Thinks 1894

NYTimes: “Karl von Randow and Matthew Buchanan created Letterboxd in 2011, but its popularity ballooned during the pandemic. It has grown exponentially ever since: Between 2020 and 2026, it grew to 26 million users from 1.7 million, adding more than nine million users since January 2025 alone…If Rotten Tomatoes has become a tool of Hollywood’s homogenizing marketing machinery, Letterboxd is something else: a cinephilic hive buzzing with authentic enthusiasm and heterogeneous tastes. The platform highlights audiences with appetites more varied than the industry has previously imagined, and helps them find their way to movies that are substantial. Black-and-white classics, foreign masterpieces and forgotten gems are popular darlings, while major studio releases often fail to find their footing. In an online ecosystem dominated by the short, simple and obvious, Letterboxd encourages people to engage with demanding art. Amid grim pronouncements of film-industry doom and the collapse of professional criticism, the rise of Letterboxd suggests that the industry’s crisis may be distinct from the fate of film itself. Even as Hollywood continues to circle the drain, film culture is experiencing a broad resurgence.”

WSJ: “When [Daniel Coyle] talks of flourishing, he talks of vitality and awakening, but also of slowing down and relaxing. He sees value in observing the pauses between things—intervals that, he argues, can be as eloquent and productive as any bursts of energetic activity. He admires good-humored, self-deprecatory attitudes and a loose, collaborative approach to problems. In all of this, he’s getting at something powerful but hard to quantify that we all perhaps have felt, if only briefly, at one time or another.”

Steven Sinofsky: ” AI-enabled or AI-centric software is simply moving up the stack of what a product is. Software did not create online banks. Banking always required software. Software that faced a consumer, banking or traveling or shopping or reading or viewing, just became an essential part of the bank, travel, etc stack. Sometimes this created new from-scratch companies and sometimes it created new companies inside old ones. Industries were restructured as assets moved around. However big and complex you think a legacy business is today, it will be vastly larger and more complex tomorrow, and it will do vastly more. Think I’m crazy? Consider what banking was like in 1995. If you have any experience you know your choices, features, options, etc were one-thousandth of what you have today, even if fundamentally you got a paycheck, paid your bills, and might have had a credit card.

FT: “In the history of friction-removal, physical toil fell first. Washing machines erased scrubbing while plumbing and thermostats ended the hauling of water and tending of fire. Then came bureaucratic easing: e-filing, direct deposit, money transfers and online flight check-in all swept away the drags that breed inefficiency. Next, distance and delay. GPS made it nearly impossible to get lost and one-click online ordering eclipsed errands. Streaming put an end to trips to the video store and then the store itself. Remember dot-matrix printers? The clatter as each line crawled across the page, leaving behind an embossed texture, the perforated edges you tore off and the ribbon you changed when it faded. Inkjets and lasers made them obsolete. PDFs came next, and then chatbots, which make even reading the PDF optional. Each advance made the tasks simpler, then pointless, then delegable.”

NeoMails: The Attention and Monetisation Surface Brands Already Own (Part 1)

Email Was Never About Delivery

For twenty years, the email marketing industry has been solving the wrong problem.

Open rates fell, so we wrote better subject lines. Click rates declined, so we redesigned templates. Conversions dropped, so we added coupons. Unsubscribes rose, so we suppressed the complaints and moved on. Every intervention attacked a symptom. Nobody looked at the disease.

The disease is this: email was never really about delivery. It was about relationship. And relationships run on one thing — attention. Not the mechanical, reflexive kind that a well-timed push notification extracts. Genuine, recurring, chosen attention. The kind a person gives because they actually want to open something.

Email has been treated as a conveyor belt for two decades. Push out the offer. Confirm the order. Send the reminder. The inbox became a warehouse for messages nobody asked for and few people wanted.

This matters because the inbox — unlike every other channel in digital marketing — is owned. When a customer hands over their email address, they are offering direct access. No algorithm mediates it. No platform takes a toll on every message. No identity graph needs to be rented or guessed at. The connection is bilateral, permissioned, and direct. It is, in theory, the most valuable channel in marketing.

In practice, brands have been squandering it. The list grows; the reachable audience shrinks. The database expands; the relationship decays. And eventually, when the silence becomes loud enough, brands do the most irrational thing in business: they pay someone else to rent back access to customers they already own.

That loop — neglect, decay, pay to reacquire, repeat — is what NeoMarketing names AdWaste: the Reacquisition Tax (REACQ) hiding inside what gets reported as ‘growth’ and ‘performance marketing’. It is the central dysfunction of modern marketing, and email neglect is its primary cause.

NeoMails exist to break that loop. They are a new class of email built to earn attention first and monetise it second. They turn the inbox from a delivery mechanism into a daily destination — the next durable attention surface, and the first inbox-native monetisation surface that does not degrade trust in the process. They are made possible now because AMP technology lets an email behave like a mini-app — actions happen inside the inbox, with no click-through required.

This essay is about how they work, why the timing is right, and what it means for the future of the inbox. It is not a product manual. It is an argument — for a different understanding of what email is capable of, and what it becomes when we stop treating it like a message warehouse and start treating it like the daily destination it always had the potential to be.

Thinks 1892

FT: “How Africa Works is arranged in three parts. The first, contrary to the title, is an analysis of why Africa doesn’t work. More accurately, it catalogues the factors, sometimes surprising, that help explain why most of the 54 states into which Africa was corralled by colonialism have failed to emulate Asia’s economic take-off. The second section is a study of four states — Botswana, Mauritius, Ethiopia and Rwanda — that have managed to generate long periods of sustained growth. The third is an assessment of what it would take for other African economies to emulate that record, with particular emphasis on the agricultural and manufacturing revolutions that were essential to Asian growth. Throughout, Studwell steers carefully between the Scylla of fatalism and the Charybdis of frothy optimism.”

Zack Kass, author of The Next Renaissance: AI and the Expansion of Human Potential : “A lot of the job fears are overblown. On a macro basis, they’re terribly overblown. That’s because if we automate most work, something good will happen. I remind people of this all the time. Every time we put a small farmer out of business, it means that far more people could be fed by industrial farming. One could bemoan the loss of something yet acknowledge the economic gain that lifts people out of poverty. If one wants to go back to small farming, one can. It just means that it will come at the cost of hundreds of millions of lives. If you return to that hyperlocal farming, a lot of the world will plunge back into food scarcity. Now there is a panacea. You could have organic living, local living, but we aren’t there yet technologically. That probably requires fusion, desalinization, small modular reactors, and more. I would argue that the problem we are presented with is that the uncertainty in the market alone is casting an enormous shadow. I challenge people to see it as an opportunity.”

Elon Musk: “The availability of energy is the issue. If you look at electrical output outside of China, everywhere outside of China, it’s more or less flat. It’s maybe a slight increase, but pretty close flat. China has a rapid increase in electrical output. But if you’re putting data centers anywhere except China, where are you going to get your electricity? Especially as you scale. The output of chips is growing pretty much exponentially, but the output of electricity is flat. So how are you going to turn the chips on? Magical power sources? Magical electricity fairies?…It’s harder to scale on the ground than it is to scale in space. You’re also going to get about five times the effectiveness of solar panels in space versus the ground, and you don’t need batteries. I almost wore my other shirt, which says, “it’s always sunny in space”. Which it is because you don’t have a day-night cycle, seasonality, clouds, or an atmosphere in space. The atmosphere alone results in about a 30% loss of energy. So any given solar panel can do about five times more power in space than on the ground. You also avoid the cost of having batteries to carry you through the night. It’s actually much cheaper to do in space. My prediction is that it will be by far the cheapest place to put AI. It will be space in 36 months or less. Maybe 30 months.”

FT: “Knowledge loss is counterintuitive because we live in a world overflowing with learning. That pushes us to think of knowledge as infrastructure: a building that, once erected, will stand for ages. But knowledge is both alive and fragile. It is embodied in people, and the teams and communities they form, and is transmitted through repeated, almost ritualistic practices. Imagine trying to train a new generation of surgeons in a world where no surgeons remain. While that is a particularly dire example, it is reasonable to say that knowledge is like a shark: it must keep moving to stay alive.”

The Attention P&L: How Atrium Unlocks a Second Revenue Stream from Email (Part 3)

Economics

Atrium is not universal. Pretending it is would weaken the argument. The right move is to name the ideal profiles clearly—and show the economics in ranges, not fantasies.

Profile A: Attention-rich commerce brands

D2C businesses, marketplaces, and retail brands with large lists and frequent transactional touchpoints. They already have surfaces where customers open emails. Their problem is that most of those opens do not compound into an attention habit—and the wider base drifts into dormancy.

They also face the hardest version of AdWaste: reacquisition inflation. When performance budgets rise just to stand still, any system that reduces reacquisition dependence is immediately valuable.

Think: fashion e-commerce, quick commerce, subscription brands, and large category leaders with millions of contacts.

Profile B: Audience owners

Publishers, newsletters, and media brands already understand sponsorship economics. Their relationship with the audience is primarily informational and habitual. For them, NeoLetters become the natural vessel: curated attention containers that can carry Action Partnerships without damaging trust—because the editorial context is the value.

Think: business dailies, lifestyle publications, and niche newsletters.

Who should wait

Luxury and aspirational brands may face brand dilution risk. Brands with tiny lists won’t see meaningful economics. Strict compliance environments may need a narrower starting scope.

But there’s a pragmatic exception: these brands can begin with First-party Actions only. The APU still improves engagement and relevance without introducing external partnerships.

The illustrative economics

Consider a mid-to-large database of 5 million contacts. Using conservative, range-based assumptions:

Variable Range
Real Reach (90-day engaged) 10-30%
Send frequency across surfaces 1-3x/week
ActionAd fill rate 15-40% (curation takes time)
Effective CPM ₹10-20 (premium: deterministic + action-first)
Brand revenue share 40-70%
Illustrative annual brand revenue ₹50 lakh – ₹2.5 crore

For some brands, that’s a meaningful new revenue line. But the crucial reframe is this: Even if the revenue is modest, it funds the attention loop.

That loop reduces reacquisition spend, improves Real Reach (customers engaged in the last 90 days), and lifts LTV. The second revenue stream is the catalyst, not the only payoff. A brand spending ₹10 crore annually on reacquisition that reduces that spend by 25% through Atrium-funded retention has captured far more value than the ActionAd revenue alone.

The real shift is that brands now have an Attention P&L line item—a measurable economic system that turns “inactive base” from a sunk cost into a compounding asset.

Of course, this only works if one measures the right things and enforces guardrails:

  • Run holdout tests: Brand Block CTR, revenue per send, incremental conversions
  • Monitor unsubscribe and complaint rates obsessively
  • Define success plainly: did we fund reactivation and maintain trust?

If trust erodes, nothing else matters. If trust is preserved and attention compounds, the economics follow.

**

Atrium is attention-funded retention infrastructure. Curated Action Partnerships delivered via ActionAds are the funding mechanism—not the identity. The outcomes are multiple: ZeroCPM communication where ActionAd revenue exceeds delivery costs, Rest/Test reactivation through daily engagement loops, cooperative recovery through NeoNet, and yes—a second revenue stream that can turn email from cost centre to profit centre.

The one-liner is simple: Atrium turns owned attention into a profit engine—first to reduce AdWaste, then to generate surplus that funds retention.

The biggest under-monetised asset in marketing isn’t data. It’s attention that’s already paid for and then stopped earning.

A brand’s email list was never just a list. It was always an attention asset. Atrium is the infrastructure that finally lets marketers treat it as one.

This is how Never Pay Twice becomes operational — not as doctrine, but as infrastructure.

Thinks 1892

FT: “For many people, the most meaningful careers do not follow straight lines. I spent two years as an engineer and three years on Wall Street before I found my place in venture capital. At the time, those moves looked like detours. In hindsight, they were formative. They provided perspective, skills and clarity that no carefully crafted résumé ever could. That experience is not unusual. In my research I have found countless examples of successful people who switched careers midstream. It often takes time to figure out what work truly makes you happy. When you are driven by curiosity — as opposed to society’s conveyor belt — your career feels less like work. When you love what you do, the more you want to do it and the better you will become, increasing your chances of success, financial and otherwise. This is where the conversation needs to shift, especially for parents. Wanting your child to be financially secure is understandable. Even the great Willie Nelson suggested mamas make their kids “be doctors and lawyers and such.” But in today’s world, that instinct can backfire.”

WSJ: “Today, Nvidia is nearly 20 times as valuable and five times as profitable as IBM was back then, adjusted for inflation. Yet it employs roughly a 10th as many people. That simple comparison says something profound about today’s economy: Its rewards are going disproportionately toward capital instead of labor. Profits have soared since the pandemic, and the market value attached to those profits even more. The result: Capital, which includes businesses, shareholders and superstar employees, is triumphant, while the average worker ekes out marginal gains. The divergence between capital and labor helps explain the disconnect between a buoyant economy and pessimistic households. It will also play an outsize role in where the economy goes from here.”

Shankkar Aiyar: “India is an outlier among outliers. It has vaulted from the 10th largest economy to the fourth largest in the world in just over a decade. It has evaded the law of necessary and sufficient conditions. It is the only economy to reach the status of the ‘fourth largest economy’ without the power of global brands and banks of global size to fund market expansion.”

Mark Roberge: “The current AI-native B2B software startups face significant risk from foundational model expansion, circular revenue redundancy, high valuation overhang, and first-mover (dis)advantage. A potential bright spot in the cohort may be vertical AI startups, where lower TAMs and higher regulatory compliance product requirements shield them from foundational model disruption, valuation overhang, and CIO “build” tendencies. In the long term, early followers starting in the “trough of disillusionment” phase may take their respective categories at the expense of the first movers.”

Z Reitano: Economics of a Super Bowl ad.

The Attention P&L: How Atrium Unlocks a Second Revenue Stream from Email (Part 2)

How It Works

Atrium’s core idea is operationally simple: marketing teams should not have to become ad ops teams, game designers, or full-time newsletter editors to build attention. The system needs to be infrastructure, not another programme that dies when the calendar fills up.

That is why the APU is at the heart of Atrium. Think of the APU as a standard, injectable ‘attention layer’ that sits inside any email send.

Brands do what they already do: create the Brand Block—their content, offers, storytelling, and utility. Then NeoCore injects the APU (Attention Processing Unit) at send-time:

  • Magnets earn the open through utility—quizzes, predictions, polls
  • Mu creates return behaviour through visible, accumulating rewards
  • ActionAds fund the system through action-first partnerships
  • Ledger provides memory, measurement, and audit trail

The brand does not need to produce “daily games” manually. The APU standardises the mechanics and makes them repeatable. Over time, Context Graphs help decide which magnet format works for which customer, how much Mu to issue, and which action is relevant—without requiring creepy surveillance. It uses first-party behavioural signals and stated preferences, not third-party tracking. It’s contextual, consent-governed, and auditable.

The APU can attach to multiple surfaces, which is why this isn’t “a new campaign channel.” It’s a layer:

  • Transactional: order confirmations, shipping updates, payment receipts
  • Lifecycle: replenishment reminders, back-in-stock, price-drop alerts
  • Newsletters / NeoLetters
  • NeoMails: attention-first cadence for Rest/Test customers
  • Post-purchase onboarding sequences

In many brands, transactional and lifecycle emails are opened more than marketing blasts—yet they remain under-utilised as relationship surfaces. Atrium upgrades these sends so every open becomes a chance to deepen the relationship and fund the system, without hijacking the brand message.

Now, the word “ads” is exactly what triggers resistance—so Atrium doesn’t sell “ads.” It sells Action Partnerships. ActionAds are action-first: they don’t ask customers to look — they ask them to do something. Subscribe. Save. Sample. Start. No click-through to a landing page. No redirect. The action completes in-place inside the email.

A shipping update arrives. The customer reads the shipping info (Brand Block), sees a quiz Magnet, earns Mu, then sees a single curated ActionAd (‘one-tap subscribe to a relevant newsletter’). The brand’s message is delivered. The system is funded. The customer got utility.

**

Traditional email ads are impression-first — a banner appears, hopes for a click, then sends you somewhere else. The value is eyeballs. The metric is CPM.

ActionAds are action-first — the unit exists to complete a transaction. A “one-tap subscribe to a newsletter.” A “save this offer to your account.” A “book a free sample.” The value is the completed action. The metric should be cost per action, not cost per thousand views.

ActionAds operate in three tiers:

Tier What It Is Goal
First-party Actions Brand’s own offers styled as ActionAds Higher conversion, cross-sell; proves APUs don’t cannibalise Brand Block
Curated Partners Handpicked partners with revenue share New revenue + genuine customer value; brand-safe and measurable
Cooperative Recovery (NeoNet) Cross-brand, category-governed placements Deterministic recovery through partner surfaces; no auctions

And Atrium draws a bright red line around what it is not: No open exchange. No creepy tracking. No infinite ad slots. One unit—capped, curated, audited.

This is not programmatic display advertising in the inbox.

**

Governance makes the difference between “profit centre” and “deliverability disaster.” Atrium’s governance is structural:

  • Brand Block sits at the top. Magnet follows. ActionAd anchors the bottom—hierarchy preserved.
  • Brand outcomes are the first constraint. Action Partnerships throttle automatically if Brand Block CTR or conversion rates drop in holdout tests.
  • Frequency caps and category controls are mandatory
  • Consent is explicit and the system is auditable
  • Customers can see: “why did I see this?”

This answers the three predictable objections:

Concern Answer
“Will this hurt my brand?” Caps + curation + placement below Brand Block
“Will deliverability suffer?” Engagement-first content, holdout tests, complaint guardrails
“Is this creepy targeting?” Contextual + consent-governed + full audit trail

Atrium works because it treats attention as the primary asset, not an accidental by-product—and uses curated partnerships as the funding mechanism, not the identity of the system.

Thinks 1891

SaaStr: “Don’t try to compete on models. Compete on what you build on top of them. The winners will be the companies that deeply understand specific workflows in specific industries and build AI that solves those problems end-to-end.”

FT on life in a depopulating world: “Picture your street in 2100, presuming climate change hasn’t washed it away. With half the population, some homes have been combined into vast single residences. Other buildings have been torn down, to make way for cooling mini-jungles. The future inhabitant of your home, born in 2026, now in their seventies — which by that time might be considered middle age — could find life cornucopian.”

Siddhant Khare: “If you’re an engineer who uses AI daily – for design reviews, code generation, debugging, documentation, architecture decisions – and you’ve noticed that you’re somehow more tired than before AI existed, this post is for you. You’re not imagining it. You’re not weak. You’re experiencing something real that the industry is aggressively pretending doesn’t exist. And if someone who builds agent infrastructure full-time can burn out on AI, it can happen to anyone.”

Suzanne Vranica: “When you set out to do an ad, you want to brief all the constituents. You want to put out a brief that says, “This is what I’m looking for.” You’ve got AI doing all of that grunt work right now. You’ve got AI doing production work. We used to have storyboards. Now you can get AI to basically create an ad. It’s not going to run on air, but it’s something that you can present to a client or you can get a feel for and you can tweak it and then really film it. So it’s that underbelly that it’s playing right now, but this technology is improving so quickly. There are companies like Mondelēz and others that have spent the last two years feeding these bots, all of their old advertising, all of their brand books and positioning so that these things get smarter. And those are the companies when they decide to turn it on and say, “Go create an ad,” you’re not going to be able to tell the difference between what’s now called AI slop and what looks like a perfectly created spot. We’re a little bit away from that at this point, but we’re going to get there.”

The Attention P&L: How Atrium Unlocks a Second Revenue Stream from Email (Part 1)

The Ignored Asset

Brands have spent the past decade doing something brilliantly expensive: building huge contact databases. Every lead form, app install, checkout, giveaway, referral, and paid campaign is, in the end, a way to put one more email address into the contact master.

And then most brands monetise only the fraction who buy.

The uncomfortable arithmetic is familiar to anyone who runs CRM: in many consumer businesses, 20-40% of the list might be “reachable” in any meaningful sense, and only a subset of that group purchases in a given window. The rest—often 60-80%—sits in limbo. Not deleted. Not removed. Not “lost.” Just unresponsive. A sunk acquisition cost generating zero value.

This is usually framed as an engagement problem (“we need better subject lines”). It’s bigger than that. It’s an unmined attention base.

Here’s the key reframing: most contacts aren’t inactive by choice; they’re inactive by neglect. Customers drift because attention decays, not because the brand suddenly became irrelevant. Their inbox got noisy. Life changed. The brand’s messages became predictable. The relationship wasn’t maintained.

So what do marketing teams do? They suppress these contacts to protect deliverability, and later pay ad platforms to “acquire” them again through retargeting and lookalikes. The same person who is already in the database re-enters through a paid funnel at auction prices. That is the Reacquisition Tax: paying repeatedly for customers you already own.

There is a precedent for how to escape this—not a perfect equivalence, but a useful analogy. Marketplaces such as Amazon, Flipkart, and Swiggy generate a meaningful portion of profits from advertising, not just transactions. Their advantage is not “better ads.” It’s human attention at scale. People show up. They browse. They search. That attention becomes monetisable—carefully, in a way that preserves the core customer experience.

Brands are not marketplaces. They don’t have infinite browsing sessions. But many brands have a lighter analogue of the same asset sitting quietly in their email lists: a large base of known identities with dormant attention. The problem is not the existence of the base. The problem is that the base doesn’t reliably show up.

This is where the moral contract must be stated early, because it determines whether this whole idea is acceptable or repulsive: Atrium isn’t about selling attention. It’s about funding attention-building.

Ads are the subsidy layer that makes ZeroCPM communication and reactivation possible—but only if the customer is better off. And in Atrium, the customer win is explicit. Customers get utility (Magnets), visible rewards (Mu), and fewer irrelevant promos because the system learns what earns attention. They also get controls—frequency limits, category preferences, and transparent explanation of “why did I see this?”

With that contract in place, the question becomes obvious: what if the “dead” portion of your database could fund its own reactivation? What if email moved from cost centre to profit centre—not by turning into spam, but by becoming attention-funded infrastructure?

Thinks 1890

NYTimes: “Sonja Lyubomirsky has been a leading researcher on the science of happiness for decades. And for just as long, people have asked her: What is the secret? Dr. Lyubomirsky, a distinguished professor of psychology at the University of California Riverside, has always chafed at this question. The secret to happiness? How ridiculous and reductive. When pressed, she told me she tends to say something along the lines of: “Connection and relationships. Positive thinking, which includes gratitude. And a sense of control in your life.” But if she really had to choose one thing, she said, the secret to happiness is “feeling loved.” That’s the premise of her latest book, “How to Feel Loved,” out today, which she co-wrote with Harry Reis, a professor of psychology at the University of Rochester who studies close relationships.”

WSJ: “Cellphones and online sports betting were made for each other, because you now have a casino in your pocket. The problem is that casinos always stack the odds in their favor. This built-in profit is the vig, or vigorish. Bet a dollar on an even game and you can only win 90 cents. In props and parlay bets, the vig might be 25% or higher. Prop bets are made on a team’s or player’s individual statistics in a game, like whether LeBron James will score more than 25 points, while parlays combine multiple bets—that four teams will all win their games, for instance—into one bet. Both are attractive. Casinos appreciate the higher vig and gamblers love the prospect of a big payout on a small bet. Never mind that the odds amount to a tax on people who can’t do math.”

FT: “The rise of software in private equity can be traced to two once little-known specialist buyout firms, Vista Equity Partners and Thoma Bravo. The leaders of both firms emerged as prolific acquirers in the wake of the 2000s dotcom bust as they acquired mid-sized software companies selling cyber security, or services to niche industries such as hospital systems, car dealerships or parking meter networks. Many of their targets had been abandoned by public investors but came with steady growth and reliable customers who rarely pushed back on annual price increases. Vista and Thoma earned large gains from their early funds, generally in excess of three times investors’ initial investment after fees. Within the PE industry, the two firms’ returns trounced those of larger, established funds that participated in a mid-2000s bubble of mega-sized takeovers of companies that quickly collapsed.”

TheMaxSource: “The International Software Benchmarking Standards Group analyzed thousands of software projects and found that teams of nine or more are significantly less productive than smaller teams. This isn’t a small effect. The data shows a clear inflection point. Below nine people, productivity holds steady or improves. Above nine, it drops. Analysis of software projects shows teams of five to seven people had the highest productivity with approximately nine percent less variation than teams of three to five, and 12 percent less variation than teams of 1.5 to three people. The five-to-seven range delivered the best schedule performance and lowest development effort. Larger teams translated directly into higher costs and longer timelines.”

Introducing NeoMarketing’s Second Engine: Atrium

Published March 5, 2026

1

Need for Two Engines

The 3 NEVERs—Never Lose Customers, Never Pay Twice, Never Pay Fixed—are not aspirations. They are engineering specifications for a new kind of marketing infrastructure. But turning principles into practice requires more than philosophy. It requires systems that make the principles operational.

This is why NeoMarketing is built on two pillars, not one.

Consider the AdWaste problem. Brands lose customers through attention decay. Those customers drift from engaged (“Best”) to declining (“Rest”) to dormant (“Test”). Eventually, brands pay Google and Meta to reacquire people whose email addresses they already have. This is the Reacquisition Tax—a hidden line item that costs brands globally around $500 billion annually.

Eliminating this tax requires solving two distinct problems simultaneously.

The first problem is outcomes. Traditional martech charges for activity—messages sent, journeys triggered, events tracked—regardless of whether customers stay engaged or revenue grows. Vendors get paid even when brands fail. This misalignment guarantees waste.

The second problem is attention. Even with perfect outcome alignment, brands cannot generate results from customers who have stopped listening. The 80% of customers whose attention churns quarterly don’t leave because of bad offers. They leave because attention faded and no system existed to restore it.

These are different problems. They require different solutions. This is the logic behind NeoMarketing’s two-engine architecture.

Meridian is the outcomes engine. It transforms customer engagement and search platforms from fixed-fee SaaS into outcomes-based partnerships. At its core: Context Graphs that give marketing systems genuine memory, and Alpha Pricing borrowed from hedge funds—a share of incremental outcomes beyond the baseline plus long-term carry. When vendors earn only by producing measurable lift, behaviour changes. Meridian’s domain is Best customers: deepen relationships, expand lifetime value, underwrite outcomes. Its promise: “Pay for results, not tools.”

Atrium is the attention engine. It transforms email from a cost centre into self-funding attention infrastructure. Where Meridian focuses on what happens after you have attention, Atrium focuses on earning and maintaining attention in the first place. Its domain is Rest and Test customers: the majority of most databases who are drifting toward reacquisition. Its promise: “Reach without paying twice.”

The relationship between the pillars is complementary, not competitive. Meridian monetises outcomes. Atrium monetises attention. Without attention, there are no outcomes to monetise. Without outcomes, attention has no commercial purpose. The two engines need each other.

They also share infrastructure. Context Graphs—the memory layer that tracks preferences, fatigue, streaks, and intent—power both pillars. Intelligence learned through email engagement informs outcome predictions across channels. Behaviour patterns detected through Meridian shape email personalisation in Atrium. The learning compounds across the system.

The naming reflects this architecture. Meridian points the direction—toward profitable growth and aligned economics. Atrium is where you arrive—the space where attention convenes. Together, they operationalise the 3 NEVERs: Meridian ensures you never pay fixed for outcomes that don’t materialise; Atrium ensures you never lose customers to attention decay and never pay twice to reach people you already own.

One engine alone cannot eliminate AdWaste. Both are required.

2

What Atrium Is

Atrium is the inbox-native attention ecosystem—where utility earns attention, Mu rewards it, and ActionAds monetise it, safely, across brands.

For readers familiar with my earlier writings on “NEO,” Atrium is that concept matured and named to fit the NeoMarketing family. The largest source of AdWaste is not bad acquisition—it is good customers becoming unreachable, then being bought back at auction. Rest and Test customers represent 60-80% of most databases. They’re not strangers. They have history, context, and proven purchase intent. They’re simply not listening anymore. Atrium exists to restore that attention through owned channels before brands are forced to rent it back through ad platforms.

Atrium’s components work as an integrated system:

NeoMails are the daily habit engine. Unlike promotional emails (which interrupt) or transactional emails (which inform), NeoMails are a third category: attention-earning, relationship-building emails built around interaction. They pair Magnets—quizzes, predictions, polls—with the Brand Block, giving customers a reason to open that doesn’t depend on discounts. The brand content appears after attention is earned, not instead of it. NeoMails create cadence where campaigns create noise.

NeoNet is the cooperative recovery network. When a customer stops responding to your NeoMails, they’re often still engaged with another brand’s emails. NeoNet enables recovery through partner surfaces: your ActionAd appears inside an engaged email from a complementary brand, reaching the customer through attention that already exists. No auction fees. No probabilistic targeting. Deterministic recovery through cooperation.

NeoLetters are curated attention containers for publishers, media brands, and institutions. Weekly or daily digests that turn newsletters into attention assets. NeoLetters expand the supply side of the Atrium ecosystem, creating more surfaces where attention can be earned and ActionAds can generate revenue.

Mu is the attention currency that creates return behaviour. Unlike traditional loyalty points earned through purchases, Mu is earned through engagement—completing quizzes, maintaining streaks, making predictions. Balances appear in subject lines. Progress compounds visibly. Mu transforms attention from invisible labour into a fair exchange customers can see and value.

ActionAds are the monetisation layer. Not banner ads that interrupt, but action-first units— Subscribe, Save, Sample, Start, Book, Buy—that convert inside the email without click-through friction. ActionAds monetise attention that Magnets have already earned, making the interaction additive rather than extractive.

ZeroCPM is the economic outcome. When ActionAd revenue exceeds delivery costs, the effective cost-per-thousand drops to zero. Email stops being an expense line and becomes self-funding infrastructure. Brands don’t budget for NeoMails; NeoMails generate surplus.

The architecture follows a clear doctrine: earn attention before monetising it; exhaust free channels before spending on paid; create pull rather than push. The escalation sequence is explicit: NeoMails first (earn attention at zero cost), NeoNet second (borrow attention at cooperative cost), Adtech last (buy attention only when necessary).

Atrium is not email marketing improved. It is attention infrastructure—the second engine NeoMarketing needs to make “Never Pay Twice” real.

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Atrium completes the NeoMarketing architecture. Meridian handles Best customers through outcome-based economics. Atrium handles Rest and Test through attention-based economics. Together, they eliminate the structural conditions that create AdWaste.