BRTN and the Transactions-Attention Table
Parts 2 and 3 mapped the Tax lever. Part 4 maps the Time lever.
The seven transaction buckets reveal where Tax is leaking. They show whether a brand is buying revenue, owning revenue, reacquiring revenue, or surrendering revenue to intermediaries. But Tax is only one half of Alpha. The other half is Time — the gap between one transaction and the next, the speed at which a customer climbs from Next to Test to Best, the rate at which Best customers drift silently into Rest. To see Time, the brand needs a different framework altogether — one that classifies customers, not transactions.
A customer relationship does not collapse in a single moment. It decays in stages. The customer does not wake up one morning and decide to leave the brand. They stop opening. Then they stop clicking. Then they stop visiting. Then the time since last transaction stretches. Only later does the brand notice the absence — usually when the customer has already drifted far enough that the only reliable way back is paid media at 20–25%, or worse, an Intermediated route at 30–40%+.
This is why Time between Transactions cannot be measured only by transactions. By the time the transaction gap becomes visible, the attention gap has already done the damage.
For four decades the working customer-state framework in retail and direct marketing has been RFM — Recency, Frequency, Monetary. When did this customer last buy? How often do they buy? How much do they spend? RFM was a remarkable framework for its era and still works as a basic diagnostic. But it has a structural blind spot that becomes more expensive every year: all three of its variables are transaction variables. Recency means transaction recency. Frequency means transaction frequency. Monetary means transaction value. RFM cannot see a customer who has stopped opening emails, stopped clicking on push notifications, stopped opening the app — until the transactions also stop.
A customer who bought three times and is still opening every week is not the same as a customer who bought three times but has ignored the brand for ninety days. Same purchase count. Different future. Same RFM score, perhaps. Opposite trajectory.
In a world where attention decays before transactions stop, RFM is a rear-view mirror.
BRTN: the four canonical states

The first refinement is to collapse RFM scoring into four states that match how a CMO actually thinks about the customer base.
Best are the brand’s most valuable customers — three or more transactions with current attention. They are the profit engine.
Rest are customers who once mattered but are now drifting or dormant. They are not dead. They are simply no longer paying attention to the brand’s owned channels.
Test are early buyers whose future value is still uncertain. They have bought once or twice, but the relationship has not yet become habit.
Next are the future customers — identified non-buyers and genuine new acquisitions waiting to be converted.
BRTN is powerful because it shifts the marketer’s question from “Who bought?” to “Who is still listening?” But BRTN by itself still carries the RFM blind spot in a softer form: it tells the brand where a customer currently is, not where they are about to go. To make BRTN operational, the CRM team needs a simple grid — the equivalent of RFM for an attention-first world.
The Transactions-Attention Table (TAT)
Call it the Transactions-Attention Table, or TAT.
The rows measure transaction depth. The columns measure attention recency. The critical point is that attention recency means days since last meaningful attention event, not days since last transaction. A meaningful attention event is an email open, click, magnet interaction, app open, push tap, WhatsApp response, product browse, or wishlist action — any signal that shows the customer is still reachable through owned channels.
Transactions ↓
Attention → |
0–30 days
Strong |
30–90 days
Weakening |
90+ days
Lost |
| 0 |
N |
N– |
L |
| 1–2 |
T |
T– |
R2 |
| 3+ |
B |
B– |
R1 |

Nine cells. Each one a distinct managerial state with a distinct strategic prescription.
N — Next. Identified, no purchase yet, attention strong. The classic active lead. Convert.
N– — Weakening Next. Identified, no purchase, attention slipping. The brand still has a chance, but the strategy must shift. Another hard-sell campaign may accelerate the fade. This customer needs relevance, trust, utility — a reason to stay reachable before the lead goes cold.
L — Lost Lead. No purchase and no recent attention. This is not Rest. This person has never bought. Recovery investment should be low. Suppression, repermission, or low-cost attention rebuilding may be appropriate; heavy discounts and paid reacquisition rarely are.
T — Test. One or two purchases, strong attention. The acceleration cell. Drive the next transaction. This is where early-lifecycle marketing matters most — the second transaction is not just more revenue, it is evidence that the relationship may compound.
T– — Weakening Test. One or two purchases, attention slipping. A fragile state — proof of purchase, but not proof of habit. The wrong move is to keep shouting “buy again.” The right move is to preserve attention before pushing the next transaction.
B — Best. Three or more purchases, attention strong. The heart of the business. Best customers should receive the best personalisation, the best service, early access, recognition, and the deepest relationship investment.
B– — Weakening Best. The single most economically important cell on the grid. A high-value customer in the act of becoming Rest, flagged before the transaction signal would show it. The dashboard may still call them loyal because they have bought many times — but attention says something has changed. The cost of holding a B– is a fraction of the cost of recovering an R1. The brand that catches B– early avoids the AdWaste it would otherwise pay to recover them later.
R1 — Rest-1. Former Best customers who have lost attention. These are the most valuable recovery opportunities because the brand has proof of depth. They deserve priority recovery — winning them back protects the largest future LTV. Recovered R1 customers return to B– first — attention restored, transaction not yet re-proven — and graduate to B only when the next transaction lands on an owned route.
R2 — Rest-2. Lower-depth buyers who have lost attention. They matter, but the recovery economics must be more disciplined. Some will be worth low-cost reactivation. Some are better served by attention-monetisation if attention can be rebuilt. Some should simply be left alone. Recovered R2 customers return to T– on the same logic, graduating to T once the transaction follows.
Sell, Relate, Recover — the doctrine the table enforces
The power of TAT is not the labels. It is the action logic the columns impose.
Sell when attention is strong. The left column — N, T, B — is where transaction prompts pay off. The customer is listening. Move them forward: first purchase, second purchase, cross-sell, replenishment, upgrade, referral.
Relate when attention is weakening. The middle column — N–, T–, B– — is the danger zone. The brand must shift from Sell to Relate: fewer hard offers, more value, more utility, more recognition, more memory, more reasons to remain connected. The goal is not immediate conversion. The goal is to stop the attention slide. Most CRM teams do not have a Relate playbook; they have a Sell playbook with the frequency dialled up, which is exactly the opposite of what these cells need.
Recover when attention is lost. The right column — L, R2, R1 — is where the CRM channel has already failed. Recovery must be tiered: R1 deserves more investment than R2; Lost Leads deserve less than past buyers. A single grid prevents the common mistake of treating all inactivity as equal.
The one-line doctrine the table produces:
Sell when attention is strong. Relate when attention is weakening. Recover when attention is lost.
The grid is a velocity field, not a snapshot

A customer is never permanently in one cell of the TAT. Two forces act on every customer simultaneously, and they pull in different directions.
The brand’s CRM effort pushes customers downward through the grid — from N to T to B — by driving transactions. Each successful Sell play moves a customer down a row.
Entropy pushes customers rightward through the grid — from Strong to Weakening to Lost — by attention decay. Every day the brand does nothing, the entire customer base drifts rightward.
The job of a CRM team is to bend trajectories downward faster than entropy pulls them rightward. A healthy operation produces high downward velocity (Convert and Accelerate plays moving N → T → B) and resists rightward drift (Relate plays keeping customers in the Strong column). When the downward force wins, the brand grows LTV. When the rightward force wins, the brand grows AdWaste — because every customer who drifts into the Lost column becomes a candidate for paid reacquisition the brand will pay for next quarter.
This is what the Time lever from Part 1 means, operationally. Less Time between transactions is the downward arrow on the TAT. Compressing N → T → B is the lever in action. Less Tax per transaction is what the Revenue Tax Ladder from Part 2 governs — what each downward move actually costs when it happens.
A brand with many customers in B and T has momentum. A brand with too many in B– and T– has a silent attention crisis. A brand with a large R1 pool has allowed valuable customers to decay. A brand with heavy Repeat Direct Adtech and a large R1 pool is paying the price of having missed the warning signs months earlier — and is now paying the adtech tax to undo what cheap CRM attention could have prevented.
This is the hidden link between Part 3 and Part 4. The transaction taxonomy tells the brand what tax it paid. The TAT tells the brand why that tax may need to be paid again next quarter.
RFM looked backward: who bought, how often, and how much?
TAT looks forward: who bought, who is still listening, and who is about to be lost?
The answer determines the next action. And the next action determines whether the customer moves toward Alpha — or falls into AdWaste.
What the TAT does not yet describe is the intervention. The B– and R1 cells expose a structural problem the Revenue Tax Ladder also pointed to in Part 2 — the cliff between CRM (5–10%) and Adtech (20–25%) has nowhere economically viable for a brand to land a recovery transaction. The grid surfaces the customers who need that recovery. The ladder shows there is no rung to recover them onto. This is not a tactical gap. It is a missing engine. That is the work of the next part.