Thinks 1911

WSJ: ““Humans need fun,” Keza MacDonald writes in “Super Nintendo: The Game-Changing Company That Unlocked the Power of Play.” “We are playful animals.” That’s the thesis of her history of Nintendo, the company that during the 1980s changed videogames by making “Donkey Kong,” “Super Mario Bros.,” “The Legend of Zelda” and, yes, “Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out!!” Over the next 30 years, the company would release several new game systems, including the Game Boy hand-held system, the Wii and the Switch. These were usually not the most technically advanced devices on the market but often the most affordable and approachable. Ms. MacDonald, who writes the “Pushing Buttons” newsletter for the Guardian, argues that Nintendo “represents an uncomplicatedly fun approach to video games, a bridge back to the central joy and excitement of childhood play in a world that is increasingly pressured and fraught.” Ms. MacDonald’s love for the company—the book ends with a ranking of her 50 favorite Nintendo games—can veer toward blinkered adoration. But her enthusiasm can also be catching.”

Venu PSV: “Disruption is a foundational feature of business. Businesses become great by overcoming disruption, protecting their moats and delivering returns…There is clearly a need for a model that gives space for opposite forces to be weighed in. HiHo model looks like 4 key dimensions – Help, Hinder, Input and Output. To the Help Vs Hinder and Input vs Output dimensions, we add 1st and 2nd order effects to allow for time lapse that supports evolution, adoption and adaption.”

NYTimes: “For a quarter century, India has made itself the world’s back office, providing an educated, English-speaking work force to do tasks more cheaply than in the United States or Europe. The industry today employs more than six million people and is worth nearly $300 billion, more than 7 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. Now, A.I. threatens to do to India what its outsourcing model did to the rest of the world: replace hundreds of thousands of office workers. Economies everywhere are bracing for an era in which A.I. tools automate entire categories of white-collar work, but the brunt could fall hardest on India, undermining two decades of effort to climb the value chain and establish a place in the global tech world.”

WSJ: “The workplace can be a tricky place to navigate. Almost everything we do at work—identifying the experts, managing tough feedback from a boss, figuring out how to work in teams made up of different personalities—comes down to our ability to manage relationships. And to do so, we need savvy social skills. But the newest workplace generation—Gen Z—is unlike anything we’ve seen. Through a combination of having fewer real-world relationship experiences, spending their education years in remote environments, and learning to communicate largely through asynchronous methods, these 20-somethings have missed opportunities to develop the skills needed to navigate the complex world of work. The result is that many are woefully unprepared for surviving—let alone thriving—in their jobs.”

WePredict: Where Email Attention Becomes Prediction Power

1

Commentary – 1

Prediction Markets – more specifically Polymarket and Kalshi – have risen dramatically in popularity in the past year. In late 2024, I had written about a hypothetical market called WePredict built with play money (Mu). In this series, I want to expand on the idea and connect it with NeoMails.

**

Every brand has millions of email addresses. Almost nobody opens them. This essay introduces a system designed to change that: Magnets — inbox-native micro-experiences that create curiosity and agency; Mu — a micro-currency earned through daily attention, not spending; and WePredict — a play-money prediction market where Mu is staked on real-world outcomes. Two surfaces, one attention economy. Mu is earned in the inbox, spent on WePredict. Together, they transform email from a push channel into a pull system — and from a cost centre into decision infrastructure.

Core Architecture: Two Surfaces, One Currency

This story only makes sense if we start with the architecture.

Email inbox = the earn surface. You earn Mu by interacting with NeoMails and Magnets: quizzes, polls, preference forks, prediction teasers.

WePredict website = the burn surface. You spend (stake) Mu on prediction markets, leaderboards, and forecasting competitions.

Mu = the bridge. Same identity, same wallet, portable across both surfaces. The MuCount in the email subject line (µ.1847) is a reminder that you have prediction power waiting to be used on WePredict.

Think of airline miles: you earn on flights, you burn on upgrades and hotels. Nobody redeems miles inside the aircraft cabin. The separation of surfaces is a strength, not a limitation.

**

Before we get to my thinking, here is a review of some of the recent commentary on prediction markets.

Coindesk: “Growth in prediction markets is surging as traders seek more precise ways to price and hedge discrete events, from elections to rate decisions, without relying on blunt proxy trades. Prediction markets are running at an annualized revenue rate above $3 billion, up from about $2 billion in December, and could reach $10 billion by 2030, according to a [recent] report by U.S. bank Citizens… Prediction markets have rapidly moved beyond niche betting to a growing ecosystem of sophisticated trading platforms that aggregate real-world event probabilities. Leading players include Kalshi, a CFTC-regulated U.S. exchange for event contracts, and Polymarket, one of the largest decentralized markets covering politics, sports and economics. These platforms are drawing significant volume and attention from mainstream finance and regulatory bodies alike, reflecting broader growth and the shift toward institutional relevance… Prediction markets allow investors to hedge discrete event risk, from inflation surprises to M&A approvals, without relying on proxy instruments such as index futures or options, reducing basis risk. By isolating specific outcomes, they provide targeted risk transfer and real-time, capital-weighted probability signals, Citizens said.”

The Conversation: “Yes or no? It’s a simple question that now drives more than US$13 billion (£9.7 billion) a month on prediction markets – companies like Polymarket, PredictIt and Kalshi. These firms run digital platforms that use blockchain technology to let anonymous users gamble on uncertainty and place “predictions” rather than bets. Users can buy a yes or no “event contract” on anything from strikes on Iran to the most popular show on Netflix and the return of Jesus. Politics and popular culture have merged, with reports that Kalshi and others are becoming a new “stock market for trends” in the so-called “attention economy”. Everything is now monetised.”

Bloomberg calls them economic oracles: “The rise of prediction markets offers statisticians and social scientists the kind of help that astronomers get from a new space telescope or particle physicists from a bigger supercollider. We finally get to test theories and resolve questions that people, held back by poor data, have been wrangling over for decades. Most importantly: Are prediction markets superior to experts and market instruments in forecasting future macroeconomic events? And can the prices on platforms including Polymarket and Kalshi Inc. guide important individual and social policy decisions? Earlier venues that allowed people to wager on the outcomes of economically relevant events were basically laboratory studies with narrow participation, infrequent trading and low stakes. Gambling markets avoided these problems but seldom considered questions that generated data comparable to implied financial market prices or expert judgments… Prediction markets are evolving rapidly, and artificial intelligence is coming up in the rear review mirror. With more trading volume, contracts, liquidity and users, prediction markets should up their game. But AI is nipping at their heels already. While AI prediction algorithms have not yet matched superforecasters, they’re moving up the leaderboard rapidly. In fact, an elite team of human forecasters at online prediction platform Metaculus puts a 95% probability on AI beating them — and all other humans — in forecasting by 2030.”

2

Commentary – 2

Beincrypto: “The core argument for prediction markets is behavioural. Exit polls and surveys suffer from a well-documented problem: respondents often give answers they think sound reasonable, or answers that reflect who they want to win rather than who they think will win. There’s no cost to being wrong on a survey form. Prediction markets eliminate that gap entirely. Every probability reflected in a market price represents someone who was willing to risk actual capital on that outcome. “It takes conviction to place a prediction or a bet,” George Tung, founder of ClashPicks and host of the widely followed CryptosRUs channel, told BeInCrypto. “You have to be pretty sure that something’s going to happen for you to actually put down real money.” That conviction makes the data generated by prediction markets fundamentally different in quality. It isn’t sentiment, it’s skin in the game.”

NYTimes: “Customers log onto a website and place bets of any amount by buying what’s known as a contract — the “yes” option on the Iran question, for example. These contracts fluctuate like stocks, with the price moving between $0 and $1. The price reflects the market’s view on how likely an event is to happen. A price of $0.20 suggests a 20 percent likelihood, while $0.90 suggests a 90 percent likelihood. The payout arrives when an event occurs and the value of the correct contract rises to $1. If a savvy customer bought 100 of those at $0.10 each (a $10 outlay), he or she would collect $100 in winnings. Unlike sports books, prediction markets do not serve as the “house,” taking the opposite side of a bet. They match the buyers on each side, generating revenue by charging trading fees.

More from Bloomberg: “Both Polymarket and Kalshi pitch themselves as sources of truth in a time of epistemic precarity. [Polymarket’s chief executive officer, Shayne] Coplan says his platform is a guide for “when you’re thinking about the world, you’re thinking about government, and you’re thinking about macro trends and headwinds that could impact your life.” Kalshi co-founder and CEO Tarek Mansour says prediction markets “take debate from the realm of subjective emotion to the realm of objective math. And that’s why it ends up being a little bit more truthful… Just as prices in a stock market aggregate information, so do prices in prediction markets. In an election market, for example, one bettor might have analyzed a candidate’s county-by-county support. Another might have created a sophisticated turnout model. Another might learn that a candidate is sick. Another might even have conducted a poll. No single person will have access to all of this. But when they place bets based on their information, it all gets channeled into a single figure.”

Wired: “Advocates argue that these platforms democratize access to commodities trading and are useful tools for forecasting the future. And at the end of the day, they say, adults should be able to do what they want with their money. The fundamental difference between a prediction market and a casino is that “on Kalshi, there is no house, users trade against each other. Users benefit from this: They get fair pricing, the ability to cash out at any time for fair market value, and winners are never banned or limited,” says Kalshi spokesperson Jack Such. But critics say that prediction markets, at least in their current form, are exploitative. “This is illegal gambling,” says former New Jersey attorney general Matt Platkin, who recently launched a boutique law firm focused on consumer protection cases. The industry is “unregulated, untaxed, unsupervised,” he adds.”

FT: “Prediction markets could yet serve a useful financial function, with careful policing. In theory, they harness the wisdom of crowds by forcing punters to put money behind their beliefs. In doing so, they can help to price risk in markets and provide investors and companies with unique opportunities to hedge against an array of events in real time. Their appeal for forecasting is particularly strong in an era of information overload and geopolitical upheaval… [But] insider bets, low liquidity and regulatory gaps complicate efforts to turn wagers into financial tools.”

**

WePredict is not trying to replicate Polymarket’s precision on geopolitical events. It is trying to create a mass-participation forecasting system powered by an attention-earned currency — where the primary value lies not in the accuracy of individual predictions, but in the engagement and intelligence signals generated by millions of people predicting daily on topics they care about. The foundational research on whether play-money markets can match real-money accuracy is mixed but instructive – something we will discuss later in the essay.

3

Email’s Attention Problem — The Channel Everyone Has, Nobody Uses

Every consumer brand in India sits on a database of millions of email addresses. Collected over years through purchases, sign-ups, app downloads, and loyalty programmes, this should be a direct line to the customer — owned, free to use, and available at scale. In practice, it is one of the most underperforming assets in marketing.

For most brands, open rates live in the teens. Across the brands we work with at Netcore, the pattern is stark: engaged cohorts decay sharply quarter to quarter. Customers who click in December are largely absent by March. The database grows in size while the active audience shrinks.

The problem is not content or timing or segmentation. Those matter, but they are optimisations within a fundamentally broken model. Email operates on push: brands send, customers ignore. A subject line is a plea. A campaign is a one-way broadcast. There is no native reason for the customer to come back.

Compare this with the channels that command daily attention. WhatsApp works because every message might be from someone who matters. Instagram works because the feed is an endless stream of variable rewards — a friend’s photo, a reel that surprises, a story that expires in 24 hours. Each of these channels has built an architecture for return: curiosity, social connection, progress, and unpredictability that make checking feel worth doing.

Email has none of this. It has reach, but no magnetism. It has access, but no pull. It is a 1990s channel running inside a 2020s attention economy.

The standard response is to improve what already exists: better subject lines, send-time optimisation, sharper segmentation. These are all attempts to optimise the push. They may lift a metric, but they do not change the underlying behaviour: email is still something people tolerate, not something they return to.

Here is the reframe: email does not need better campaigns. It needs an economy of attention — a system where value earned inside the inbox has a destination outside it. Where opening an email is not the end of something (a message read, a link clicked) but the beginning of something (a game entered, a streak continued, a prediction placed).

This is the idea behind three interconnected concepts: Magnets, Mu, and WePredict. Mu is earned in the inbox (via Magnets) and spent on WePredict — two surfaces, one attention economy.

4

Mu — An Attention Currency, Not a Loyalty Programme

Mu is easiest to misunderstand if you approach it like loyalty. Loyalty programmes reward spending. Mu rewards attention.

Mu (µ) is a micro-currency earned through the simple act of showing up and engaging. Every meaningful interaction inside a brand’s email earns Mu: answering a quiz question, completing a poll, sharing a preference, responding to a prediction prompt. It operates in small denominations — paise-scale, not rupee-scale — because habit is built on frequency, not grand prizes. Lightweight actions earn a little; deeper interactions like surveys or detailed feedback earn more.

Mu is not cashback. It is not a discount coupon. It is not an airline-miles clone where you hoard points for months and then discover you need a ridiculous balance for a trivial voucher.

The distinction from loyalty is worth stating plainly.

Loyalty rewards the transaction. Mu rewards the relationship. Loyalty points accumulate when you buy something. Mu accumulates when you pay attention. It fills the gap between purchases — the weeks or months where a brand has no engagement lever at all. Most customer relationships are 95% silence punctuated by occasional transactions. Mu is designed for the silence.

Loyalty is infrequent and high-denomination. Mu is daily and small-denomination. You earn loyalty points a few times a year. You earn Mu every day. The compounding effect of daily engagement is what produces habit. The smallest unit of consistent behaviour compounds into the largest change over time.

Loyalty is designed to be hoarded. Mu is designed to be spent. Most loyalty programmes fail because redemption is an afterthought. You accumulate 30,000 points over two years and discover you can exchange them for a ₹500 voucher that expires next month. The earn side works; the burn side is a disappointment.

Mu is also pan-brand by design. No single brand, on its own, generates enough daily interaction to create a vibrant micro-rewards economy. The network does. Mu earned across different brands accumulates in one wallet, creating momentum and meaning that no individual brand’s loyalty programme can match.

The behavioural mechanics are well-understood. The visible MuCount in the email subject line (µ.1847) acts as a cue — a reminder before the email is even opened that something has been accumulating. The growing balance creates a sense of progress. Streak mechanics amplify this — a 14-day engagement streak creates loss aversion that makes missing a day feel genuinely uncomfortable. And the Ledger, visible in every email’s footer, provides evidence of showing up: a tangible record of the relationship.

But here is the critical insight: a currency that can only be earned and never meaningfully spent is not a currency. It is a counter. And counters do not create habit. Mu needs burn — and the ideal burn must be (1) continuous, not a one-shot redemption that ends the loop; (2) engaging, not a sterile transaction; and (3) forward-pulling, creating a reason to come back tomorrow.

This is where WePredict will make the difference.

5

Magnets — Earning Attention Without Begging for It

If Mu is the currency, Magnets are the earning mechanism — but more importantly, Magnets are how email shifts from broadcast to participation.

A Magnet is an inbox-native micro-experience — typically 10 to 60 seconds — that creates curiosity, demands a response, and delivers instant feedback. It is not content to be passively consumed. It is a prompt that asks the customer to do something: answer, choose, predict, compare, decide. That act of responding — however small — is what earns Mu and what transforms the email from a broadcast into a conversation.

Magnets are not gamification gimmicks. They are commitment devices. They transform a passive recipient into an active participant. Why they work is almost embarrassingly human:

Micro-commitment: Answering a question, even a trivial one, creates psychological investment. Once you have committed to a response, you are more likely to stay engaged to see the outcome. This is why quiz shows are compelling — the act of guessing, not the prize, holds attention.

Instant feedback: The result is immediate. Answer a quiz question, see whether you were right. Share a preference, see what the crowd chose. The gap between action and feedback is seconds, not days. This rapid loop is what social media mastered and email has never attempted.

Continuity: The best Magnets create a bridge to tomorrow. A prediction that resolves in 48 hours. A quiz streak that builds over days. A leaderboard that updates with each email opened. These forward connections turn a single email into a node in an ongoing programme.

Status and progress: Streaks, levels, and leaderboard positions make attention feel like achievement. A 30-day engagement streak is something people protect. A top-100 ranking is something people share.

A few Magnet types, in brief. A daily quiz delivers questions with instant scoring and leaderboards — it borrows from the enduring appeal of television quiz shows, except it plays inside your inbox. A preference fork presents two options — “Which would you choose: this or that?” — and shows the crowd’s response instantly, revealing brand affinity without feeling like a survey.

And then there is the prediction teaser — the Magnet that bridges the two surfaces. Inside the email, the customer sees a prompt: “Will RCB make the IPL playoffs? 58% say Yes on WePredict.” They cannot stake Mu inside the email — that happens on the WePredict website. But they can see the crowd sentiment. They can feel the pull. The email creates the itch; the website lets them scratch it.

Every one of these interactions is more than an engagement metric. It is a voluntary, zero-party data point — more honest than a survey (because the customer responds for their own enjoyment), more specific than clickstream data (because it captures a preference, not just a behaviour), and more frequent than a purchase signal. Over time, Magnets turn a passive email list into an active, self-updating intelligence layer. This is a theme that pays off fully in the intelligence dividend.

6

India’s Prediction Opportunity — Why Now, Why Here

Prediction is woven into Indian daily life. Cricket outcomes. Monsoon arrival. Movie openings. Festival demand. Product launches. People predict constantly — informally, socially, casually. Over chai, in office WhatsApp groups, at family dinners. Prediction is social currency in India, and it always has been.

The commercial validation of this instinct is everywhere. Dream11 proved that tens of millions of Indians will engage daily with prediction mechanics if given the chance. The informal prediction economy — friends, office pools, social media — demonstrates an appetite that far exceeds any formal platform’s reach. And globally, prediction markets have moved from academic curiosity to mainstream legitimacy: Polymarket and Kalshi have demonstrated that aggregating crowd forecasts can match or outperform expert analysis and traditional polling. The Iowa Electronic Markets have been running since the late 1980s, consistently showing that diverse crowds produce reliable probability estimates.

What is missing is not interest. What is missing is a format that is mass-market, low-friction, and designed for fun and forecasting rather than speculation.

This is the space WePredict is designed to fill. And the design choice at its core is deliberate: WePredict runs entirely on Mu — attention-earned, not money-risked. No real money enters or leaves the system. The barrier to participation is zero: anyone who opens their email can play. The system is designed for fun, forecasting, and collective intelligence — not speculation.

“But prediction markets only work with real money.”

This is the most common criticism — and it deserves a straight answer.

Real money is one way to create seriousness. But it is not the only way. The deeper principle is: predictions get better when forecasters have consequences. Money is a consequence. So is reputation. So is the loss of a scarce currency you had to work for. WePredict uses earned scarcity to create consequence.

Mu is not free. It is earned through daily attention — opens, quizzes, polls, streaks. A customer who has built a balance of 2,000 Mu over weeks of engagement has invested real time and consistency. Staking 200 Mu on a prediction feels like a real decision because those 200 Mu represent mornings spent engaging, streaks maintained, quizzes answered. Behavioural research consistently shows that people treat earned rewards with the same care as modest cash outlays — the endowment effect does not distinguish between money and effort.

Second, social stakes fill the gap that financial stakes leave. Leaderboards, Predictor Scores, Circle-level competitions, and public track records create reputational accountability that, for daily engagement, is often more motivating than money. Platforms like Metaculus and Good Judgment Open have demonstrated that reputation-based incentive systems produce serious, thoughtful forecasting without a single rupee at stake.

Third — and this is the insight most people miss — the purpose of WePredict is not to replicate the accuracy of a financial prediction market. Polymarket and Kalshi are designed to be precise probability machines for high-stakes events. WePredict is designed to be an engagement engine that also produces useful intelligence signals. A prediction market that is 80% as accurate as Polymarket but has 100 times the participation generates far more aggregate signal — because the wisdom of crowds improves with the diversity and size of the crowd, not just the intensity of each individual’s conviction. Play money enables mass participation. Mass participation enables better crowd intelligence. This is not a compromise; it is the entire point.

The claim is not “play money is identical to real money”. The claim is: attention-earned currency + reputation can produce serious forecasting at mass scale, without turning the product into a financial instrument. That is the India-friendly insight: you preserve the fun and the forecasting, and you keep the system accessible to everyone.

7

How WePredict Works — A Simple Walkthrough

Let us demystify prediction markets with a simple story that shows the two surfaces working together.

Priya opens her morning NeoMail from a fashion brand she follows. The subject line reads “µ.1247 | Your Daily Style IQ.” Inside, there is a three-question quiz about sustainable fashion (the day’s Magnet). She answers all three, earning some Mu. Her streak counter ticks up to 23 days.

Below the quiz, she sees a prediction teaser: “Will RCB beat CSK on Friday? 62% say Yes on WePredict.” She has an opinion. She taps through.

On WePredict, she is already logged in — same account, same Mu wallet. She navigates to the IPL section and finds the market: “RCB vs CSK, 28 February: Will RCB win?” Two outcomes — Yes and No. The current prices tell her what the crowd thinks: Yes shares are at 62 Mu, No shares at 38 Mu. These prices are live probabilities. A Yes price of 62 means the crowd currently believes there is roughly a 62% chance RCB will win.

Priya stakes 100 Mu on Yes. Her purchase slightly nudges the Yes price upward — now 63 — reflecting her added confidence. Her Mu wallet drops, and her WePredict portfolio shows her new position.

Over the next two days, she checks the market — sometimes through a teaser in another NeoMail, sometimes by visiting WePredict directly. On match day, RCB wins comfortably. Her Yes shares pay out at 100 Mu each. She nets 38 Mu per share — the difference between her purchase price and the full payout. Her Mu balance grows. She looks for the next market.

That is it. The loop is simple: email creates the habit and earns Mu; WePredict turns Mu into a game of forecasting; resolution creates continuity — tomorrow matters.

A few plain-language mechanics:

Markets are questions about future events with clearly defined outcomes. “Will X happen?” with Yes and No is the simplest form.

Prices are probabilities. Each outcome has a price in Mu. Prices always sum to 100 across all outcomes. As more people stake on one outcome, its price rises and the other falls.

The Automated Market Maker (AMM) ensures you can always buy or sell shares, with the price adjusting smoothly based on demand. Unlike a stock exchange, you do not need a counterparty. The algorithm is always available.

Resolution is how markets close. When the event occurs, the outcome is verified against pre-declared public sources. Correct predictions pay out; incorrect ones do not.

What people predict, especially in early days, stays in safe, culturally resonant categories: sports (IPL, cricket internationals, football leagues), entertainment (box office results, award winners), culture and lifestyle (product launches, trending topics, seasonal milestones), and public events that resolve cleanly (weather records, exam result windows).

What WePredict Is Not

WePredict is not real-money betting. Mu is earned through email engagement, not deposited from a bank account. There is no cash-out — Mu is spent within the ecosystem, never converted to money. It is not financial trading: no derivatives, no leverage, no margin. It is not surveillance: participation is voluntary; predictions are self-expression, not data extraction. It is built for fun, forecasting, and collective intelligence — and to make email engagement genuinely rewarding.

8

The Intelligence Dividend — Why Predictions Are Data Gold

Now we get to the section that turns WePredict from “fun game” into “strategic rethink”.

The core insight is simple: predictions reveal expectations. Expectations are forward-looking. They are often more valuable than preferences and more actionable than behaviour.

This is what makes predictions fundamentally different from the two other data types that marketers rely on. Behavioural data (clicks, purchases, browsing history) tells you what someone did. It is backward-looking — useful, but a record of the past. Survey data tells you what someone says. It is forward-looking, but unreliable — people give the answer they think you want. Prediction data tells you what someone expects. It is forward-looking and honest, because the Mu stake — even as play money — activates accountability. You are not telling a researcher what they think they want to hear. You are committing to a forecast that will be publicly resolved.

Aggregated across thousands of users, these predictions become remarkable decision inputs. Predicting that a new phone will outsell another reveals brand affinity. Forecasting monsoon intensity reveals hyperlocal context that shapes seasonal purchasing. Predicting when a major sale will begin reveals purchase timing expectations. Predicting a team’s success reveals passion points and emotional identity.

Consider what becomes possible. If a cluster of customers predicts that monsoon will arrive early in Maharashtra, a retail brand can adjust seasonal campaign timing. If crowd forecasts on a product launch show genuine excitement (heavy Mu staking, high Yes prices), that is a demand signal more honest than any pre-launch survey. If prediction patterns reveal that a particular customer segment has high accuracy on technology topics, that segment becomes a valuable cohort for tech brand partnerships.

And because WePredict and NeoMails share the same identity layer, the intelligence is cross-surface. You know what someone engages with in email (brand affinity, content preferences, quiz performance) and what they predict on WePredict (expectations, risk appetite, domain knowledge). The combination is far richer than either alone. It is not “more data”. It is better understanding.

Attention → Signals → Predictions → Intelligence. This is the value chain that transforms email from a cost centre into decision infrastructure.

A note on quality controls, because intelligence is only as good as the system’s integrity. Resolution transparency is non-negotiable: every market states its resolution source upfront. Persistent Predictor Scores mean that forecasts from consistently accurate users carry more signal. Multi-account detection and stake pattern monitoring prevent gaming. And an editorial policy governs which categories are offered.

9

Getting Started — How the Flywheel Begins

The architecture is elegant on paper. The honest question is: how does this start?

The cold-start challenge is real. The earn side (NeoMails with Magnets) and the burn side (WePredict) must both exist for either to work. A prediction market with no Mu to stake is empty. An email currency with nowhere to spend it is meaningless. This is a bootstrapping challenge, not a launch-day miracle.

The sequence we envision is deliberately narrow.

Seed the earn habit. Launch a daily NeoMail with one high-quality Magnet — a quiz or a prediction teaser — to a small, engaged cohort. The goal is not scale; it is habit. A few thousand users earning Mu daily, building streaks, seeing their balance grow.

Open WePredict narrowly. Launch the website with a tight category set: cricket, entertainment, and a handful of public events with clear resolution sources. Simple binary markets. The initial markets should be hand-curated for quality. Better to have ten excellent markets than a hundred mediocre ones.

Build retention before scale. Streaks, leaderboards, and Circle-level social competition create retention before you need growth. A user who has maintained a 30-day streak and ranks in the top 50 of their friend Circle has social capital invested in the system.

Stabilise attention. Once daily engagement is measurable and consistent, the system can support self-funding economics through one non-intrusive, action-first ad per email — relevant to the audience, enabling a useful action without leaving the inbox.

Expand. More prediction categories. More partner brands contributing NeoMails. Deeper market types. Community-proposed markets. Over time, the system grows from a curated experience into a platform with network effects.

One structural advantage of the two-surface architecture deserves emphasis: the flywheel can spin from either entry point. Users who discover WePredict directly — through social sharing of predictions, leaderboard virality, or organic search — need Mu to play. That need pulls them into the NeoMails ecosystem to earn. Users who start with NeoMails see prediction teasers that pull them to WePredict. Each surface feeds the other. Growth compounds from both directions — a resilience that single-surface systems do not have.

None of this works without trust. A prediction platform that cannot be trusted will not sustain engagement regardless of its game mechanics.

Resolution transparency: Every market states its resolution source before a single Mu is staked. No judgement calls.

Anti-abuse: Multi-account detection, bot prevention, and stake pattern monitoring ensure the system rewards genuine forecasting, not gaming.

Topic guardrails: A clear editorial policy governs what markets are offered. Some topics are off-limits — anything that could cause harm, invite manipulation, or create perverse incentives.

No cash-out, ever. Mu is earned through attention and spent within the ecosystem. This is not a temporary constraint or a regulatory workaround. It is a design principle.

A student in Patna plays on the same field as a professional in Pune.

Closing Thought

Email has been waiting for its “why you return” moment. Not another campaign. Not another optimisation trick. A reason.

Magnets create participation. Mu turns participation into progress. WePredict gives progress a destination — and turns attention into forecasting, and forecasting into intelligence.

If we get this right, the inbox stops being a place messages go to die, and becomes the start of something people actually want to do every day.

Thinks 1910

NYTimes: “Tai Chi is a traditional Chinese martial art with complex, flowing poses — known as forms — that integrate movement, breath and mindfulness. Typically, Tai Chi walking (or Tai Chi gait) is the first thing that new students learn. “It’s the most fundamental movement for Tai Chi practice,” said Feng Yang, an associate professor of biomechanics, kinesiology and health at Georgia State University, who practices and studies Tai Chi. When you walk normally, you push off from one step to the next, using momentum to propel you forward. Tai Chi walking takes away the pushing, slowing everything down until you have total control of each movement. “Some people call Tai Chi gait a catlike walk,” Dr. Yang said. “You need to walk very slowly and silently.””

McKinsey’s questions for growth leaders: “Are our growth aspirations and commitments bold enough to allow us to grow faster and more profitably than the market? Do our resource allocations match our growth priorities? How many independent growth engines do we actually have today—and how many rely entirely on the core? Which adjacencies genuinely build on our strengths, and which are distractions dressed up as growth? Where can AI and agentic AI help us build up our competitive advantages? Which strategically critical capabilities should we build organically, and which would benefit from being developed through thoughtful partnerships or acquisitions?”

WSJ: “AI-written code may replace minor applications, but it isn’t dependable enough to write anything essential on its own. I talk to a lot of customers, and none has yet suggested they might vibe-code a critical system. In the end, AI-generated code may do more to lower costs for software companies than it does to lower prices for their consumers. The software industry will survive its second free-code scare. As Safra Catz of Oracle said in 2012, “If you are in this business long enough, you hear about a thousand things that are going to kill you. Open source? Yeah, we are not dead yet.””

NYTimes: “In the future that Elon Musk envisions, humans won’t just live on Mars. They will also never have to work again. Money will be irrelevant. And everything they could ever want will be immediately accessible. This is what Mr. Musk calls “sustainable abundance,” a post-scarcity society where humans have created technologies so ubiquitous and so powerful that they have eliminated the need for labor.”

Thinks 1909

NYTimes: “Planning a strength training regimen can feel overwhelming. You have to work your upper and lower body, focus on mobility and build grip strength if you have time. Wouldn’t it be easier to if you could train multiple regions at once? That’s the logic behind combination exercises, which string together two or more moves, making it easier to cover more muscle groups quickly. This not only works the targeted muscles, it also hits smaller, supporting ones during the transitions from one move to the next, said Katy Bowman, a movement teacher in Carlsborg, Wash., and author of “Move Your DNA.””

Danny Crichton: “No discussion of tech media can get past this basic traffic fact: in the AI world, Google and social no longer refer traffic, which means that the vast majority of readers just never find you in the first place.”

Aaron Zamost: “When I use these [AI coding] tools, I conclude an imaginative, future-forward company may want to increase hiring, at least of people who know how to use them creatively. In many or even most scenarios, the bottleneck that prevents the discovery of what your product should be or how you should improve the one you have is the time and effort it takes to sandbox and try out new ideas and the social blocking that occurs in meetings. Like the individual-focused PC—as opposed to the “efficiency”-oriented mainframes that preceded it—these tools mostly empower the individual to leapfrog these impediments.”

FT: “Academics at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business have been doing ethnographic research into how technology workers are using generative AI. Some will tell you that ethnographic business research is both the worst kind of business research and the worst kind of ethnography, but I admit to a soft spot for this stuff. What the researchers found was the opposite of Adams’ morose Vogon guard: the minutes are amazing but the hours are terrible. “In micro moments of prompting, iterating and experimenting, people talked about momentum and a sense of expanded capability,” researcher Xingqi Maggie Ye explained. “But when they stepped back and reflected on their broader work experience, a different tone sometimes emerged. They described feeling busier, more stretched, or less able to fully disconnect.” These tech workers felt that generative AI was making them dramatically more productive and capable — but they were also trying to do more, voluntarily working longer hours, and hurtling towards burnout.”

Free Press Journal Interview

I did a podcast with Free Press Journal.

From the description:

Is AI just another dotcom bubble, or is it something much bigger? In this insightful interview, Rajesh Jain (Founder of Netcore Cloud and pioneer of India World) explains why AI is set to reshape every industry more profoundly than the internet ever did. Jain breaks down the shift from Generative AI to Agentic AI, the rise of Digital Twins, and why CMOs must evolve into “Chief Profit Officers.”

If you’re a professional wondering if AI will take your job, Jain has a clear message: Roles are changing, and the rewards will go to those who move from “passive assistance” to “active problem-solving.”

Key Takeaways:

  • Beyond the Internet: Why AI’s ability to act and analyze makes it a transformative force. The “AdWaste”.
  • Problem: How brands are “renting” their own customers and how AI fixes it.
  • Digital Twins: Creating customer replicas to personalize at a massive scale.
  • Career Advice: Why you should pay for AI tools and spend time learning every single day.
  • The India Opportunity: Why education and “asking better questions” are India’s keys to winning the AI race.

The print interview is here.

Thinks 1908

Asian Paints CEO Amit Syngle: “Based on our research, a lot of our marketing efforts have been shifting from just a central initiative to regional markets and micro marketing. For example, in Tamil Nadu, we launched Varnamaalai, a shade guide based on the soaps that Sun TV was showcasing. In West Bengal, we did a pack which had the elements of Durga Puja, the Howrah Bridge and the trams of Kolkata. Because of regionalisation, paint cans, which were earlier used in bathrooms and kitchens, are now adorning living rooms. While it has led to a significant increase in our marketing budget, we think it is a worthwhile return on what we spend, rather than just spending on a national framework, which we continue to do.”

Bloomberg: “India is fast becoming one of the world’s biggest AI user bases. The question now is how it can turn that scale into superpower status rather than just training Silicon Valley for free. That will be a tall order for a country largely caught flat-footed by the boom. But let’s start with the basics: The three main building blocks of AI are talent, compute (including high-end chips and infrastructure), and data. India doesn’t lack engineers, but it currently doesn’t have foundational research training at scale or enough advanced processors at public labs and universities. What it does have, in abundance, is data. It should start treating this like a strategic asset rather than leaking it out as a free export.”

Activate: “After years of discussion about India’s potential in AI, the first wave of AI-native unicorns is now beginning to form across infrastructure, applications, and foundation models. Some are being built to power India’s own AI ecosystem, while others are building global products from Indian talent. For the first time, both of those stories are unfolding at the same moment.”

Arnold Kling: “I think that the potential for AI to increase productivity is very high. But I look at faculty at universities, for example, and think that the chances for realizing these productivity gains are pretty low. To take advantage of AI, you need to be willing to completely re-think your mission and your role. My guess is that the professionals at large incumbent organizations who are most willing to do that are also the ones most likely to leave and strike out on their own. What organizations will be left with are the folks who are inclined toward denial and resistance.”

Profile in Financial Express

An excerpt from the story by Gopika Nair:

His summary of the journey is unusually calm. “No regrets. Always look forward,” Jain thought after thinking for a few seconds. “Entrepreneurs have to be optimistic. Your odds are completely against you.”

And then, unexpectedly, he names his two best decisions. “One is the arranged marriage to my wife,” he said, followed by a laugh. “She has been the backbone throughout my life.” The second was selling IndiaWorld when he did.

When I ask him how he looks back on 35 years of building, selling, pivoting and starting again, Jain does not romanticise the arc. He reduces it to a simple tally. “I look at it as sort of two and a half successes and probably 30–40 failures,” he said. IndiaWorld counts as one. Netcore is another. The political experiment, perhaps half. The rest, he shrugs, were attempts, ideas tried, tested, discarded.

Failure, he insists, is routine. “Just as you don’t let success get to your head, you don’t let failure get to your head,” he said. The numbers, then, are not the point. What matters is the habit of returning to work the next day, of finding the next problem, of building again.

Thinks 1907

Bloomberg: “Far from freeing up engineers for a life of leisure, increasingly capable AI coding agents—including Anthropic PBC’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex—have over the past few months created a kind of productivity paranoia among executives and, by extension, the people who work for them. These agents do more than generate text or images, as consumer-facing chatbots do. Instead they plan, execute and complete tasks on behalf of their human users, even creating their own agents to do the work for them. That may mean building and debugging an app, scheduling a meeting or buying a pair of pants, all with minimal human oversight. The fact that AI agents can produce more code than mere humans in less time has morphed into a sense that they therefore must. As OpenAI’s president, Greg Brockman, recently put it on X, it “feels like such a wasted opportunity every moment your agents aren’t running.””

Ajay Shah on the Indian IT industry: “From the point of view of investment and corporate finance, big changes are required. Historically, Indian IT firms have exhibited the financial characteristics of stable utilities. There was a bias toward distributing cash to shareholders rather than reinvesting it in research and development. This strategy of capital allocation must change. The financial system must transition from pricing these firms as low-risk utilities to valuing them as complex, adaptive, technology integrators. Management teams must alter how they communicate with capital markets. Boards must show their portfolio of technological bets to the financial system, outlining the risk of their AI investment and its potential return. The world will always want intellectual capability. The constraint on growth is not the capability of algorithms but the availability of human ingenuity. The task for India is to double down on producing, owning, and growing intellectual capital, in the emergence of a firm culture of knowledge and innovation.”

TheMaxSource: “Zero based budgeting requires every expense to be justified from the ground up, as if the company were starting fresh. This method is not simply about cutting costs. It is about allocating money only to activities that create real value. For founders and executives, zero based budgeting brings clarity, accountability and speed. It eliminates autopilot spending and replaces it with intentional decision making.”

McKinsey: “India’s retail landscape is deeply fragmented, shaped by decades of traditional distribution networks, regional supply chains, and a political economy that reinforces support for micro, small, and medium-size enterprises (MSMEs) as an important driver of employment. Nearly 60 million MSMEs form the backbone of this ecosystem, collectively contributing close to $1 trillion in value to the economy every year, which is roughly 30 percent of national GDP. These MSMEs operate across multiple subsegments defined by category, geography, scale, and formality. Fragmentation is structural and likely to persist, creating a unique environment where small sellers and local traders coexist alongside large national and international retailers. We therefore believe this large, fragmented, and growing group of sellers will seek services and digital solutions that are fit-for-purpose: unbundled, flexible, lower-cost and more “consumer direct” relative to offerings provided by today’s dominant marketplaces.”

A Tuesday in the NeoMails World

1

Priya, Category Manager, Mumbai

A product is not what it claims to do. A product is what people do, repeatedly, without being pushed.

NeoMails are easier to understand that way — not through frameworks or economics, but through behaviour. So here are three people, on the same Tuesday morning, each inside the NeoMails system from a different vantage point.

Priya is the customer. Maya is the CMO. Arjun buys the ActionAds. They have never met. But this morning they are all operating inside the same ten centimetres of inbox.

The question behind all three stories is simple: what does NeoMails feel like when it is working?

Note: The names of brands and individuals in these stories are illustrative. They do not reflect actual usage or endorsement.

**

8:04am. Priya’s alarm went off seven minutes ago. She is still in bed, phone in hand, doing what she does every morning before her feet hit the floor: scanning her inbox.

Most of it is what it always is. A bank statement. A flight reminder for a trip she has not yet planned. Three newsletters she subscribed to in a moment of optimism and has not opened in two months. A promotional email from a brand with a subject line that says LAST CHANCE in capital letters, which makes her want to close the app entirely.

Then this: Ajio NeoMails · µ 2,847 · Will India chase or set a total today?

She opens it almost accidentally, the way you open a game notification.

Ajio is showing her a curated selection of kurtas — three she looked at last week. She does not tap Shop Now. But she sees them. The brand is present without demanding anything.

She scrolls down to the Magnet. She has been following this WePredict thread for three days — a running cricket prediction that unfolds across emails, each one revealing the previous day’s result and posing the next question. Yesterday she staked 35 Mu on the prediction and called it correctly — the bet returned 100. The Ledger at the bottom of the email updated in real time, which gave her a satisfaction she did not entirely expect.

Today’s question loads inside the email. No browser redirect. She taps Set — the pitch has been behaving strangely in recent games, she saw the highlights last night — and her answer registers instantly.

She has just interacted with Ajio’s email programme on a morning when she has no intention of buying anything from Ajio. That is not a failure of the email. It is the point.

Below that, an ActionAd: a travel insurance provider with a one-tap quote. She has a trip she has not sorted insurance for. She taps. Her details are saved inside the email, no redirect, no form. She will get a quote later.

At the bottom, Gameboard Status. Currently Live: WePredict. Coming Up Next: Geography Quiz. She feels a faint pull of anticipation. She did well in the geography quiz last week.

Total time inside the email: 68 seconds. She puts her phone down and gets out of bed.

She has not thought once about email marketing. She does not know her streak is now 19 days, or that her MuCount puts her in the top 30% of engaged users. She just had a good morning.

Then something interesting happens, later that week: she buys something. Not because the email shouted. Because the relationship stayed warm. The brand stayed present. The distance between her and the brand quietly shrank.

For the first time in years, an email channel did what it was always meant to do: hold a relationship, one small moment at a time.

2

Maya, Chief Marketing Officer, Bengaluru

8:47am. Maya has been at her desk since 7:30. She has a 9am with the CEO and a 10am with the CFO, and she is preparing for both with the same set of numbers — numbers that, six weeks ago, she could not have shown anyone without embarrassment.

The NeoMails pilot went live 42 days ago on a segment of 180,000 customers who had not opened a brand email in more than 90 days. Her performance marketing agency had been quietly retargeting them on Meta for the better part of a year — paying, in effect, to reach people who had already opted in to hear from the brand directly.

Before approving the pilot, she ran a simple internal test. She subscribed herself as a customer under a personal email address and asked three questions after one week: would I open this if I were not the CMO? Would I open it twice? Would I trust it? The answers were yes, yes, and yes. That was enough to proceed.

She opens the dashboard. The numbers have been good for three weeks running, but they still look slightly unreal each time.

58% CRR on the NeoMails segment — was 17% on standard sends to the same cohort
34% Real Reach on the pilot segment — was 9% before the pilot launched
11,200 customers reactivated — 2+ opens and 1+ interaction in 30 days
Zero Meta retargeting spend on this segment — paused on day one

What the pilot revealed, more than the numbers, is a different way to run her week. Monday is no longer campaign calendar. Monday is attention stability. She asks: where is attention growing, where is it shrinking, which Magnet formats are building habit and which are creating fatigue? She is starting to think like a product manager rather than a campaign manager.

She has also started to see the system clearly. Mu and the Magnet create the open. The Ledger makes progress visible. The BrandBlock rides on earned attention instead of fighting for it. That is not a campaign sequence. It is a behavioural engine.

The CFO meeting is the one Maya is most focused on. She is not walking in with a campaign result. She is walking in with a structural change in the economics of the owned channel. 11,200 customers came back without a single rupee of paid reacquisition. The avoided CAC is real and cashable. The Real Reach on the pilot is nearly four times what her standard programme delivers.

There is one number she cannot yet present cleanly but thinks about most: prevention value. Of the 11,200 reactivated, how many would have gone dormant again and appeared in her Meta retargeting queue for a second or third time? She does not have a clean model. But she knows it is significant, and she knows it belongs in a different line of the P&L than anyone has ever put it.

At 8:58 she closes the dashboard. Two minutes until the CEO meeting. She is, for the first time in a while, looking forward to it.

If NeoMails become a daily destination, the brand is no longer renting attention back from platforms. The brand is rebuilding a private attention asset. That is the point where marketing becomes infrastructure.

3

Arjun, Head of Growth, fintech lending platform, Gurugram

9:20am. Arjun is in his second meeting of the morning, half-listening, scrolling through the ActionAd performance report from last week’s NeoMails run.

He has been running performance advertising for six years. He is fluent in the standard funnel: impression, click, landing page, drop-off, retargeting, more drop-off. He has optimised every step. Clicks are not outcomes. He has known this for years. Clicks are a hope, followed by a form, followed by a journey the user may or may not complete. Every step away from the original moment of attention is an opportunity to lose them.

What drew him to ActionAds was one thing: the action happens inside the moment of attention, without a redirect. One tap to submit a lead. One tap to get a quote. The gap between intent and outcome collapses from a journey into a single gesture.

But what the report shows surprises him. The actions are not evenly distributed. They cluster — and the clustering follows the Magnet.

After a Hot or Not interaction — fast, light, playful — users are in a low-friction mood. One-tap actions with minimal commitment perform strongly. After a WePredict — a considered forecast where the user has taken a position — users are in a higher-intent mode. Actions involving a pledge or subscription outperform. After a passive Magnet — a story, a daily fact — users are in a reflective, unhurried state. Thoughtful offers with a soft CTA land better than urgent ones.

The same user behaves differently depending on what they just did. That is the missing layer in performance advertising: state.

Most adtech ignores state entirely. It targets based on identity and past behaviour — who you are and what you have done — but not where your mind is right now. The Magnet creates a real-time attention state that the ActionAd can arrive inside. The ActionAd is not interrupting attention. It is expressing itself within attention already won by someone else’s design. That is not an incremental improvement on programmatic. It is a different surface with a different logic: fewer impressions, higher demonstrated intent, clean one-step actions, measurement that does not depend on cross-domain attribution.

He has three questions for the NeoMails team: can he specify Magnet type as a targeting parameter? Can he see attention state data alongside action data? Can he run different creative against WePredict openers versus Hot or Not openers?

He already knows he wants the answers to be yes.

**

8am to 10am.

Three people. Three motivations. Priya opens because it is a daily product she has quietly started to anticipate. Maya invests because it restructures the economics of attention without platform dependency. Arjun participates because it delivers actions inside a moment of intent, not clicks into a journey of attrition.

The common thread across all three: NeoMails succeed when they stop behaving like marketing and start behaving like a habit.

From campaigns to cadence. From persuasion to product. From rented attention to earned attention. From AdWaste to a relationship asset.

If you can earn 60 seconds a day, you don’t have to buy back customers later.

Nobody in this story used the words “email marketing”. Nobody talked about open rates or subject line optimisation. Nobody paid Google or Meta for access to a customer they already had.

The inbox just worked — the way it was always supposed to. That is the NeoMail promise: experienced in real life, not explained on a slide.