Thinks 1956

Bloomberg: “The bigger culprit for the woes of recent grads is an imbalance in supply and demand that’s been quietly building for years: From 2004 to 2024, college completions in the US rose by 54%, according to Lightcast, a labor market analytics company, whereas entry-level jobs suitable for those graduates grew by just 42%. To make matters worse, what students are studying is out of sync with where the economy is creating jobs. The result: In 22 of 35 fields of study, the ratio of entry-level jobs per graduate declined over the past two decades, according to a Bloomberg analysis of Lightcast data. “We’ve never seen so many changes all at the same time and at this speed,” says Elena Magrini, the head of global research at Lightcast. “This is the first time where the education pathway to jobs is kind of broken.””

Decrypt: “Japan isn’t interested in building the next ChatGPT. [Recently], SoftBank, NEC, Honda, and Sony Group jointly formed a new company with one goal: build a trillion-parameter AI model that runs machines, not conversations. The move is a direct bet on what the community refers to as “Physical AI”: the idea that the next frontier isn’t language models that write your emails, but AI systems that control a robot arm, drive a car, or run a factory floor. Japan, with its deep industrial base and decades of robotics heritage, thinks it has a natural edge that Silicon Valley and Beijing can’t easily replicate.”

FT (in the context of Anthropic’s Mythos]: “AI is like the atomic bomb — once you invent the means to build one, you live in a different world.”

Mint: “Consumer brands are reworking their e-commerce marketing strategies as digital advertising becomes more expensive with diminishing incremental reach, prompting a shift away from scale-at-all-costs growth. Instead of relying heavily on marketplace (Amazon, Flipkart, etc.) ads and aggressive discounting, small brands across categories such as food and personal care are now dispersing spends across platforms including their own websites, investing more in brand-building, and focusing on retaining customers. “At scale, it becomes very expensive to advertise because you don’t have enough incremental reach available,” said Jatan Bawa, co-founder of Sauce VC-backed oral care brand Perfora.”

What Doesn’t Change in Marketing in the Age of AI (Part 5)

Ads, Distribution, and the New First-Party Layer

Why ads persist

Advertising will not disappear in the age of AI.

This is one of the easiest mistakes to make when a technology transition becomes noisy. People confuse changes in form with the disappearance of function. AI will change creative production, targeting, testing, workflow, and interface. It will not eliminate the basic need for brands to buy reach they do not own.

If anything, it may intensify that need.

When content becomes abundant, distribution becomes scarcer. This is the pattern across all media history. As production gets cheaper, the bottleneck moves elsewhere. In the AI era, it moves to trusted attention, verified identity, and channels where action can happen with confidence.

That is why advertising survives every major technology shift. Print did not kill radio. Radio did not kill television. Television did not kill digital. New surfaces emerge, older ones adapt, and the total need to buy attention grows because the number of messages competing for notice grows. In an AI world, every brand with access to the same tools produces roughly comparable creative. Distribution — the ability to place a message in front of a genuinely attentive human — becomes the scarce and therefore valuable resource.

The regulatory tailwind for first-party infrastructure

At the same time, the architecture of digital advertising is shifting in ways that favour owned, first-party infrastructure. GDPR, India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act, cookie deprecation, and the general tightening of data regulation are reducing the reliability of third-party inference. As AI makes behavioural inference from third-party signals noisier — more content, harder to separate signal from intent — the value of declared, verified, first-party identity rises.

The brand that owns a first-party attention surface — a live, engaged, consented audience operating on authenticated identity — is structurally advantaged in the ad market of the next decade. This is not a regulatory compliance argument. It is a commercial one. Verified first-party audiences will command a premium over probabilistic third-party inferences, and that premium will grow as regulation and AI-driven noise compound.

The combination that hasn’t happened

Commerce media — first-party attention monetised through in-context advertising — is already a $100 billion-plus category in the US, growing faster than traditional or digital advertising. Amazon, Walmart, and now brands in travel, finance, and hospitality have built significant ad businesses on one core asset: verified first-party attention linked to identity and purchase outcomes.

But all of it has been built on retailer websites and apps. Nobody has built it inside owned email at scale.

That gap — email plus ads plus action, assembled properly — is where NeoNet and ActionAds sit. The concept is not to stuff banners into email. It is to create action-based, first-party, authenticated media that operates inside a relationship channel the brand already owns. This is the Inbox Media Network.

Two ActionAd formats power the system. The One-Tap Subscribe ActionAd subscribes a customer to another brand’s NeoMails with a single tap — pre-filled email address, no landing page, no form, explicit consent logged at the moment of interaction. The form-fill ActionAd generates a verified lead inside the inbox — contact details, a preference, a qualification question — completed without the customer leaving the message. Both pay per completed action, not per impression. Both operate on authenticated identity, not probabilistic inference. The advertiser pays for demonstrated intent, not passive exposure.

NeoNet as cooperative distribution

Most advertising networks are adversarial by design. Brands bid against each other for the same audience. A platform sits in the middle extracting margin from every transaction. The brand does not own the relationship. It rents it at whatever price the market will bear.

NeoNet is built on a different premise. It is cooperative. Brands exchange access to their own active NeoMail audiences — first-party for first-party, no auction, no platform intermediary. A brand becomes a publisher when it carries a curated ActionAd in its own NeoMails. The same brand becomes an advertiser when it places ActionAds in other brands’ NeoMails to recover dormant customers or acquire new ones. Both directions happen on the same infrastructure.

The quality filter is structural and self-reinforcing. An identity enters the network only after opening at least one NeoMail. Dormant addresses sitting cold in a CRM are not the network. Live attention is the network. The audience receiving an ActionAd is not a stored list of addresses. It is a cohort of people who are actively opening emails, completing Magnets, and building Mu balances. That is a fundamentally more valuable audience than anything a conventional ad network delivers.

Recovery points backward: a customer cold for Brand A but still active inside Brand B’s NeoMails can be reached via a One-Tap ActionAd and returned without either brand entering a paid auction. Acquisition points forward: a customer new to Brand A can subscribe from inside Brand B’s audience with a single tap, creating a genuinely new, consented, verified relationship. Both directions run on the same infrastructure. The cooperative structure means no platform extracts rent from the transaction.

As AI makes programmatic targeting less reliable and first-party identity more valuable, cooperative networks built on authenticated attention become more powerful, not less. The open auction degrades as inference gets noisier. The cooperative exchange improves as the network grows and the quality filter holds.

The Magnet as the first-party signal engine

In an AI world, the highest-quality marketing signal is not passive exposure. It is a human choosing to do something. Answering, predicting, preferring, staking, clicking, subscribing: these are active signals that cannot be manufactured by content abundance alone.

The Magnet is how they are collected — one sixty-second interaction at a time. Mu is how they accumulate into a record of consistent engagement that becomes both a churn predictor and a loyalty indicator. ActionAds monetise the resulting attention surface. NeoNet routes that surface cooperatively across brands.

Remove the live attention layer, and the commercial architecture has nothing to operate on. This is why the system only works as a system. NeoMails create the surface. Magnets generate the signal. Mu builds the memory. ActionAds fund the loop. NeoNet extends it. Each element depends on the others.

The invariants as a system

The three parts of this series describe the same opportunity from three angles, and they connect.

Attention is permanent and scarce — and AI makes it scarcer by making everything around it abundant. Email is the structural owned channel that captures human attention without a platform in the middle — and its relative value increases as rented surfaces get noisier and more expensive. Advertising and distribution remain essential — and first-party, cooperative, action-based infrastructure is the form they take when the open auction degrades.

NeoMails, NeoNet, Magnets, Mu, and ActionAds are not separate product curiosities. They are the commercial expression of the same set of invariants: push, attention, owned identity, relationship memory, first-party distribution. Remove any one of them and the system weakens. Keep them together and they compound.

The closing argument

The AI conversation is dominated by questions about what changes. Who creates the content. How decisions get made. Which jobs disappear. Which interfaces win. These are real questions and they deserve serious answers.

But the most important strategic question is the one being asked less often: what stays true?

The permanent asymmetry between brands and customers. The finite budget of trusted human attention. The compounding value of owned relationships over rented ones. The need for distribution that does not require surrendering the relationship to a platform every time.

Everyone else is asking how to use AI to produce more. More content, more personalisation, more targeting, more automation. These are real gains. They are also crowded gains — every brand with the same tools achieves roughly the same marginal improvements, and the competitive advantage disappears as soon as the tool becomes standard.

The uncrowded question is the one this series has answered: what endures?

Build only on what changes, and you are always catching up. Build on what endures, and you get to compound.

The Inbox Media Network is the commercial architecture built on precisely those enduring layers — attention, owned identity, relationship continuity, and first-party distribution.

That is not a defensive position. It may be the most ambitious one available.

Thinks 1955

Benedict Evans: “The experience, product, value capture and strategic leverage in AI will all change an enormous amount in the next couple of years as the market develops. Big aggressive incumbents and thousands of entrepreneurs are trying to create new features, experiences and business models, and in the process try to turn foundation models themselves into commodity infrastructure sold at marginal cost. Having kicked off the LLM boom, OpenAI now has to invent a whole other set of new things as well, or at least fend off, co-opt and absorb the thousands of other people who are trying to do that.” [via Arnold Kling]

FT: “Are you the person who takes the time to explain to new hires on your team what everyone does? Are you the person who notices when a project is in danger of going wrong because two teams have different ideas of what is actually required? Do you know the name of the person on the third floor who can sort out the fiddly problem that has slowed down your colleague for weeks? If you answered yes to most of these questions, then you are doing “glue work”: you build relationships with people; you can see the bigger picture; you fix the organisational cracks and help to hold projects together…Now is a good time for managers everywhere to ask themselves a few questions. Who is doing the glue work on your team? Are you giving them credit and promotion for it? Are you making sure everyone is learning how to do some of this work? Because in the tech sector, AI hasn’t suddenly made those skills valuable to organisations — they always were. It has just made the fact impossible to ignore.”

Asymco: “As AI has emerged as a technology, we are in a strange position where the interface, born as a chatbot, suggested an infrastructure that is massive in scale. The magic sauce of GenAI isn’t so much the algorithm, which is quite a simple idea. It’s the scale of the data and computation that permits the illusion of intelligence. In developing the commercial idea, investors are imagining the device while investing in the infrastructure. In other words, the investors are poised to put trillions of dollars to work on what amounts to “the grid” without knowing exactly what the motor will be. The cash flows associated with infrastructures are very different from those of devices. Devices are iterated rapidly and evolve to changing tastes and discoveries of behavior. Infrastructures are built once, maintained and perhaps re-built but only after decades. Therefore financing for infrastructures is more likely through bonds (debt) rather than shares (equity). Returns are also much more subdued as the risk for infrastructures is lower. Regulation and relations with labor are also dramatically different.”

WSJ: “When everything from oil prices to ‘Survivor’ is worthy of a wager, everyone needs a bank of screens and a headset…There was a time when this kind of behavior would be called doomscrolling. Now, in the vernacular of our bet-on-anything era, it’s all part of monitoring the situation. People who’ve never worked on a trading floor are moving markets with informed wagers. Some are getting rich.”

What Doesn’t Change in Marketing in the Age of AI (Part 4)

Email, the Missing Relate Layer, and NeoMails – 2

AMP changes the category

Before introducing NeoMails, there is a technical shift worth naming: AMP for Email.

Most people still think of email as a static object — text, images, links, a call-to-action button leading somewhere else. AMP changes that category. It allows forms that submit inside the inbox, polls that respond in real time, quizzes that react immediately, dynamic content that updates on open, and actions that complete without the customer leaving the message.

A static email is a document. An interactive email is a product.

That shift is more significant than it first appears. A surface that can receive input and respond to it is a fundamentally different kind of thing from a document that can only be read. The implications for what email can do in a customer’s daily life are significant and mostly unexplored. NeoMails are built on this infrastructure.

NeoMails as the attention architecture

NeoMails are not a better email template. They are a different category of inbox interaction — one designed for the conditions AI creates.

The unit is the APU: BrandBlock, Magnet, Mu, ActionAd.

The BrandBlock gives the NeoMail identity. The brand’s voice, perspective, and world — before anything is asked of the reader. The Magnet gives it lift: a quiz, a prediction, a preference fork, a tiny challenge that earns engagement before anything is asked of the reader. Engaging with the Magnet earns Mu — the micro-reward currency that builds a visible streak and accumulates over time. The ActionAd funds the send — one curated, brand-approved in-email action unit per NeoMail, covering the cost of delivery and making the Relate message economically rational for the first time.

This architecture is exactly suited to what AI changes and what it does not.

AI makes content abundant. NeoMails are not mainly a content idea. AI makes personalisation cheaper. NeoMails are not mainly a targeting idea. AI makes creative production easier. NeoMails are not mainly a creative-format idea. They are an attention architecture — bounded, participatory, cumulative, self-funding.

Bounded: sixty seconds, completable, with a beginning and an end. There is a cognitive science finding worth naming here: the Zeigarnik effect. Incomplete tasks occupy working memory; complete tasks release it. An infinite scroll produces a form of low-grade anxiety — the sense of having consumed without finishing. A completed NeoMail produces something different: the mild satisfaction of having done a small thing. That satisfaction is not incidental to habit formation. It is the mechanism of it.

Participatory: the Magnet requires the human to do something — predict, choose, rate, answer. Participation generates a first-party signal that no AI-generated content can replicate. A choice expressed, a prediction staked, a preference registered: these are human signals of genuine attention. In an AI era, where passive exposure becomes cheap and abundant, active participation becomes the premium signal.

Cumulative: Mu builds a visible record of the relationship. From the customer’s point of view, the inbox usually has no memory — each send is a stranger introducing itself. Mu changes this. The balance in the subject line says: yesterday mattered. Showing up left a trace. The relationship has a history. Histories are harder to abandon than novelties.

Self-funding: the ActionAd covers the cost of delivery. A message that earns attention is also the message that funds itself. That single economic inversion is what makes the entire architecture viable at scale.

The Relate message as the human signal

When AI generates all the transactional and promotional content, the brand that sends something genuinely worth opening for its own sake stands out precisely because it is rare. A message that asks for nothing except a minute of genuine engagement becomes the rare signal that a human relationship is being maintained — a brand that is treating the customer as a person rather than a conversion target.

That is not a sentimental argument. It is a competitive one.

In an inbox increasingly populated by well-crafted machines talking at customers, the Relate message is the differentiator. Not better AI. Not smarter targeting. Simply: something worth opening when nothing urgent is happening.

Email did not fail because the channel declined. It failed because brands stopped having anything worth saying between transactions. NeoMails are the answer to that failure. And they are more relevant in an AI world than in the one that preceded it.

Thinks 1954

Manu Joseph: “Spare me the young, why should they matter for everything? They have no money, no clout. Even if it was true that they won’t read a magazine, which I don’t believe is true, why should that decide the survival of a product? I notice this fixation with the young in several businesses. It is as though there aren’t other kinds of people on this planet. That is odd when those businesses survive on other kinds of people. In cinema, television, dining, apparel, hospitality, social media and just about any business except hospitals and old-age homes, people at the helm worry a bit too much about the young—how to get them, or how to keep them. Entire nations are obsessed with the young. That insufferable buzzword, ‘demographic dividend,’ is all about this phenomenon. The value of the young is not only their fertility rate anymore, as the average age at which people become parents has been increasing. Their value is said to lie in their contribution to society, which I believe is overblown. They are merely loveable, and society is coming up with excuses to disguise its love for an adorable segment as a wise investment of time and money.”

Benoit Denizet-Lewis: “I’ve come to believe that the “self” in self-transformation is only half the story. Change is less about willpower than we imagine, more shaped by other people than we admit, and far more mysterious than the self-improvement industry can afford to sit with…In other words, we might think of self-transformation as a team sport.”

TheMaxSource: “In the last 12 months, something shifted in the tech-related job market and it didn’t make headlines. Just a quiet, consistent pattern showing up in job listings across tech related industries: ”The specialist titles are shrinking, and the broader ones are coming back.” Not because companies got lazy with job descriptions. Because the economic logic that created hyper-specialization in the first place — that scale required narrow focus — no longer holds the way it did. AI absorbed the repetitive execution. And suddenly, one person with range is worth more than two people who each own a slice.”

WSJ: “The idea behind silicon sampling is simple and tantalizing. Because large language models can generate responses that emulate human answers, polling companies see an opportunity to use A.I. agents to simulate survey responses at a small fraction of the cost and time required for traditional polling. Phone polling has become exponentially harder. Web polling is too uncertain. Silicon sampling removes the messy, costly part of asking people what they think. But this undermines the very idea of the opinion poll. Public opinion is used to guide policy, politics and social science, and it has value only insofar as it summarizes the beliefs and opinions of actual humans. Using simulations of human opinions in place of the real thing will only worsen our broken information ecosystem, and sow distrust. We should not turn to an artificial society to try to understand our real one.”

What Doesn’t Change in Marketing in the Age of AI (Part 3)

Email, the Missing Relate Layer, and NeoMails – 1

Why email survives every wave

Email has been declared dead many times. It was supposed to be replaced by social networks, then messaging apps, then push notifications, then mobile apps. Now, perhaps, by AI interfaces and agents.

And yet it remains.

That persistence is not nostalgia. It is structural. Email survives because it combines a set of properties that no other channel has managed to replicate together.

It is identity-linked: tied to a real, named person rather than a device ID, a cookie, or a probabilistic inference. It is portable: the same address works across every device, platform, and application, independent of any single ecosystem’s fate. It is permissioned: the customer chose to share it. It is universal: it requires no particular app to receive. And, crucially, it is not primarily governed by an external feed algorithm.

A social follower can disappear behind ranking logic. A mobile app can be deleted. A cookie decays. A device ID breaks. An email address persists. In a world where rented surfaces grow noisier and less reliable, those properties become increasingly valuable rather than increasingly quaint.

The problem with email is not that the channel failed. The problem is that the product built on the channel became too narrow.

The product failure: Sell and Notify only

Most brands use email in only two ways.

They Sell — the campaign message: launch, offer, discount, cart reminder, seasonal push, urgency, conversion. And they Notify — the transactional message: order confirmation, shipping update, password reset, account alert.

Both matter. Neither is enough.

Because most of a brand-customer relationship does not happen at the moment of purchase or immediately after it. Most of it exists in the long middle: when the customer is not actively shopping, not waiting for a receipt, not browsing the category, not in-market at all.

That is where the relationship either stays warm or starts to cool. And conventional email has almost nothing to say in that period except more extraction.

If every email either asks for something or confirms something, the inbox becomes a sequence of interruptions organised entirely around the brand’s agenda. The customer learns the pattern. They stop opening unless the offer is strong enough or the transaction is important enough. The relationship loses rhythm. Attention decays. Eventually the same customer appears in a Google or Meta auction — the brand pays twice and wonders why retention feels so weak despite all the automation.

This is not a channel failure. It is a product failure. The channel was reduced to two modes when it needed three.

The missing layer: Relate

What is missing is a third message class. Not Sell. Not Notify. But Relate.

A Relate message exists to keep the relationship alive between transactions. It does not need a campaign to justify it. It does not need a purchase to trigger it. It simply needs to be worth opening for its own sake — because it gives something before it asks for anything.

That sounds almost modest. It is in fact the structural missing piece in modern brand communication.

The absence of Relate explains more of marketing’s persistent problems than any other single factor. It explains silent drift — because customers have no reason to stay engaged when they are not buying. It explains the reacquisition trap — because brands that never Relate must reacquire attention through paid channels when they need it. It explains the episodic traffic problem — because a brand that only sends Sell and Notify messages only generates sessions during campaigns.

AI makes this worse, not better. If AI generates all the promotional and transactional content — and it will, reliably and cheaply — the brand’s communications become indistinguishable from a machine talking at the customer. More personalised, perhaps. More timely. But still fundamentally asking or confirming, never simply present. The Relate message becomes the rare signal that a human relationship is being maintained. In an AI world, that signal is differentiating in a way it has never previously been.

Thinks 1953

FT: “[Francis] Bacon articulated a new attitude to nature. As he famously wrote: “Knowledge itself is power.” Nature was not to be revered but interrogated, understood and ultimately controlled. His focus was what he called the “relief of man’s estate”: the systematic enlargement of human knowledge and human prosperity. That foundational ambition to “master nature” is arguably one of the most consequential ideas in history, for good and ill. It underlies the agricultural and industrial revolutions. It also sits behind modern demographic and ecological crises — and the technological revolution of our own age. Yet mastery, in Bacon’s sense, always invoked ambiguity. To understand nature is to gain power over it — but also to become newly dependent on the systems we create. Modern societies are not only masters of nature; they are also entangled in vast technological networks they can neither fully predict nor easily control.”

NYTimes: “Body weight workouts are a convenient and inexpensive way get in shape. But it’s easy to get bored with them or start to plateau. If you want to train your balance or build more explosive power, there is a simple way to level up your exercises by using a standard household step or even the curb outside. “That little bit of height can make an exercise easier or more difficult,” said Dr. Kyle Lau, team physician for the athletics department at the University of California, Los Angeles. For example, you can place your hands on the step to make push-ups easier. Or you can elevate your feet on one or even two steps to make them more challenging.”

WSJ: ““The diary’s dailiness sets it apart in the self-writing sea,” Ms. Rubiner observes. “While a memoir or formal autobiography aims to offer a retrospective story, the diary typically doesn’t, or can’t, because it is written from the middle of an unfolding life.” Having said as much, she hastens to clarify that entries needn’t be made daily for a diary to qualify; nor need the diarist use a physical notebook (some use video or apps); nor indeed need a diary contain personal reflections. The diaries of some consist of little more than, say, a dispassionate daily notation of the weather (my grandfather). The diaries of others (Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath) are rich, intimate and self-searching. Still others have charted terrible and turbulent periods of history, the most famous of these being the World War II writings of Anne Frank.”

Neil Borate: “Almost a decade after Coffee Can Investing, Saurabh Mukherjea says the idea is dead. Consumption has crawled. Those fabled moated compounders aren’t compounding. And India, he warns, is heading for a 1991-style crisis.”

What Doesn’t Change in Marketing in the Age of AI (Part 2)

Attention, Push, and the Permanent Asymmetry

The asymmetry that predates the internet

The most important fact in marketing is older than the internet.

The brand needs to reach the customer. The customer does not need to reach the brand.

Everything else is built on top of that.

It is a simple asymmetry, but it explains almost the entire history of marketing. Print, radio, television, direct mail, search, display, social media, push notifications, email — each new system is a new attempt to solve the same old problem: how does a brand get into the customer’s field of attention when the customer was not already looking for it?

That asymmetry does not disappear because AI arrives. It intensifies.

What AI does to scarcity

Content generation becomes easier, which means content supply rises sharply. When supply rises toward infinity, scarcity moves somewhere else. It moves to the human side of the equation. Trusted human attention becomes more valuable precisely because generated content becomes cheap.

This is the paradox of the AI era. Most people think AI will solve marketing’s hardest problems because it can generate more content, more quickly, more cheaply, more personally. In reality, AI solves many production problems while leaving the central relationship problem untouched. It may even make that problem worse. When every brand can generate competent, personalised content at scale, content stops being differentiating. The rare thing is no longer production. It is attention willingly given.

A person can only actively notice, remember, and respond to a limited number of brands and relationships in a given period. App usage data is instructive: people use roughly nine apps per day regardless of how many are installed. Inbox behaviour shows the same pattern — people read far fewer newsletters than they subscribe to. The human attention budget has always been finite. AI does not expand it. It merely increases the number of entities competing for it, while making each competitor more capable.

Why push doesn’t disappear

There is a fashionable tendency to assume that AI agents will make push obsolete. The story goes like this: customers will ask their agents what to buy, agents will compare options, and brands will compete inside agentic marketplaces rather than through direct messaging. Pull wins; push fades.

There is partial truth in this. Agents may become excellent at pull — at responding to expressed intent, researching options, and completing transactions on the human’s behalf. But brands do not live only in moments of pull. They also live in the vast stretches of time when the customer is not actively searching, not in-market, not comparing, not deciding. Pull handles active intent. It does not solve the problem of staying present when intent is absent.

That is what push is for. Push is how a brand reminds, signals, maintains, and accumulates familiarity between purchase moments.

And here is the more important point: even when agents mediate downstream decisions, those decisions are shaped by upstream human preferences, associations, and familiarity. An agent instructed to find the best coffee subscription will not choose randomly from an undifferentiated set. It will act on the preferences and brand familiarity its human principal has built up over time. Attention is upstream of the agent’s instruction. The brand that has maintained human attention wins the agent’s recommendation. The brand that has been absent does not.

AI moves the conversion downstream. It leaves the attention problem exactly where it is.

The owned channel premium

As AI floods rented surfaces — search, social, display, feeds, programmatic placements — with more content and more competition, the value of a direct, permissioned, algorithm-light channel rises. A channel where the brand does not need to win a bid every time. A channel where the message does not depend on an opaque ranking system. A channel where identity is known, not inferred.

This is not sentimentality about old media. It is arithmetic. When rented reach becomes more competitive and more expensive, owned reach becomes relatively more valuable. The brand that controls a direct line to a customer — a line the customer chose to open and can choose to close — holds something that no amount of AI-generated creative can substitute for.

What compounds

Here is the question most of the AI conversation is not asking: what compounds?

Production does not compound. A relationship does.

A customer who has encountered a brand consistently, positively, and meaningfully over six months is in a fundamentally different state from one who saw a perfectly generated ad yesterday. AI can create the ad. AI cannot manufacture six months of accumulated familiarity in one moment.

That difference matters enormously in marketing because brands are not built only through conversion events. They are built through repeated contact, remembered presence, low-pressure continuity, and trust that grows invisibly before it becomes measurable.

Attention compounds. Owned channels compound. Trust compounds. Memory compounds. AI can help produce the pieces that travel through those systems. It does not replace the systems themselves.

In an AI-saturated world, the signal that a human is genuinely attending to a brand becomes more valuable, not less. The company that can create, keep, and deepen that attention without paying a platform tax each time is building on something far more durable than content abundance.

So the question is not whether to use AI. Of course brands will use it. The question is whether, while everyone else uses AI to produce more, you are also building the layer that compounds.

That layer sits where attention, push, and relationship continuity meet. Which owned channel is best suited to host it?

That is where email enters.

Thinks 1952

Andy Kessler: “If you haven’t figured it out, the main export of the U.S. is our standard of living. It isn’t in decline but the envy of the world, hence the rush to our borders. You won’t find that export in economic statistics, but it drives demand for our technology, medical practices and more. The other thing we export is freedom, which drives innovation and lifts living standards elsewhere. Global growth and productivity will be so strong that we’re rapidly inventing robots and artificial intelligence to handle logistics.”

Sunder Pichai: “I’ve always internalized speed. Let’s call it latency for this purpose, and as one of the distinguishing features of a great product. Also, it almost always reflects the technical underpinnings of the product having been done well. There’s a different speed which matters, too, which is the speed of shipping and iteration and release cycles. Both are important.

WSJ: “Forget the keyboard and the mouse. In 25 years, most people will be using brain-computer interfaces to control devices with their thoughts, says Bin He, professor of biomedical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. These interfaces will be able to interpret brain activity and convert people’s intentions into commands that a computer can understand. “The brain-computer interface will become a technology like the smartphone, where the vast majority of people have one,” says He. “It will make everything so convenient: You just have a thought, and then you control your environment.” In 25 years, He says, billions of people will be using brain-computer interfaces to do everything from messaging friends to switching on the lights and making coffee.”

Greg Brockman (OpenAI): “When we look at the list, there’s consumer, which you can think of it as many things, but there’s a personal assistant — something that knows you, that’s aligned with your goals, it’s going to help you achieve whatever it is that you want in your life. There’s also creative expression and entertainment and many other applications. On the business side, maybe if you zoom out, it looks more like: You have a hard task, can AI go do it? Does it have all the context to do all these things? For us, it’s very clear that the stack rank includes two things at the top. One is the personal assistant, the other is the AI that can go and solve hard problems for you. And when we look at the compute we have, we are not even going to have enough compute to fund those two things. And then once we start adding in many other applications, many other things that AI is going to be very useful for and is going to help people with, we just can’t possibly get to all of them.”