideas they found them alarmingly shallow. Consequently this person’s company made fewer return offers and is now focusing less on graduates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics — and more humanities students instead. “We want critical thinking, not just AI,” he explains. Human brainpower is needed to handle the silicon variant.”

WSJ: “During a recent pitch for a healthcare company, [WPP’s CEO Cindy] Rose was willing to cut the agency’s fee for the work it was being asked to do, tying part of its compensation to performance goals such as hitting specific sales lift targets. That helped the agency win the business, says Greg Paull, president of global growth for MediaSense, a firm that matches advertisers with agencies. “Showing that they are putting skin in the game has not been a hallmark of that holding group,” he said.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 2)

Three Questions and the Revenue Tax Ladder

Before a brand can create Alpha, it must first learn to classify its revenue. Most D2C dashboards do the opposite. They cut revenue by campaign, channel, product, geography, or cohort, but they rarely answer the most important question — what tax did the brand pay to make this transaction happen?

The same $50 order can mean very different things. If the customer came directly to the website and bought without prompting, almost the entire gross margin is preserved. If the customer bought after an email or WhatsApp message, the brand paid a modest owned-channel cost. If the customer arrived through Google or Meta, the brand may have paid 20–25% of revenue to rent the moment of attention. If the customer bought through Amazon, Flipkart, Blinkit, or Zepto, the visible sale hides a much larger tax — commission, logistics, discounts, platform ads, fulfilment rules, returns, and the loss of identity itself.

Revenue is not equal. The route matters.

The first step, therefore, is a simple classification exercise. Every transaction answers three questions, in this order, with mutually exclusive answers.

Question 1 — Where did the money change hands?

The brand’s own surface — its website, its app, its checkout — or a third party: Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, Nykaa, Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart. This single answer decides whether the brand captures the customer’s identity. Direct: identity captured, data complete, the relationship begins. Intermediated: identity stays with the platform, data is partial or absent, the relationship does not start because the brand does not know whom it sold to. A marketplace sale is not a relationship; it is a one-night arrangement. And because the relationship never began, every future transaction with that same person will also have to be paid for through the platform. The tax compounds across the customer’s entire lifetime.

Question 2 — What put the customer in front of the buy button?

Three answers, with sharply different Revenue Tax. Owned attention — direct visit, branded search, organic, app open, push, email, WhatsApp, SMS, loyalty, word of mouth — costs 0–10% of the transaction. Rented attention — Google, Meta, paid search, paid social, retargeting, affiliates, paid influencers — costs 20–25%. Platform-owned attention is the third answer — the Amazon search box, the Blinkit homepage, the Myntra ranking algorithm — but it already sits inside Intermediated from Q1. So for a Direct transaction, Q2 collapses to a binary: did owned attention or rented attention create the sale?

Question 3 — Was this identity already in the database before the sale?

New (the brand had never sold to this person before), Known (the brand sold to them recently and still considers them active), or Known-but-dormant (the brand sold to them once but lost contact long enough that what just happened was recovery, not retention). On Direct, the CRM gives the answer cleanly. On Intermediated, the brand often cannot answer at all — and that blindness is itself the finding. A brand that cannot tell a new acquisition apart from a paid reacquisition is running its CAC numbers in the dark.

The Revenue Tax Ladder

Stack the answers and four rungs appear, ordered low to high. Organic / Direct (0–5%) is brand pull — the customer arrived on their own. The route the whole system should be maximising. CRM / Owned channels (5–10%) is email, WhatsApp, push, SMS, app notifications turning owned attention into a transaction — the strategic core of Retained revenue. Adtech (20–25%) is Google, Meta, paid search and social, affiliates — identity captured, but the tax is 4–5× owned. Intermediated (30–40%+) is Amazon, Flipkart, Blinkit, Zepto — the transaction completes, but no identity transfers, so the full cost is channel tax plus every future transaction the brand will have to pay for again.

The ladder is not a blame chart. Every route has a role. Marketplaces create discovery. Quick commerce creates immediacy. Adtech creates new demand. CRM activates relationships. Organic reflects brand pull. The point is not to eliminate high-tax channels; the point is to know when a brand is using them for the wrong job. A healthy D2C business buys New efficiently and owns Repeat completely. A weak one keeps paying high taxes on customers it should already own.

But there is one structural problem with the ladder as it stands today. The jump from CRM (5–10%) to Adtech (20–25%) is a 15-percentage-point cliff, not a slope. There is no rung in between. When the brand’s owned channels fail to reach a customer in time — when attention decays, when the CRM journey stalls, when the email goes unopened, when the WhatsApp number goes stale — the next available route up the ladder is paid media at 20–25%. There is nowhere softer to land. Every customer the brand fails to hold on the 5–10% rung falls directly onto the 20–25% rung — or worse, onto the marketplace rung at 30-40+.

The cliff is not a bug in the ladder. It is the absence of a rung the brand does not yet have. We will return to that absence later in this essay.