Thinks 1974

WSJ: “Perspective-taking is the ability to genuinely inhabit another point of view. Not to debate it, not to tolerate it, but to actually inhabit it. Intellectual humility is the ability to recognize the edge of your own knowledge and sit with that discomfort rather than trying to rush to fill it.  Both of these qualities are, at root, emotional skills. Perspective-taking requires genuine curiosity about minds other than your own. Intellectual humility requires a kind of emotional courage: the willingness to feel uncertain, even a little foolish, in the presence of something or someone that seems very sure of itself. These are not the soft skills we typically celebrate. We celebrate confidence. We promote decisiveness. We are building AI systems specifically designed to give us the answer before we feel the discomfort of not having it.”

NYTimes: “For better or worse, artificial intelligence is driving a major upheaval in American politics that will alter the substance and the character of campaigns. A.I. has emerged as a powerful political tool with the potential either to improve the quality of decision-making on Election Day or to do the opposite and subvert the process of deliberation. Perhaps surprisingly, a number of studies have shown that A.I. chatbots and large language models have stronger persuasive powers than humans.”

Tim Maleeny: “Reading builds empathy, because we’re experiencing the world through the lives of so many different characters. Therefore, more books and readers in the world means more shared experiences and common ground. Remember, politics thrive by tearing us apart, but great stories bring people together.”

WSJ: “American public schools are awash in YouTube. According to more than 45 families, school administrators, clinicians and educators across the country interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, schools’ overreliance on the Google-owned platform for educational content has created a gateway for students to get sucked into an infinite scroll of videos on school-issued devices. YouTube during snack time, dismissal and indoor recess. YouTube to teach drawing to first-graders. YouTube to read a book to class. YouTube under the covers at night, watching hamster videos on school-issued Chromebooks. A survey touted by YouTube executives shows that 94% of teachers have used YouTube in their roles.”

The CMO’s Alpha Playbook: Run the Growth Beta. Build Customer Alpha. Create Acquisition Alpha.

Run today’s campaigns. Build tomorrow’s customer engine. Stop paying twice.

1

The Great Contradiction of Modern Marketing

  1. Every CMO knows the dashboard. CAC. ROAS. Repeat rate. MER (marketing efficiency ratio). Revenue by channel. Revenue by cohort. Email opens. WhatsApp clicks. App pushes. Influencer performance. Marketplace contribution. Discount burn. Payback period. The dashboard is busy. Often, it is even improving. Campaigns are faster. Creatives are more numerous. AI tools are helping teams produce more variants, launch more experiments, personalise more flows, and optimise more channels.
  2. And yet, for many B2C and D2C brands, the economics keep getting harder. CAC rises. Discounts deepen. Repeat rates flatten. Owned channels weaken. Customers who once bought and engaged quietly disappear. Months later, they reappear through Google, Meta, marketplaces, affiliates, or retargeting — celebrated as acquisition, even though they were customers the brand already had.
  3. This is the great contradiction of modern consumer marketing: more tools, more data, more automation, more AI — and still, weaker customer economics. The reason is structural. Most marketing systems are designed to run campaigns. They are not designed to preserve customer attention as a compounding asset.
  4. The previous two essays — The Alpha Thesis and The Alpha Playbook [LINKS] — were CEO essays. They named the strategic claim every company must make about where its measurable edge will come from in the Age of AI, and the operating structure that turns the claim into something more than rhetoric. This essay translates the framework into the CMO’s operating reality.
  5. For most B2C and D2C companies, the CMO is the executive best positioned to operationalise the Alpha Playbook. The reason is structural: most of where Alpha lives in a B2C business — CAC, LTV, attention, retention, repeat purchase, owned channels, customer habit — sits inside the CMO’s mandate. The CFO sees the result. The CEO sets the direction. The CMO operates the levers that move the numbers.
  6. The translation: for Netcore (the B2B SaaS context the original Playbook was written for), Track 2 and Track 3 are about creating Alpha as a martech company selling to brands. For a B2C/D2C brand, Track 2 and Track 3 are about creating Alpha from customers — keeping them, growing them, and acquiring new ones with structurally better economics. Same framework. Different audience. Different operating mechanisms.
  7. The CMO’s job is no longer just to drive campaigns. It is to create measurable economic spread: lower CAC, higher LTV, faster repeat, higher Real Reach, lower REACQ%, better contribution margin. The campaigns are necessary. The spread is what makes them strategic rather than tactical.
  8. The playbook in one line: Track 1 runs the growth machine. Track 2 turns existing customers into a compounding profit base. Track 3 creates structurally better acquisition. Track 0 keeps the CMO honest by defining the spread.

Figure 1: The CMO’s Four Tracks — same framework, B2C operating mechanisms

2

Track 0: The CMO’s Alpha Thesis

Before the CMO changes budgets, channels, teams, agencies, or technology, she must write one sentence.

  1. Not a brand purpose. Not a campaign theme. Not a quarterly target. Not a media plan. A Marketing Alpha Thesis. One sentence with a benchmark, a metric, and a direction. Testable. Defensible. Operational.
  2. For a B2C/D2C brand, this sentence must answer four questions. First: what is our category Beta? Normal CAC. Normal repeat rate. Normal LTV. Normal payback period. Normal contribution margin. Normal discount dependency. Normal percentage of revenue from paid versus owned channels. These numbers are the floor. Without them, “we want to grow” is aspiration, not strategy.
  3. Second: what spread are we trying to create? CAC 25% below category. LTV 40% above. Repeat rate doubled. Payback under 60 days. REACQ% reduced from 60% to 25%. Real Reach doubled. The spread is what the Alpha Thesis commits to.
  4. Third: where will the spread come from? Owned attention? Community? Product velocity? Subscription? Brand IP? Superior retention? Referrals? Better first-party data? A new category narrative? The honest answer is usually one or two of these — not all of them.
  5. Fourth: what protects the spread? Can a competitor copy it in three months? Or is it protected by community, trust, habit, data, supply chain, brand meaning, product distinctiveness, Context Graphs, or a network? If a competitor with similar resources can copy the move within a quarter, it is not Alpha — it is a temporary lead.
  6. A weak thesis sounds like this: “We will improve retention, reduce CAC, grow LTV, increase repeat purchase, strengthen the brand, use AI, and build community.” That is not a thesis. That is a wish list.
  7. A stronger thesis: “We will create marketing Alpha by turning owned customers into a compounding asset instead of repeatedly renting attention from adtech.” That sentence is testable. It tells the CEO, the CFO, and the board what game marketing is playing.
  8. Track 0 has no team, but every team reports to it. Every campaign must ask: does this protect Beta or create Alpha? Every channel must ask: does this rent attention or compound it? Every budget must ask: does this grow customer value or only buy traffic? Every review must ask: what spread did we create?
  9. Without Track 0, the CMO runs a busier version of the old machine. With Track 0, marketing becomes an Alpha function.

3

Track 1: Run the Growth Beta

The current marketing machine — the cash engine that funds the future.

  1. Track 1 is the marketing function as it exists today. Performance media. Google, Meta, Amazon, marketplace ads. Influencer campaigns. Email. WhatsApp, SMS, push. App engagement. Website conversion. Offers and discounts. Seasonal campaigns. Loyalty programmes. CRM journeys. Agency operations. Campaign analytics. This is the BAU engine. It keeps revenue flowing.
  2. Track 1 cannot be ignored. Most CMOs spend 70-80% of their budget here. The cash it generates is what funds Tracks 2 and 3. Track 1 funds the future. It does not build it.
  3. But for most B2C/D2C companies in the AI era, most Track 1 activity is becoming Beta. Better creatives. More AI-generated content. More segmentation. Better retargeting. More influencer partnerships. Better landing pages. Faster testing. Smarter automation. All of these are necessary. Almost none of them create durable Alpha because every competitor is doing the same things, with similar tools, against similar baselines.
  4. AI will make this more true, not less. It will raise the baseline of marketing execution across the category. What once required a large team will be done by a small team. What once required specialist agencies will be done by agents. What once required long creative cycles will happen in minutes. This will improve efficiency. But efficiency is not Alpha unless it creates spread competitors cannot match.
  5. The diagnostic question for Track 1: is our current growth machine compounding above the category, or merely keeping pace? If a brand’s ROAS improved 15% this year, the honest follow-up is: did the category average improve by the same amount? If yes, the brand kept pace. It did not gain spread.
  6. For a few brands, Track 1 itself may be Alpha. Costco’s membership flywheel itself is the moat. Tesla turns product launches and community energy into acquisition demand. Some brands have such powerful product-market-community loops that paid marketing becomes secondary. But most brands are not in that position. Most are running harder on the same treadmill.
  7. Track 1 metrics: revenue, CAC, ROAS, MER, contribution margin, campaign conversion, CAC payback, repeat purchase, discount rate, paid media dependency, agency efficiency, creative velocity, owned-channel revenue share. The question Track 1 metrics answer: are we harvesting today’s growth efficiently? Not: are we creating tomorrow’s edge?
  8. The biggest Track 1 failure mode is mistaking efficiency for Alpha. AI is producing extraordinary efficiency gains across most BAU marketing activities. CMOs read these as strategic edge. They are not — they are Beta improvements every competitor is also achieving. The CMO who declares AI productivity a strategic win is the CMO whose competitors will quietly match it within three quarters.
  9. Track 1 needs a kill rule too. Channels accumulate inertia. Agencies defend their scope. Last year’s campaigns get re-funded out of habit. A Track 1 channel or programme that is producing CAC at or above category benchmark, with no path to better, should be cut or restructured.

4

Track 2: Build Customer Alpha

The most underdeveloped source of Alpha for most B2C and D2C brands.

  1. Track 2 asks: how do we create more value from customers we already have? This should be the CMO’s favourite question. The customer has already been acquired. The trust exists. The email address exists. The purchase history exists. The behavioural data exists. The brand has permission to speak. There is no need to start from zero.
  2. And yet this is where most brands underperform. They acquire customers at high cost, then treat them as campaign targets. They send offers. They send newsletters. They send reminders. They send more when response drops. Eventually, the customer stops opening, clicking, browsing, or buying. The brand suppresses them to protect deliverability. Months later, the same customer is reacquired through paid media. This is not growth. It is leakage.
  3. The reframe that makes this concrete: marketing is funding its own failure. Acquisition budget pays to bring customers in. Then marketing fails to keep their attention. Then more acquisition budget pays to bring them back. The bigger the brand, the bigger the leak. The cure is not more acquisition. It is owned attention that compounds.
  4. The single most valuable Track 2 reframe: segment customers by state, not by demographic. The BRN framework — Best, Rest, Next — gives the CMO a customer-state lens that maps directly to the operating moves Track 2 needs to make. Demographics tell you who someone is. States tell you what to do for them this quarter.

Figure 2: The BRN Customer State Map — Track 2 organised around what each cohort needs

The three cohorts and what each needs

  1. Best customers — active, high-frequency, profitable. These are the profit pool. The CMO’s first job in Track 2 is not to grow them — it is to keep them from drifting. Drift detection. Concierge service. Replenishment journeys. Cross-sell through proprietary preference data. VIP access. Referral programmes that turn the most engaged customers into acquisition channels for Next. The metric that matters: Best-to-Rest drift reduction.
  2. Rest customers — post-active, drifted, the reactivation pool. These are the customers the brand had given up on — the dormant database, the lapsed buyers, the ones marketing eventually suppressed to protect deliverability. Most brands respond to Rest customers by ignoring them until adtech reacquires them at full Meta CAC. The right move is owned-channel reactivation through attention — NeoMails-style daily engagement that earns interest before it asks for purchase. Magnets, polls, useful content, “still interested?” sequences for late-stage Rest. Every Rest customer recovered through owned channels saves an entire CAC.
  3. Next customers — future customers acquired through existing relationships. This is where Track 2 and Track 3 overlap. Best-customer referrals. Lookalikes built on first-party data. Community-led acquisition. Cooperative brand networks (NeoNet-style) where complementary brands share recovery infrastructure. The acquisition compounds from existing trust rather than competing on paid auctions.

Figure 3: The Customer Alpha Engine — how Tracks 2 and 3 act on the BRN states

The four high-leverage Track 2 plays

  1. Owned attention as a compounding asset. The email list, SMS list, app, loyalty members — converted from a notification channel into a daily attention asset. NeoMails earn attention through value (content, predictions, games, useful information) rather than burning attention through transactional sells. BrandBlocks anchor brand presence; Magnets create reasons to open; Mu rewards continuity. The Alpha is repeat CAC reduction — customers reactivate themselves rather than being reacquired through paid channels.
  2. Subscription, membership, or community economics. Recurring relationships replace lumpy purchase cycles. Costco-style membership. Amazon Prime-style frequency rewards. Beauty brand subscription replenishment. Fitness brand community membership. The Alpha is LTV stability and retention defensibility. Same customer, fundamentally new economic loop.
  3. Cross-sell through proprietary customer data. Existing customer behaviour, preferences, frequency, basket composition — turned into AI-driven personalisation that competitors cannot replicate because they don’t have the data. The Alpha is contribution margin per customer, not just AOV. The moat is not the algorithm; it is the data the algorithm runs on.
  4. Brand IP monetisation beyond the core product. Apparel brand becomes media. Coffee brand becomes hospitality. Skincare brand becomes content publisher. Liquid Death sells merchandise alongside water. The brand’s audience and trust become monetisable in adjacent categories — the existing customer relationship is the moat startups cannot replicate without first earning it.
  5. For each Track 2 play, the test is the same: is this a new economic loop, or just expansion revenue without a moat? A loyalty programme that doesn’t change unit economics structurally is the latter. A subscription model that converts purchase frequency into recurring revenue with retention defensibility is the former.
  6. Track 2 metrics: LTV uplift, repeat purchase rate, purchase frequency, AOV, Real Reach, CRR, Best-to-Rest drift reduction, Rest-to-Best recovery rate, REACQ% reduction, owned-channel revenue share, referral revenue, subscription/membership adoption, margin per customer, discount dependency reduction.

5

Track 3: Build Acquisition Alpha

Acquisition through doctrine, not chase.

  1. Track 3 asks: how do we acquire new customers cheaper, faster, and with higher intent than competitors? This is not “spend more on Meta.” That is Track 1. Track 3 is about creating designed acquisition advantage — a system that makes customer acquisition structurally cheaper for this brand than for any competitor.
  2. The reason Track 3 matters more than ever: outbound acquisition is becoming Beta. Every brand has the same Meta and Google tools producing similar performance creative. SDR-equivalents (in B2C, this is the influencer-and-paid-acquisition machinery) are becoming standardised. Running faster on the outbound treadmill maintains parity. Acquisition Alpha now lives in inbound, doctrine-led, brand-led activity that creates conversations competitors cannot create.
  3. The shift to internalise: outbound Beta is chasing prospects. Inbound Alpha is being chosen. Track 3 is the system that makes the brand the one being chosen.

Figure 4: Five Track 3 motions — each with the moat that protects the spread

The five Track 3 motions

  1. Brand IP and narrative ownership. Owning a category vocabulary, point of view, or cultural position. Patagonia owns environmental responsibility. Liquid Death owns rebellion against bottled water Beta. Glossier owned the inclusive beauty conversation. Tesla owned the EV future narrative before the auto industry could respond. The brand’s ability to be talked about, written about, referenced — without paying for it — is the deepest Track 3 moat. Earned media is what every paid media bidder is trying to manufacture.
  2. Community-led acquisition. Audience-first brands that build the community before they sell the product. Athletic Greens via podcast partnerships. On Running via running clubs and athlete partnerships. Lululemon via studio partnerships. The community is the acquisition channel; the CAC structure is fundamentally different from paid social. Trust travels through identity, not bidding.
  3. Product-as-content. Products designed to be photographed, shared, posted, talked about. Glossier’s pink packaging. Apple’s unboxing experiences. Liquid Death’s tallboy as a statement. Drunk Elephant’s colour-coded packaging. The product itself becomes the marketing medium — every customer becomes a distribution channel. CAC approaches zero on shared posts.
  4. Vertical integration as a marketing weapon. D2C brands that own supply chain or manufacturing can tell stories competitors cannot. Allbirds telling the wool sourcing story. Warby Parker telling the disrupting-eyewear story. Tesla owning manufacturing as both a cost advantage and a narrative. The vertical integration produces both better unit economics and a Track 3 narrative competitors can’t replicate.
  5. Owned diagnostic and experience layer. Skin quizzes, fit guides, personalised recommendations, AR try-ons — interactive entry points that create an owned relationship before the first purchase. Function of Beauty’s personalised hair quiz. Stitch Fix’s style profile. Sephora Color IQ. Curology’s skincare consultation. The diagnostic is the wedge that lowers first-purchase friction and converts on first-party data rather than Meta lookalikes. The data the diagnostic captures becomes a Track 2 asset over time.
  6. The Track 3 test is unforgiving: is the CAC structurally below category benchmark, sustained for multiple quarters? Volume metrics — content posted, influencers engaged, campaigns launched, audience size — don’t pass the test. Spread does. A brand with 10x the Instagram followers of its competitor but the same CAC has built brand awareness, not acquisition Alpha.
  7. Track 3 metrics: new customer CAC vs category benchmark, first-order profitability, CAC payback, organic / referral share of acquisition, community-to-purchase conversion, content-to-customer conversion, trial-to-purchase conversion, referral rate, paid:owned acquisition ratio, percentage of new customers from non-paid channels, LTV by acquisition source. The headline: are our new customers cheaper, better, and more likely to repeat than those acquired through standard paid channels?

6

How the Tracks Connect for a CMO

The structural rules and the customer-state-movement reframe.

  1. Track 1, Track 2, and Track 3 are independent in execution but linked in commercial flow. Track 1 funds the present. Tracks 2 and 3 build the future. Track 3 produces new customers. Track 2 deepens them. Track 1 monetises the existing flow.
  2. The most important reframe a CMO can make: marketing should be reviewed not only by campaign performance, but by customer state movement. Most marketing reviews today look at campaign metrics — open rates, conversion rates, ROAS by channel. These are necessary but insufficient. The strategic question is: how many customers moved between states this quarter?
  3. The questions a CMO Alpha review should ask each quarter: How many Best customers stayed Best? How many Best customers drifted toward Rest? How many Rest customers were recovered through owned channels, rather than reacquired through paid? How many Next customers were acquired through Best-customer referrals, communities, and partnerships, rather than through paid auctions? How many existing customers were unnecessarily reacquired — paying twice for relationships the brand already had?
  4. That is the CMO Alpha dashboard. It does not replace the campaign dashboard; it sits above it. The campaign dashboard tells the team how the engine is running. The state-movement dashboard tells the board whether the strategy is working.
  5. Three structural rules govern how Tracks 2 and 3 relate inside the marketing function.
  6. Independent budgets, shared doctrine. Track 2 and Track 3 should have separate budget lines, separate measurement, separate accountability. They share the brand’s Alpha Thesis (Track 0), the BRN segmentation, and the customer-state movement language. Doctrine unifies; execution stays separate.
  7. Graduated handoff. A customer acquired through Track 3 (community, narrative, diagnostic, vertical story) hands off to Track 2 (BRN cohort programmes) once acquired. The handoff must be explicit. Without it, the customer who came in through a Function of Beauty quiz gets lost in a generic email programme that treats them like every other Meta-acquired customer.
  8. Doctrine investment serves both tracks. Every published essay, every category-defining piece, every diagnostic the CMO publishes lowers CAC for new customers (Track 3) and reinforces the brand’s position with existing customers (Track 2). Doctrine is the highest-leverage investment because it serves both tracks simultaneously.

7

Six B2C-Specific Failure Modes

Patterns that kill the CMO Playbook even when the framework is right.

  1. Failure mode 1: Mistaking ROAS for Alpha. ROAS improves with AI creative iteration, with automated bidding, with platform optimisation — for every competitor simultaneously. ROAS gains over the past two years are largely Beta improvements. The test: is the spread vs category benchmark widening, or just keeping pace? If the brand’s ROAS improved 20% and the category average improved 18%, the brand earned 2% spread. Most “wins” disappear under this test.
  2. Failure mode 2: Confusing brand awareness with Track 3. Brand awareness measures whether people have heard of the brand. Track 3 measures whether people are choosing the brand without paid demand generation. Awareness is necessary but not sufficient. The test: are people coming to you, or just remembering you? Many brands celebrate aided awareness scores while their CAC matches category Beta. The awareness is real; the Track 3 isn’t.
  3. Failure mode 3: Treating community as a marketing channel. Communities that exist to receive marketing messages don’t compound. Communities built around a genuine shared identity, practice, or interest do. The CMO’s job in community-led Track 3 is not to “build a community” but to genuinely add value to one that already exists or could exist. The On Running running clubs work because they are running clubs first; they are CAC reduction second.
  4. Failure mode 4: Innovation theatre in Track 2. A brand launches a “subscription product” without fundamentally changing the customer relationship economics. The brand celebrates innovation and changes nothing. Track 2 must produce measurable spread above the existing-customer baseline; otherwise it’s a launch, not a strategic move.
  5. Failure mode 5: Owning vocabulary that nobody uses. The B2B equivalent of doctrine ownership was CMOs and CFOs talking about AdWaste in their internal meetings. The B2C equivalent is consumers using the brand’s category vocabulary in their everyday speech. “I need a Liquid Death,” not “I need a flavoured sparkling water.” If the brand’s category vocabulary isn’t being used by consumers, the doctrine isn’t real — it’s internal marketing-team language.
  6. Failure mode 6: Performance media as a permanent crutch. Some brands need 70%+ paid media share forever because their Track 2 and Track 3 never matured. That’s a sustainable Beta business — defensible, profitable, but not building structural edge. Honest CMOs admit this. Ambitious ones build the tracks. Both are legitimate strategic positions. The dishonest position is claiming Alpha while running on Beta dependency.

Figure 5: The six B2C failure modes — diagnostic and cure for each

8

How the CMO Transitions the Business

The 90-day diagnostic, the five-phase transition, the budget reallocation discipline.

  1. The CMO should not attempt a “big bang” transformation. The right path is a staged transition that begins with making the leak visible.

Phase 1 (Days 1-30): The Customer Alpha Audit

  1. The starting point is a Customer Alpha Audit. Most marketing dashboards hide the leak because they measure campaigns, not relationships. They show conversion, not continuity. They show revenue, not reacquisition. They show list size, not Real Reach. The audit should calculate seven numbers.
  2. CRR — Click Retention Rate. Of customers who clicked last quarter, what percentage clicked again this quarter?
  • Real Reach. What percentage of the customer base opened or engaged in the last 90 days?
  • REACQ%. What percentage of “new” customers acquired through paid channels had previously purchased, subscribed, installed, or engaged?
  • BRN split. What percentage of customers are Best, Rest, and Next?
  • Revenue by customer state. How much revenue comes from Best versus Rest versus reactivated customers?
  • LTV by acquisition source. Which channels produce customers who repeat, and which only produce first-order revenue?
  • Discount dependency. How much revenue requires discounting to convert?
  1. Present one slide to the CEO and CFO: “How much are we paying to reacquire customers we already had?” Put a dollar figure on REACQ%. Put a dollar figure on Best-to-Rest drift. Put a dollar figure on Rest customers who got reacquired through Meta when they could have been recovered through email. That single slide creates the political space for everything that follows. Without it, every subsequent recommendation looks like marketing arguing for more budget. With it, the conversation shifts: marketing is funding its own failure, and there is a way to stop.

Phase 2 (Days 31-60): Protect Best customers

  1. Best customers are the profit pool. The first job is not to win back the dead. It is to prevent the best from drifting. Build early drift detection, richer personalisation, VIP access, replenishment nudges, cross-sell and upsell, referrals, service recovery, preference capture. Metric: Best-to-Rest drift reduction.

Phase 3 (Days 61-120): Recover Rest before adtech does

  1. Rest customers are not lost — they are post-active. Critical: do not begin with discounts. Discount-led recovery trains customers to wait for discounts. Attention-led recovery trains them to engage. Use NeoMails, Magnets, Mu, useful content, preference forks, quizzes, predictions, reminders based on customer state. For late-stage Rest (deeply lapsed), use careful “still interested?” sequences, controlled pilots, suppressions, cooperative networks (NeoNet-style), partner surfaces, and one-tap re-subscription flows. Metric: cost per recovered customer versus paid reacquisition. If owned-channel recovery is structurally cheaper than adtech reacquisition, the case for shifting budget is made on hard numbers.

Phase 4 (Months 4-9): Build new acquisition loops

  1. Once Customer Alpha is improving, use existing customers to acquire better. Build referrals, community loops, customer advocacy, creator partnerships, brand collaborations, diagnostic funnels, content-led acquisition, NeoNet / ActionAds, one-tap subscription surfaces. Metric: new customer CAC below category Beta, with better second-purchase rate.

Phase 5 (Months 6-12): Reallocate budget

  1. The budget must follow the thesis. A directional 12-month shift for a typical B2C brand:
Budget Area Today (typical) 12-Month Target
Paid acquisition / retargeting 70-80% 50-60%
Owned-channel retention 10-15% 20-25%
Rest reactivation 0-5% 10-15%
Referral / community / partnerships 5-10% 10-15%
Customer intelligence / Alpha measurement minimal explicit budget
  1. The exact numbers will vary by category, brand maturity, and competitive dynamics. The direction matters more than the precision: move spend from renting attention to compounding attention.
  2. At the end of 90 days, the CMO should have one board-ready slide: “We found the leak. We proved one Customer Alpha pilot. We tested one Acquisition Alpha wedge. Here is the spread. Here is the next budget shift.”

9

The Big Shift

From campaigns to customer states. From ROAS to spread. From renting attention to compounding it.

  1. Every B2C and D2C company has a Growth Beta business. It must run campaigns. It must acquire customers. It must optimise media. It must launch products. It must send emails, WhatsApps, pushes, and offers. It must compete today.
  2. But the CMO who only runs Growth Beta will eventually be trapped by rising CAC, fading attention, and shrinking margins. The Alpha CMO builds two additional tracks. Track 2 turns existing customers into a compounding profit base. Track 3 creates structurally better acquisition. Track 0 keeps the whole system honest by defining the spread.
  3. The CMO’s mental model needs to shift across ten dimensions. Each shift is a rejection of an inherited assumption that has stopped serving the brand.
  • Campaigns → Customer states
  • ROAS → Contribution margin
  • Acquisition → Owned growth
  • Discounts → Attention
  • Retargeting → Reactivation
  • Broadcasting → Relationship
  • List size → Real Reach
  • Churn reporting → Drift prevention
  • Marketing spend → Alpha investment
  • “How much did we sell?” → “How much customer value did we compound?”
  1. The last shift is the most important one. It captures the entire framework’s reframe in a single question. Sales is the output of yesterday’s acquisition. Compounded customer value is the asset that produces tomorrow’s sales without yesterday’s CAC.

The 18-Month CMO Test

Can the CMO point at customers being acquired, retained, or expanded through motions that the company’s largest competitors cannot replicate — and demonstrate that those motions produce structurally better unit economics than category Beta?

  1. If yes, the brand has built Customer Alpha and Acquisition Alpha alongside its Beta marketing engine. The valuation will reflect Alpha generation, not just performance marketing efficiency.
  2. If no, the CMO is running a sophisticated Track 1 — protecting margin, improving efficiency, defending share — but not creating durable strategic edge. That is a legitimate position to occupy. It is not the position that compounds.

The closing thesis

  1. For a B2C/D2C company: Track 1 runs the growth machine. Track 2 turns existing customers into a compounding profit base. Track 3 creates structurally better acquisition. Track 0 keeps the CMO honest by defining the spread. Or shorter: Run today’s campaigns. Build tomorrow’s customer engine. Stop paying twice.
  2. The CMO’s Alpha Thesis should be simple enough to fit on one slide: “We will create marketing Alpha by turning owned customers into a compounding asset instead of repeatedly renting attention from adtech.” That sentence is the strategy. Everything else is execution.

**

In the Age of AI, every brand will run a Beta marketing function. The Alpha brands will be the ones that built the tracks alongside it — explicitly, separately, and with discipline.

Thinks 1973

NYTimes on conversation openers: “If you know someone fairly well, Dr. John said, swap ‘How are you?’ for ‘How are you feeling?’ Including that one word can make the conversation richer, Dr. John said. “That gives the person an opportunity to say something a little less rote, and they’re going to pause and consider their answer,” she said. Dr. John told me that she and her husband often ask each other this question when they get home from work. It opens the dialogue, because “there are so many different ways you can respond,” she said: “You can be snarky, or safe, or talk about something that’s bothering you.””

Arnold Kling: “What I like about democracy is that it facilitates the peaceful transfer of power. Monarchies and dictatorships create a succession crisis whenever the king or dictator dies. Murder and civil war can easily ensue. I lament that few others see the peaceful transfer of power as the primary virtue of democracy. Instead, we have come to believe in a “will-of-the-people” theory of democracy. We have grown accustomed to having elections and a Federal government that have major consequences for our lives. The “will of the people” ends up as Fear Of Others’ Liberty, justifying promiscuous government intervention in markets and local communities.”

Jet Li on punctuality: “When we were late for training as kids, the coach would punish us, make us run 400 meters in a circle, around 20 times. Every time you were late, you ran. So that became stuck in my mind when I was a little boy: You cannot be late. Show your pride and respect people. If you tell me eight o’clock, I will be there 10 or 15 minutes before and wait.” More: “People know how to train their body — be healthy, exercise — but not so many understand how to train their mind. For the past 30 years I’ve been training my mind to figure out the meaning of life and be happier. I say: Relax. Appreciate life, appreciate your teacher, parents, partner, whatever you need to appreciate.”

FT reviews Prophecy: “Véliz’s polymathic survey of prediction from the ancient world to the digital age is well timed. In the era of machine learning, we rely on algorithmic forecasting to guide decisions not just in engineering, but in public policy, corporate governance and our own personal lives as well. There is a core problem with this imperial advance, Véliz argues: the human practice of prediction is not about discerning truth, but exercising power. Predictions are intrinsically probabilistic, but are accepted as statements of determinate fact because they fulfil the psychological function of assuaging humanity’s innate anxiety about an uncertain future. As a result, they are also inherently wishful — motivated reasoning, rather than objective science.”

The Alpha Playbook: Run the Beta. Grow Customer Alpha. Build Market Alpha.

Companion essay to “The Alpha Thesis: Finding Business Edge in the Age of AI

Every company has a Beta business. The question is whether it has built the two Alpha tracks alongside it: one that compounds value from existing customers, and one that acquires new customers with structurally better economics.

1

From Doctrine to Playbook

  1. The Alpha Thesis essay ended with a question every CEO needs to answer: where will our spread come from, and what protects it from collapsing back into Beta? But it stopped short of the operating question. Knowing where Alpha lives is not the same as knowing how to build the company that produces it. A doctrine without an org chart is rhetoric.
  2. The gap that matters: most companies that read a strategy framework agree with it intellectually and then go back to running the same business unchanged on Monday. The framework names the edge but doesn’t specify the structure that produces it. The CEO nods. The leadership team agrees. The strategy deck is updated. The language changes. The company does not.
  3. The playbook in one line: Track 1 protects Beta. Track 2 creates Customer Alpha. Track 3 creates Market Alpha. Track 0 names the thesis that connects them.
  4. What this is not — Three Horizons (McKinsey) and the Ansoff matrix are organised around time horizon and product-market combination. Useful, dated, and silent on which quadrants produce edge in the AI era. This playbook is organised around measurable Alpha spread: each track is defined by the kind of moat it builds, not by the kind of work it contains.
  5. What this is — a Monday-morning structure. Four parts, each with a question, a metric, a kill rule, a graduation path, and a failure mode. By the end, a CEO should be able to point at every initiative in the company and say which track it belongs to and what spread it is producing.

Figure 1: The four tracks — one thesis above, three tracks below

2

Tracks 0 and 1

Track 0: Name the Alpha Thesis

The strategic claim that comes before any track exists.

  1. Before three tracks, one thesis. Track 0 is the strategic claim that defines what spread the company is trying to create. Without it, three tracks become three uncoordinated initiatives. With it, every track decision can be tested against a single question: does this contribute to the spread, or not?
  2. The four sub-questions — What is our Beta? What spread are we trying to create? Where will it show up — CAC, LTV, margin, retention, conversion, NRR, payback? Which track will produce it, and what moat protects it? — are the discipline that turns strategy talk into a usable thesis.
  3. A good Alpha Thesis fits in one sentence with a benchmark, a metric, and a direction. “We will outperform category Beta by reducing repeat CAC, raising LTV, and turning owned attention into a compounding asset.” That sentence is testable. Most company strategies, written this way, evaporate.
  4. Track 0 has no team, but every team reports to it. It is a leadership artefact — a sentence the CEO and the board agree on and revisit annually. Its output is the discipline that disciplines the other tracks. No staffing, no budget, no separate metrics — just the thesis everything else is measured against.
  5. The failure mode: skipping Track 0 because it feels obvious. Most companies cannot state their Alpha Thesis in one sentence with a benchmark. The act of writing it is the strategy work. The first draft is wrong, the fifth is defensible, the tenth is operational.

Track 1: Run the Beta

The diagnostic question, and the importance of the existing business.

  1. Track 1 is the BAU business. The products that pay the bills today. The customers the company already has. The operations that funded the existence of every conversation about Tracks 2 and 3. Track 1 is the present that funds the future, and that is not a small thing.
  2. The first question of Track 1 is diagnostic, not prescriptive: does our BAU compound faster than the category, or does it merely keep pace? If it compounds — Visa, Costco, ASML, AWS, TSMC, Shopify, Bloomberg — then Track 1 is itself the Alpha and the playbook reorients around defending and deepening it. If it merely keeps pace, Track 1 is Beta and Tracks 2 and 3 are where the spread will come from. Most companies are in the second category. A few are in the first. The honest test is whether the system gets more valuable every time it is used.
  3. The failure mode of skipping the diagnostic: a CEO declares the existing business an Alpha to avoid the harder work of building Tracks 2 and 3. The cure is the same discipline rule from the doctrine essay — versus what category benchmark, by how much spread? If Track 1 cannot answer both, it is keeping pace, not compounding.
  4. For most companies in the AI era, most Track 1 activity is Beta — improving margins, adopting AI, optimising cost structure, defending share. None of these create durable Alpha because every competitor is doing them at the same time, with the same tools, against the same baselines. The question to ask of Track 1 honestly: are we improving Beta, or running on momentum?
  5. Track 1 metrics: cash efficiency, gross margin, retention, NRR, customer satisfaction, AI productivity gains, cost per unit of revenue. The question Track 1 metrics answer: are we harvesting Beta well?
  6. Track 1 kill rule: when does an existing product line get sunset? Most companies fail at this — they let zombie products consume cash and attention because the org chart resists pruning. Explicit kill criteria — declining gross margin, declining retention, declining strategic relevance — give leadership the cover to do the hard thing.
  7. Track 1 failure mode: mistaking efficiency for Alpha. AI is producing extraordinary efficiency gains across most BAU activities. CEOs read these as Alpha. They are not — they are Beta improvements that every competitor is also achieving. Track 1 efficiency improves margin; it rarely creates spread above category benchmark. The compensation problem follows: leaders rewarded for efficiency gains they would have got anyway, with no Alpha to show for it.
  8. Track 1 funds the present. Tracks 2 and 3 build the future. Track 1’s role matters — it creates the resources without which the other tracks could not exist. But Track 1 by itself, in the AI era, will not produce category leadership for most companies.

3

Track 2: Build Customer Alpha

 The most natural Alpha source for most companies.

  1. Track 2 asks: what new economic loops can we create using the customers we already have? Customer Alpha is the increase in economic yield from relationships the company already owns. The customer relationship is built. The trust exists. The data exists. The distribution exists. The question is what new value the company can produce on top of those assets.
  2. Why Track 2 is often the highest-leverage Alpha source: CAC is low because the customers are already there; insight is high because the data tells the company what they need; trust is established so new offerings get tried. A startup attempting the same thing has to build all three from zero. The gap between “customer trusts you enough to try” and “no relationship at all” is often the largest economic moat the company has.
  3. Track 2 is not expansion revenue. It is expansion revenue with a moat. This is the most important distinction in the whole playbook. Outcome-based pricing, data products, advertising and attention yield, embedded finance, marketplaces, networks — these create new economic loops on the existing customer base; the moat structure changes. Premium products, subscriptions, services layers, AI add-ons — these improve unit economics without changing the moat structure. Both are valuable. Confusing them is the most common Track 2 failure mode.
  4. Worked example — NeoMarketing as Track 2 for Netcore. Atrium and Meridian are both Track 2 plays into Netcore’s existing martech base. Atrium converts owned channels from a decaying asset into a self-funding compounding attention asset (lower repeat CAC, lower fresh CAC, ZeroCPM economics). Meridian converts existing customer data into measurable LTV uplift through outcome underwriting. Same customers Netcore has been selling Email and CEE to for years. New economic loops that compound the moat. That is Track 2.
  5. The pattern beyond martech. Retail: private labels, subscription, membership, marketplace inventory, retail media networks. Banks: embedded advisory, wealth products, marketplace lending, data products. Telcos: fintech bolt-ons, content bundles, IoT services, attention monetisation. B2B SaaS: outcome-based pricing, vertical products, managed services, agent layers. In every case, the question is the same: what economic loop can we build on top of an existing customer relationship that no startup can build without first earning that relationship?
  6. Track 2 metrics: expansion revenue, attach rate, revenue per customer, NRR uplift, outcome-based revenue, contribution margin from new offerings, Alpha Generated from existing base. The question Track 2 metrics answer: are we capturing more of the customer relationship’s value?
  7. Track 2 kill rule: a Track 2 initiative that has not produced measurable spread above its target benchmark within four quarters gets terminated. The temptation to extend is the temptation to avoid admitting the experiment failed. Pre-committed kill criteria prevent zombie initiatives.
  8. Track 2 failure mode: treating Track 2 as innovation theatre rather than commercial discipline. The classic pattern — set up an “innovation team,” let it operate without P&L accountability, let initiatives accumulate without kill criteria, fund novelty rather than spread. Track 2 is not innovation. It is new revenue with measurement discipline applied.
  9. The subtle organisational point. Track 2 succeeds when the team is staffed with builders who do not have Track 1 day jobs and are not measured on Track 1 outcomes. Most companies fail this test — they ask their best Track 1 leaders to “also” run Track 2 in their spare time. Spare time is Beta time.

4

Track 3: Build Market Alpha

Acquisition Alpha through doctrine, not outbound.

  1. Track 3 asks: how do we acquire new customers with structurally better economics than the category norm? The word structurally is doing real work. A temporary campaign win is not Track 3 Alpha. Hiring more SDRs is not Track 3 Alpha. More outbound is not Track 3 Alpha. Even better conversion is not enough unless it creates a durable spread. Track 3 is designed acquisition advantage — a system that makes new customer acquisition structurally cheaper for this company than for any competitor.
  2. The reason Track 3 matters more than ever — outbound acquisition is becoming Beta. Every competitor has the same AI tools writing similar emails, generating similar landing pages, running similar campaigns, producing similar SDR outputs. Running faster on the outbound treadmill maintains parity, not Alpha. Acquisition Alpha now lives in inbound, doctrine-led, category-creation activity. The companies that own the language of a category lower their CAC for everything sold inside it.
  3. The shift to internalise. Outbound Beta — chasing prospects — is what every competitor is doing. Inbound Alpha — being chosen — is the spread. Track 3 is the system that makes the company the one being chosen.
  4. Worked example — Landings as Track 3 for Netcore. Most martech is sold against annual contract cycles. A challenger waiting for the renewal calendar waits forever. Landings — diagnostic wedges (the NEVER Audit), channel add-ons (WhatsApp, CPaaS), intelligence layers (Insight Agent), outcome wedges (Reactivation-as-a-Service) — create entry moments independent of the renewal calendar. The 10-day Land → 30-day Integrate → 90-day Expand sequence converts the Track 3 doctrine into a sales motion.
  5. The two tests every Landing must pass simultaneously — (1) it doesn’t threaten the incumbent so the brand doesn’t feel forced to choose; (2) it generates data or a visible gap that makes the case for replacing the incumbent eventually. Both conditions must hold. Either condition alone produces a Track 3 motion that doesn’t work — too aggressive, the buyer freezes; too benign, the buyer never returns.
  6. The doctrine layer that powers Track 3. The NEVER framework — Never Lose Customers, Never Pay Twice, Never Pay Fixed. AdWaste as the named problem. CRR, Real Reach, REACQ% as truth-serum metrics. ZeroCPM as the economic promise. Alpha pricing as the commercial frame. Owning this vocabulary is itself acquisition Alpha. When CMOs and CFOs are talking about AdWaste and Real Reach, Netcore is selling into a market that has been framed in its own terms.
  7. The pattern beyond martech. Diagnostic-led landings — HubSpot’s Website Grader, Drift’s chat, Stripe’s Atlas — all use a free or low-friction tool to surface a gap in the customer’s current setup, generate a data point, and create a conversation. Vertical wedges — purpose-built products for one industry that displace generic horizontal incumbents. Community-led acquisition — D2C brands building owned audiences before they sell. Tesla’s direct-to-consumer narrative built demand through community and product symbolism rather than conventional auto advertising. Insight-led selling — board-level benchmarks and ROI calculators that surface value before the sales conversation begins.
  8. Track 3 metrics: sales CAC vs category benchmark, inbound quality, conversion rate, win rate, time-to-close, pilot-to-scale conversion, CAC payback, first-order profitability, % pipeline influenced by thought leadership. The question Track 3 metrics answer: are our new customers cheaper, faster, and stickier than the market average?
  9. Track 3 kill rule: a Track 3 channel or wedge that does not produce CAC structurally below category benchmark within two quarters gets reworked or cut. Channels accumulate inertia easily — the calendar fills with content, the SDRs hit their numbers, the funnel produces leads. None of those metrics speak to CAC Alpha. The question is always the same: are these customers structurally cheaper than the market?
  10. Track 3 failure mode: mistaking outbound volume for acquisition Alpha. A company that hires more SDRs, runs more campaigns, sends more emails, and reports more leads is doing more Beta. None of that is Alpha unless the unit economics are structurally better than the category. Volume is not edge. Spread is edge.

Figure 2: Customer Alpha vs Market Alpha — what each track is and isn’t

5

How the Tracks Relate

Six structural rules that make the playbook work.

  1. Rule 1 — Track 1 funds Tracks 2 and 3 with explicit budget. The core must not be allowed to quietly starve the future. In most companies, when the quarter gets hard, resources flow back to the core. Experimental teams lose engineers. Sales attention shifts to immediate revenue. Marketing budgets get reallocated to pipeline. Tracks 2 and 3 become slogans. The cure is to make the budget separate, named, and protected from quarter-by-quarter reallocation.
  2. Rule 2 — Tracks 2 and 3 do not return resources to Track 1 until they graduate. Their job is not to help the current quarter. It is to create new engines. If they are constantly pulled into Track 1 priorities, they become staff augmentation for BAU. That kills them slowly and politely. Resources flow outward from Track 1 to Tracks 2 and 3. They flow back only when an initiative graduates into the BAU.
  3. Rule 3 — Tracks 2 and 3 are temporary structures that produce permanent Track 1 outcomes. This is the most important organisational point. A Track 2 product that reaches scale stops being Track 2 and graduates into the BAU. A Track 3 acquisition motion that proves out becomes part of the standard go-to-market. The tracks are not innovation labs. They are factories for creating new Track 1s. The objective is not to celebrate experimentation. The objective is to change the core.
  4. Rule 4 — Graduation criteria must be pre-committed, not deferred. Examples — a Track 2 product graduates when it crosses a defined revenue threshold and a defined gross margin threshold sustained for two consecutive quarters. A Track 3 motion graduates when its CAC remains structurally below category for three quarters and pipeline contribution exceeds a defined share. Without pre-committed criteria, initiatives stay in pilot mode forever.
  5. Rule 5 — Each track has its own metrics, leader, kill rule, and compensation structure. Different teams. Different reporting lines. Different time horizons. Most companies that try this fail because they staff Tracks 2 and 3 with people who are still measured on Track 1 outcomes. Compensation determines behaviour; mixed compensation produces mixed behaviour. A leader measured on Track 1 revenue will under-invest in Track 2 every time.
  6. Rule 6 — Beta and Alpha need separate P&Ls. If Track 2 revenue is rolled into Track 1 revenue at the financial line, the Alpha pricing transition becomes invisible. If Track 3 pipeline is reported as ordinary pipeline, the CAC spread disappears. Accounting separation is not bureaucracy. It is strategy made visible.
  7. The CEO test, applied to the rules: can you point at every initiative in the company and say which track it belongs to, and what spread it is producing? If yes, the playbook is working. If no — if initiatives float between tracks, or sit in “strategic priorities” buckets without measurement — the structure is rhetorical, not real.
  8. The board test, sharper: does the quarterly review actually distinguish between Track 1 cash discipline, Track 2 customer-base spread, and Track 3 acquisition spread? Most boards do not. They treat all revenue as the same. Boards that hold the distinction force the discipline. Boards that don’t get drift.

Figure 3: The graduation path — Track 2 and Track 3 produce new Track 1 outcomes

6

The Common Failure Modes

Six patterns that kill the playbook even when the framework is right.

  1. Failure mode 1: Skipping Track 0. Three tracks get launched without a Track 0 thesis underneath them. Within 18 months, Tracks 2 and 3 have drifted in different directions, the leadership team disagrees about priorities, and the company is running three uncoordinated initiatives instead of one coherent Alpha programme. The cure: write the Track 0 thesis as a sentence with benchmark, metric, and direction before authorising any Track 2 or Track 3 budget.
  2. Failure mode 2: Calling Track 1 efficiency Alpha. AI is producing extraordinary efficiency gains across most BAU activities. CEOs read these as Alpha. They are Beta improvements. The test — versus what category benchmark, by how much spread? — usually exposes the claim. The compensation problem follows: leaders rewarded for efficiency gains they would have got anyway, with no Alpha to show for it.
  3. Failure mode 3: Track 2 as innovation theatre. A team gets named “innovation,” gets a budget, runs initiatives without P&L accountability, accumulates novelty without commercial outcomes. After two or three years the team is quietly shut down and the company concludes “innovation is hard.” It wasn’t innovation that was hard. It was the absence of measurement and kill discipline.
  4. Failure mode 4: Track 3 as more outbound. Hiring more SDRs and running more campaigns and reporting more leads is Track 1. Doctrine-led inbound that creates structurally lower CAC than the category is Track 3. Most companies that say they are doing Track 3 are doing more Track 1 with a Track 3 label.
  5. Failure mode 5: Mixed compensation. The same leader running Track 1 and Track 2, measured on Track 1 numbers, will under-invest in Track 2 every time. Spare time is Beta time. The structural fix is dedicated leaders with dedicated metrics. The cosmetic fix — asking your best Track 1 leader to “also” drive Track 2 in their spare time — guarantees Track 2 fails.
  6. Failure mode 6: No graduation path. Track 2 and Track 3 initiatives keep running as pilots, labs, or special projects. They never enter the standard P&L, never get standard compensation tied to them, never become how the company talks about itself in board meetings. The company celebrates experimentation but never changes the core. The cure: pre-committed graduation criteria — what milestone moves a Track 2 product into BAU revenue, what milestone moves a Track 3 motion into standard go-to-market.

Figure 4: The six failure modes — diagnostic and cure for each

7

The Pattern in Practice

Five companies that have executed the playbook — different industries, same discipline.

  1. The framework is general. Its strongest test is whether it explains companies that succeeded before the framework existed. Five examples — across e-commerce, retail, creative software, B2B SaaS, and payments infrastructure — show the pattern in practice. Each company executed a different combination of tracks. None of them ran all three at maximum intensity. Each got the discipline right where it most mattered for their position.

Amazon — Track 2 as the company-defining bet

  1. Amazon’s Track 1 is retail e-commerce: low-margin, high-scale, structurally Beta in most years against the broader retail category. The genius of Amazon is that it built AWS — initially internal infrastructure to run the retail business — into a Track 2 product sold to existing technical customers (developers, IT teams who already trusted Amazon as a platform). AWS now generates a majority of Amazon’s operating profit despite being a fraction of its revenue. The Track 2 product became a larger Alpha source than the Track 1 BAU.
  2. Amazon’s Track 3 is Prime — membership that creates recurring visit habit and lowers repeat CAC. Customers don’t need to be reacquired through paid channels because they return on their own. The Track 3 motion looks like a loyalty programme; structurally, it’s a Customer Alpha mechanism doing acquisition Alpha work, because every Prime member is a permanently lower-CAC customer than the equivalent non-member.

Costco — when Track 1 is the Alpha

  1. Costco is the diagnostic case for “Track 1 IS Alpha.” Its membership warehouse model gets stronger with use — more members lower per-unit costs, lower prices attract more members, member loyalty drives repeat visits, repeat visits sustain Kirkland Signature private label penetration. The core compounds. Costco does not need a heavy Track 2 or Track 3 programme because its Track 1 is producing structural Alpha against the broader retail category.
  2. Costco’s Track 2 is Kirkland Signature — private label products built on existing membership trust. Higher gross margin than national brands, because the membership relationship makes customers willing to try unfamiliar labels. The Track 2 layer compounds the Track 1 moat further, rather than replacing it.
  3. Costco’s Track 3 is almost zero. The company spends remarkably little on advertising. Word-of-mouth and the customer experience itself drive new membership inbound. This is what Track 3 looks like when Track 1 is so strong that the customer becomes the acquisition motion. Most companies cannot reproduce this pattern. Costco can because of the diagnostic test passed in Track 1.

Adobe — Track 2 as pricing model transformation

  1. Adobe’s pre-2013 Track 1 was Creative Suite licences — a perpetual-licence model that was aging fast. The Track 2 bet was Creative Cloud subscription — same customers, fundamentally new economic loop. Recurring revenue replaced lumpy licensing cycles; gross margin improved; churn risk dropped because customers stayed continuously connected to the product. The customers were the same. The economic loop was new. That is the textbook definition of Track 2.
  2. Adobe’s Track 3 is Behance, education content, and tutorials — a community + content layer that functions as an inbound funnel for new creator acquisition. Designers learn the tools through Adobe-run channels and become customers as they do. The cost of acquiring a new Creative Cloud subscriber through this motion is structurally lower than acquiring one through paid search or display.

HubSpot — Track 3 as the doctrine play

  1. HubSpot’s Track 1 is marketing automation software — a category that has become increasingly Beta as competitors caught up on feature parity. Its standout track is Track 3: the Website Grader and the Inbound Marketing doctrine. The Website Grader is a free diagnostic tool that surfaces a gap in any company’s current marketing setup and creates a conversation. The Inbound Marketing doctrine is the category vocabulary HubSpot owns — books, podcasts, certifications, conferences, the entire framing of “inbound vs outbound.” Companies talking about Inbound Marketing are selling into HubSpot’s home turf.
  2. HubSpot’s Track 2 is multi-hub expansion — adding Sales Hub, Service Hub, Operations Hub on top of the existing Marketing Hub customer base. Same customers, more economic loops. Track 2 working in tandem with the Track 3 vocabulary is what has kept HubSpot growing through the AI-feature commoditisation pressure.

Stripe — Track 2 and Track 3 simultaneously

  1. Stripe’s Track 1 is payments processing — a high-scale, low-margin gateway business that competitors are constantly attacking on price. Its Track 2 layer is Capital, Issuing, Atlas, and Treasury — embedded financial products built on the existing merchant base. Each product creates a new economic loop: lending revenue from merchants, card issuing revenue, incorporation services for new companies. Different revenue streams, same trust layer.
  2. Stripe’s Track 3 is Stripe Press, Atlas, developer documentation, and the entire developer-first content motion. Stripe is acquired primarily through inbound — developers find Stripe through documentation, recommendation, or technical content. The CAC structure is fundamentally different from a competitor that has to sell payments through enterprise sales teams. Stripe is the company most often named when people describe doctrine-led inbound done well.

What the pattern shows

  1. Across the five examples, the pattern is consistent: no company maximises all three tracks simultaneously. Each company picked its strongest tracks and invested deeply there. Costco has barely any Track 3. HubSpot’s Track 2 came after years of Track 3 dominance. Amazon’s AWS is so strong that its Track 1 retail business is sometimes more like a moat-feeding mechanism than a profit centre. The discipline is not running every track at full intensity. It is naming which tracks the company is betting on, and committing to the measurement and graduation discipline on those.
  2. The second observation: every successful Track 2 was built on a customer relationship that already had structural trust. Amazon’s AWS sold to developers who already knew Amazon could run infrastructure at scale. Adobe’s Creative Cloud sold to designers who already used Adobe daily. Stripe’s embedded finance products sold to merchants who already trusted Stripe with their money. The Track 2 product is not the moat. The trust is the moat. The product is what monetises the trust.
  3. The third observation: every successful Track 3 had doctrine, not just demand generation. HubSpot’s “Inbound Marketing” is doctrine. Stripe’s “developer-first” is doctrine. Costco’s “value reputation” is doctrine. None of these companies won acquisition Alpha by spending more on ads. They won by owning a vocabulary, a category, or a customer behaviour pattern that competitors could not easily copy. Doctrine is what makes Track 3 structural rather than tactical.

Figure 5: Five companies, five different track combinations, one shared discipline

  1. The pattern is broader than these five examples. Apple Services is one of the cleanest Track 2 cases of the past decade — App Store, iCloud, Music, TV+, payments built on top of an existing installed base. Bloomberg Terminal is another Track 1-as-Alpha case alongside Costco — workflow, trust, professional habit, and data accumulation that compound until the product is harder to replace than to retain. Visa’s core network is Track 1 Alpha through pure network effects. Tesla has built a Track 3 acquisition motion through narrative, community, and direct distribution that conventional auto advertising could not match. The framework explains all of them. The point is the same in each case: the discipline is choosing the tracks that matter, not running all three.

8

Applying the Playbook to Netcore

From general framework to specific operating map.

  1. For Netcore (and martech companies), the framework is immediate. Each of the four tracks maps to specific products, motions, and metrics that already exist or are being built. Stating them explicitly is the test of whether the playbook is operational or rhetorical.
  2. Track 0 — Netcore’s Alpha Thesis. “Netcore will outperform martech Beta by shifting from input-based software to outcome-underwritten customer growth, creating measurable uplift in CAC and LTV through Atrium’s NeoMails and NeoNet and Meridian’s proprietary marketing model (with Context Graphs), MGEs and outcome-based pricing (Beta + Alpha + Carry).” The spread is lower repeat CAC, higher LTV, higher Real Reach, lower REACQ%, and higher NRR. The benchmark is the category-normal performance of fixed-fee martech vendors. The moat is the Context Graph-based model (compounding intelligence) and the outcome-based pricing model itself (counter-positioning — fixed-fee martech vendors structurally cannot adopt it without destroying their existing economics). That sentence governs every track decision below it.
  3. Track 1 — the existing business. Email, CEE, CPaaS, Unbxd. This is the cash engine. It funds Tracks 2 and 3. It must be run well — not abandoned, not deprioritised — but it must not be mistaken for the future. Email and CPaaS face structural price pressure; CEE faces AI-native competition; AI features will be copied. Track 1 funds the future. It does not build it.
  4. Track 2 — where the company-defining bet sits. Atrium turns the existing email infrastructure and owned customer databases into a self-funding attention economy (attention Alpha). Meridian turns existing customer data into measurable LTV uplift through outcome underwriting (relationship Alpha). Outcome-based pricing converts the commercial model from fixed-fee to Beta + Alpha + Carry (commercial-model Alpha). MGEs deliver outcomes through a human + agent operating model that pure-software competitors cannot replicate (execution Alpha). The sell is to customers Netcore already has or can access through existing relationships. Same base. New economic loops. Different moat.
  5. Track 3 — the Landings motion. NEVER Audit. CRR / Real Reach / REACQ% truth-serum dashboards. Zero the CAC narrative. AdWaste doctrine. CMO/CFO category education. Vertical wedge offers. Diagnostic-led inbound. The 10-day Land → 30-day Integrate → 90-day Expand sequence. The Track 3 question is not how do we sell more? It is how do we create conversations that competitors cannot create? Doctrine becomes go-to-market.

Figure 6: The Netcore Track Map — every initiative inside Netcore should map cleanly to one of these four tracks

**

The Closing Discipline

The summary, the CEO test, the closing thesis.

  1. The summary in one table:
Track Role Question Alpha Type Time Horizon
Track 0 Define the thesis Where will our spread come from? Strategic Alpha Annual
Track 1 Run the BAU business Does the core compound, or merely keep pace? Beta discipline (or Track 1 Alpha if it compounds) Continuous
Track 2 New economic loops to existing customers What new value can we create from the base? Customer Alpha 12-36 months
Track 3 Win new customers with structurally better economics How do we land better, cheaper, faster? Market Alpha 6-18 months

 

  1. The CEO test, applied: every initiative in the company maps to a track. Every track has a leader, a metric, a kill rule, a graduation criterion, and a budget. Every quarterly review distinguishes Beta cash from Alpha spread. Every annual review revisits Track 0.
  2. The board test, sharper: where is our Alpha coming from, and what protects it from collapsing back into Beta? If the answer is “AI productivity,” the company is probably confusing efficiency with Alpha. If the answer is “new initiatives,” the company may be confusing innovation theatre with Alpha. If the answer is “better sales execution,” the company may be confusing volume with Alpha. The right answer is track-specific: Track 1 funds the present, Track 2 compounds value from existing customers, Track 3 acquires new customers with structurally better economics, Track 0 keeps all three honest.
  3. The closing thesis. Every company has a Beta business. The question is whether it has built the two Alpha tracks alongside it: one that compounds value from existing customers, and one that acquires new customers with structurally better economics. The doctrine in the previous essay named the discipline. This playbook names the structure. The work is to apply both.

**

In the Age of AI, every company will run a Beta business. The Alpha Businesses will be the ones that built the tracks alongside it — explicitly, separately, and with discipline.

Thinks 1972

Ryan Roslansky: “The people who are winning right now, they’re not the ones with the best credentials. They’re the ones who are taking control of their career…There’s no single route up. You can go sideways, you can go diagonal, you can even go down to find a better path. The path that works for you, that’s unique to who you are — and that’s the whole point.”

SaaStr: “The single biggest variable in whether an agent actually works is not the model, not the prompt, not even the vendor. It’s whether you get a real human from the vendor helping you deploy it.”

FT: “Judgment: of all the traits that go into making a successful life, it must be the least understood, and so the most overlooked. Talent, of which intelligence is a subset, gets much of the attention. Parents go to the wall as a result of school fees and the like to maximise whatever quotient of it their children have. Hard work, or the “grind”, is the subject of almost all motivational podcasts. Even luck gets its due, as perhaps it didn’t a generation ago. “White”, “pretty” and “straight” are just three varieties of “privilege” in the parlance of the young. Next to all these factors, there is much less talk of (and even agreement on how to spell) judgment, which is the habit of making good decisions.”

WSJ: “A startup called LiquidPiston has spent more than a decade developing a new kind of rotary engine that it says can be both more efficient and compact than traditional piston engines. The spark plug ignites a fuel-air mix, causing the rotor to turn a shaft, creating motion. Exhaust escapes through the rotor.”

The Alpha Thesis: Finding Business Edge in the Age of AI

When AI makes capability universal, every company must define where it will outperform category Beta.

In the Age of AI, Beta will be available to everyone. The winners will be Alpha Businesses — companies that create measurable economic edge from proprietary attention, intelligence, relationships, and compounding loops.

1

When Beta Becomes Free

  1. Every business searches for edge. For decades, that edge came from familiar sources: better products, superior distribution, stronger brands, proprietary technology, cheaper capital, deeper customer understanding, faster execution, or access to talent others could not hire. These advantages created separation. They allowed some companies to outperform their categories, charge premiums, lower costs, retain customers longer, and compound profits faster than peers. The question of strategy was always: where does our edge come from, and how long will it last? That question has not changed. Only the answer has.
  2. AI is now changing the nature of edge. It is the most aggressive Beta-equaliser in business history, collapsing the cost and scarcity of capabilities that once kept leaders ahead of the pack. Capabilities that were specialist, expensive, and slow to build are becoming widely available almost overnight. Content creation, code generation, customer support, analytics, segmentation, creative variants, campaign optimisation, sales assistance, product mock-ups, workflow automation, and even agentic execution are moving from rare capability to common infrastructure. What was once Alpha — the advantage — becomes Beta — the baseline — in months, not years.
  3. A company that could generate hundreds of creative variants in a week once had an advantage. Soon, every company will do it. A company that could deploy AI copilots for customer service once looked advanced. Soon, that will be standard. A company that uses agents to summarise meetings, write emails, build dashboards, analyse data, or create campaigns may feel productive — but it will not be differentiated for long. The half-life of many AI-driven advantages may be shorter than any prior productivity revolution, and that compression is the defining strategic fact of the next decade.
  4. Each technology wave first creates advantage for early adopters, then raises the minimum standard for everyone. Historical parallels reinforce the pattern. ERP collapsed a layer of operational Beta in the 1990s; once every large company had ERP, edge migrated elsewhere. Cloud collapsed infrastructure Beta in the 2000s; once every digital company ran on cloud, edge migrated again. Mobile collapsed distribution Beta in the 2010s; every serious brand now has an app, a mobile site, and push notifications, and none of those are competitive advantages. AI will follow the same pattern, only faster and across a wider surface than any prior wave. By 2030, agents, copilots, and AI workflows will be table stakes the way websites became by the early 2000s. Saying “we use AI” will signal nothing about competitive position — like saying “we have email” or “we use cloud” today.

Illustrative: each technology wave becomes commodity faster than the last

  1. This requires a careful distinction that protects the framework against an obvious objection. AI clearly can create advantage — surely the right framing is more nuanced than “AI is Beta.” It is. Using AI is Beta. Using AI to create proprietary loops is Alpha.
  2. A content agent is Beta. A content agent learning from years of proprietary customer response, brand memory, product margin structure, inventory constraints, and individual context can produce Alpha. A support bot is Beta. A support system that updates a customer’s Context Graph, detects future churn, triggers the right retention action, and learns from every outcome can produce Alpha. A coding copilot is Beta. A product organisation that uses AI to run six experimentation cycles where competitors run two can produce Velocity Alpha. AI itself is not the edge. AI raises the baseline. The edge comes from what AI is connected to: proprietary data, customer relationships, trusted distribution, specialised workflows, networks, culture, speed, and decision memory.
  3. This forces the strategic question of the AI decade: when capability becomes common, where does edge come from? That question is what an Alpha Thesis is built to answer. The companies that merely “use AI” will not win — they will be running the same playbook as every competitor, with the same tools, against the same baselines. The companies that win will be those that use AI to construct loops, contexts, networks, and economics that competitors cannot easily copy. The rest of this essay is a framework for thinking about exactly that.

2

Alpha Needs a Benchmark

  1. The vocabulary borrows directly from investing, and the borrowing is exact rather than metaphorical. In financial markets, Beta is the return a fund gets from being exposed to the market itself. If the market rises 10% and the fund rises 10%, that is not skill. That is exposure. Alpha is the excess return generated by insight, judgement, timing, information advantage, or superior execution. A fund does not get credit for market returns. It gets credit only for returns above the market, after fees, after risk adjustment. The same discipline should apply to business performance, and most strategy frameworks fail because they do not impose it.
  2. A company cannot simply declare itself excellent. Excellence has to be measured against something. A brand cannot claim it has an advantage because its revenue is growing — growing compared to whom? A SaaS company cannot claim product leadership because retention is “good” — good relative to which category benchmark? A manufacturer cannot claim operational superiority because costs are down — down relative to what competitors, what input prices, what industry norms? Alpha exists only relative to a benchmark. That something is its Beta — the category-normal economics that an unremarkable competitor would produce given similar resources, capital, and effort.
  3. Beta varies sharply by industry, and naming it precisely is the first work the framework demands. For a digital fashion brand: category-average CAC, repeat purchase rate, gross margin, payback period, LTV, discount dependency, churn, contribution margin, Real Reach, and revenue from owned channels. For a contract manufacturer: production cost, defect rate, inventory turns, sourcing efficiency, working capital cycle, fulfilment reliability, and energy usage. For a SaaS company: net retention, expansion revenue, CAC payback, NRR, implementation time, support cost, sales productivity, and product adoption. For a financial services firm: loss ratios, underwriting accuracy, fraud rates, cost of acquisition, cost of capital, approval speed, and lifetime profitability per customer. Define Beta first. Everything else follows from that definition.
  4. With Beta defined, Alpha becomes precise. Alpha is the measurable spread between category-normal performance and a company’s actual performance. Not ambition. Not narrative. Not “we have a strong culture.” Take Maya’s $100M digital fashion brand as the running example in the essay. Maya does not begin with Alpha. She begins with a thesis. Today, her CAC is $34 against a category Beta of $35 — barely above baseline. Her LTV is $185 against a Beta of $180. Her REACQ% is 62% against a Beta of 65%; her Real Reach is 25% against a Beta of 22%. Her Alpha Thesis is that within four quarters, by attacking repeat CAC and lifting owned-channel engagement, she will move CAC to $24, LTV to $260, REACQ% to 25%, and Real Reach to 55%. That spread — $11 of CAC Alpha, $80 of LTV Alpha, 40 points of REACQ Alpha, 33 points of Real Reach Alpha — is what she has to earn. Alpha is not declared on day one. It is earned as the spread appears.
  5. This distinction matters because business language is full of vague advantage words: moat, differentiation, strategy, positioning, brand strength, execution excellence, transformation. All may be useful. But they do not automatically prove Alpha. The distinction in the framework is this: Moat explains why advantage may persist. Alpha measures whether advantage exists. They are different questions, asked at different layers, answered with different evidence. Moat is qualitative and assessed in paragraphs — Buffett-style judgements of switching costs, brand power, network effects. Alpha is quantitative and assessed on dashboards.
  6. A company may have a strong brand moat but weak Alpha if margins are falling and CAC is rising. A company may have temporary Alpha without a moat if it catches a market wave before others copy it. The strongest companies have both: measurable Alpha today and moats that protect it tomorrow. Moat without Alpha is a slowly emptying castle. Alpha without moat is a quarterly result that will collapse under competitive imitation. The framework treats them as related but distinct, and asks both questions of every business.
  7. From this distinction comes the discipline rule that protects the framework from drifting into buzzword territory. Every Alpha claim must attach a benchmark and a spread. Versus what? By how much? If those two questions cannot be answered, you are not describing Alpha. You are describing ambition, narrative, or moat. The rule has more bite than it looks. Most strategy decks evaporate under it. “We have a strong brand” — versus what brand, with what measured spread on what metric? “Our customers love us” — measured how, against what category benchmark, by how many points? Either the answers exist on a dashboard or the claim is not Alpha. The rule keeps the idea financial, operational, and falsifiable.

The novelty here is worth naming explicitly, because the framework deliberately reuses old vocabulary and a sceptical reader could ask whether this is just competitive advantage in finance dress. The Alpha Thesis is not a replacement for strategy, moat, or competitive advantage. It is a measurement discipline layered on top of them. Strategy names choices. Moat explains durability. Alpha proves economic spread. The novelty is not in saying companies need an edge — that is old. The novelty is insisting that every claimed edge must be benchmarked, measured, and revisited as AI collapses yesterday’s advantages into tomorrow’s baseline. The framework’s contribution is the discipline, not the discovery.

3

The Alpha Thesis

  1. A business does not become Alpha by wishing for it. It needs a written, explicit, falsifiable claim about where its outperformance will come from. An Alpha Thesis is a company’s deliberate belief about the source of its measurable outperformance. It is not a mission statement. It is not a brand promise. It is not a slogan. It is a strategic claim that can be tested. Most boards do not have one. Most strategy decks orbit around one without ever stating it cleanly. The simplest test: can the Alpha Thesis be written in one sentence, with a benchmark, a metric, and a direction? If not, it is not yet a thesis — it is still a hope.
  2. Worked examples make the abstraction concrete across industries. A fast-fashion company’s Alpha Thesis may be speed: it can identify trends, design products, manufacture them, and get them to customers faster than competitors. The benchmark is category design-to-shelf cycle time. The spread is weeks saved, inventory risk reduced, and sell-through improved. A logistics company’s Alpha Thesis may be route density and predictive allocation. The benchmark is cost per delivery and on-time fulfilment. The spread is lower delivery cost in covered metros, faster service, and higher utilisation than nationwide carriers.
  3. A luxury brand’s Alpha Thesis may be trust, scarcity, and cultural meaning. The benchmark is category pricing power, retention, resale value, and margin. The spread is premium sustained without discounting across cycles. A financial services firm’s Alpha Thesis may be better risk scoring and distribution density. The benchmark is approval rate, loss ratio, CAC, and lifetime profitability. The spread is more good customers approved, fewer bad risks accepted, and lower acquisition cost. A SaaS company’s Alpha Thesis may be proprietary domain workflows and outcome-linked pricing. The benchmark is retention, expansion, implementation cost, and customer ROI. The spread is lower churn, higher NRR above 130%, and faster time-to-value. Maya’s brand might say: “We will outperform category economics by reducing repeat CAC, raising LTV, and turning owned attention into a compounding asset.” Each thesis is testable. Each can be wrong.
  4. A good Alpha Thesis has three properties. First, it is specific — it names a small number of metrics rather than gesturing at “growth.” Second, it is falsifiable — there is a defined period after which the spread either appears or the thesis is wrong and must be revised. Third, it is aligned — every major resource decision in the company can be checked against it, and most should support it. Most corporate strategies fail not because they pick the wrong thesis but because the thesis is too vague to be falsifiable. A thesis that cannot be wrong is not a thesis. It is a slogan dressed up.
  5. The full vocabulary of the framework needs to be laid out together because each term does distinct work and conflating them collapses the precision the framework is built to provide. Alpha is the measured spread above Beta — a number on a dashboard. Alpha Thesis is the strategic claim about where that spread will come from — a sentence in a board document. Alpha Engine is the operating system that produces the spread repeatedly — Atrium and Meridian, in NeoMarketing’s case. Alpha Stack is the underlying assets and loops that power the engine — NeoMails, Mu, Context Graphs, BrandTwins. Alpha Metrics is the dashboard that proves it — CRR, Real Reach, REACQ%, LTV, CAC. Moat is what protects and compounds the spread over time. Each term names something different.
  6. The architecture in one line: Blue Ocean opens the space. Alpha Thesis names the edge. Alpha Engine creates the spread. Alpha Metrics prove it. Moats protect and compound it. Category leadership with sustained Alpha is the destination. This is why “Alpha Business” should not be the starting point. It is the outcome. A company becomes an Alpha Business only after it repeatedly creates, measures, protects, and compounds Alpha across cycles. The starting point is the Alpha Thesis.
  7. The reference table below summarises the vocabulary, the question each term answers, and how it instantiates for Maya’s brand.
Term Meaning Question Maya’s Brand
Beta Category-normal performance What would happen without special edge? CAC $35, LTV $180, REACQ% 65%, Real Reach 22%
Alpha Measured spread above Beta By how much do we outperform? −$11 CAC, +$80 LTV, −40 pts REACQ, +33 pts Real Reach
Alpha Thesis Strategic claim Where will the spread come from? Owned attention + lower repeat CAC + higher LTV
Alpha Engine Operating system What produces the spread repeatedly? Atrium + Meridian
Alpha Stack Underlying assets and loops What does the engine run on? NeoMails, Mu, Context Graphs, BrandTwins, NeoNet
Moat Protection and durability Why won’t the spread disappear? Context Graph compounding, NeoNet network
Alpha Metrics Proof What dashboard verifies it? CRR, Real Reach, REACQ%, LTV, CAC

4

The New Sources of Alpha in the AI Era

  1. AI does not eliminate industry structure. It makes the search for edge more urgent. Different businesses will find Alpha in different places — for some, it will come from supply chain; for others, from distribution; for others still, from trust, data, community, product velocity, or operating leverage. The mistake is to assume that one Alpha Thesis fits all. But the sources of Alpha in the AI era can usefully be grouped into four families, each containing distinct sub-types. The four families are Customer Alpha, Intelligence Alpha, Operating Alpha, and Market Access Alpha. Most companies will find their Alpha Thesis sitting in two or three of these families, almost never in all four.
  2. Customer Alpha — the family of edges built on direct relationships with the people who buy. Attention Alpha is owning recurring customer attention instead of renting it repeatedly from platforms. The cost of paid attention is rising; the value of owned attention is rising faster. Paid attention is expensive and volatile; owned attention, if maintained, becomes a compounding asset. This matters most for B2C, media, commerce, financial services, gaming, education, and consumer apps. Relationship Alpha is building deeper context, trust, habit, and personalisation so customers stay longer and buy more. Generic AI cannot replicate proprietary relationship depth — it can only describe it. Trust Alpha is decisive in healthcare, finance, education, childcare, eldercare, B2B software, legal services, and regulated industries. AI raises the volume of synthetic content; the premium on verified, accountable, audited trust will rise, not fall. The metrics that prove Customer Alpha: cost per minute of owned attention, LTV spread, churn spread, regulatory wins, customer concentration in long-term contracts.
  3. Intelligence Alpha — edges built on what a company knows that no one else does. Data and Context Alpha is using proprietary first-party data, Context Graphs, decision traces, and behavioural memory that public AI models cannot access. The model is universal; the context is not. Every interaction is a signal. Every decision becomes memory. Every memory sharpens the next decision. Talent and Agentic Alpha is not just using AI agents but redesigning the operating model around human-agent teams, faster decision cycles, and outcome ownership. The new question is not “how many people do we need?” but “how much output, judgement, and learning can each person create with agents?” Professional services felt this first — fewer humans, higher leverage, higher margin per partner — but the pattern is bleeding into operations everywhere. The metrics: prediction accuracy versus baseline, decisions per day, revenue per human, time from insight to deployed action.
  4. Operating Alpha — edges built on how fast and how cheap a company can run. Product Velocity Alpha is learning faster, launching faster, testing faster, iterating faster. Six product cycles where competitors run two. Hit rate held while volume rises. Time from insight to live deployment measured in days, not quarters. AI compresses cycles, but only for organisations designed to consume that speed. Supply Chain Alpha is better sourcing, inventory turns, fulfilment reliability, working capital efficiency, cost structure, resilience. AI improves planning across the board, but proprietary supplier relationships, geographic positioning, process knowledge, and execution discipline still matter. The metrics: cycle time, hit rate, gross margin spread, on-time fulfilment, inventory turns, cash conversion cycle.
  5. Market Access Alpha — edges built on the geometry of how the company reaches customers and partners. Distribution Alpha is owning or controlling a channel to market that competitors cannot easily replicate — direct stores, exclusive partnerships, embedded distribution in third-party products, regulatory licences, geographic density, trusted intermediaries. Network Alpha is cooperative ecosystems, marketplaces, community loops, data networks, or cross-brand networks that improve as more participants join. NeoNet is one example; pharma data consortia, banking fraud networks, B2B procurement networks, and shared logistics platforms are others. The classic compounding moat is one where the marginal value of the next participant exceeds the marginal cost of adding them. The metrics: cost per acquired customer through owned versus rented channels, marginal value of the next participant, network density, cross-side activity.
  6. The nine sources clustered into these four families — Attention, Relationship, Trust, Data/Context, Talent/Agentic, Product Velocity, Supply Chain, Distribution, Network — are not a checklist. They are a map of where to look. Most companies will find Alpha in two or three of them; almost none will find it in all nine. The work is not to have every kind of Alpha. The work is to find the one or two where the company can build something proprietary, measure it precisely, and compound it relentlessly across cycles. Pursuing all nine simultaneously is the most common failure mode of strategy committees — a company with nine Alpha Theses has zero focus and produces no measurable spread on any of them.
  7. The nuance worth holding alongside the families is that in the AI era, combinations of Alpha sources are stronger than single sources. For example, NeoMarketing combines Attention Alpha (Atrium), Relationship Alpha (Meridian), Data/Context Alpha (Context Graphs), and Network Alpha (NeoNet) into a single integrated engine. A pure attention play would be vulnerable to imitation. A pure relationship play would lack distribution. A pure data play would lack customer-facing application. The combination is the moat the components individually could not provide. This pattern repeats across categories: the strongest Alpha Theses synthesise sources rather than relying on one alone.
  8. The corresponding warning is that combining Alpha sources requires architectural coherence, not just a list of capabilities. A company that has attention, relationships, data, and a network — but treats them as separate departments with separate KPIs — will not produce the combinatorial advantage. The four must connect into a single engine in which signals from one source feed decisions in another, decisions feed back into context, and context sharpens future signals. A capability list is Beta. An integrated engine is Alpha. This is why durability matters — without the integration, the spread either does not appear or does not last.
  9. The Alpha Thesis question is never “should we use AI?” — that is Beta. It is always: “what does AI uniquely unlock in our category that competitors cannot easily copy?” That question forces specificity about category, about source, about durability, and about the proprietary loops that AI alone does not provide. Most companies that answer the AI adoption question well still answer the Alpha question poorly. The two questions are different. The second one is the one that determines whether the next decade compounds or commoditises.

5

From Alpha to Durable Alpha

  1. Alpha left unprotected gets competed away. This has always been true, but AI accelerates the erosion dramatically. The gap between “novel advantage” and “available everywhere” has compressed from years to months in many categories. A workflow innovation can be copied. A prompt can be imitated. A model can be accessed. A campaign format can be replicated. A visible tactic rarely remains a durable edge. This means an Alpha Thesis without a protection thesis is a quarterly result, not a business model. Maya’s brand might post strong CAC Alpha for two quarters; if the source of that Alpha is a temporarily underpriced channel or an arbitrage opportunity that any competent competitor can replicate, the spread will collapse.
  2. Every Alpha has a decay curve, and naming the curve sharpens the strategic task. Alpha Decay is the rate at which a measurable spread erodes under competitive pressure. Some Alpha decays in weeks — a campaign format, a prompt template, a channel arbitrage, a viral creative trick. Some decays in years — a process advantage, a supplier relationship, a distribution edge, a hiring playbook. Some compounds for decades — a trusted brand, a dense network, a proprietary learning loop, a counter-positioned business model. The strategic task is not merely to find Alpha but to understand its half-life. Fast-decay Alpha funds experiments. Slow-decay Alpha funds strategy. Compounding Alpha builds category leaders. A portfolio of all three is healthier than a bet on any one.
  3. This produces the cleanest framing of the moat layer in the framework, the three-part discipline that distinguishes one-quarter wins from decade-long compounding. Alpha measures the spread. Moat measures the durability of the spread. Multipliers measure whether the spread expands with scale. Three different questions, three different answers, three different evidence requirements. Spread is measured in basis points and dollars. Durability is measured in half-life — how long does the spread persist before erosion forces overcome it? Expansion is measured in slope — does the spread widen or narrow as the company grows? A great Alpha Business answers all three with hard numbers, not stories.
  4. Hamilton Helmer’s 7 Powers framework, stress-tested for the AI era, gives a useful taxonomy. Network effects, switching costs, brand, and process power survive AI well — they were never about capability in the first place. Scale economies and counter-positioning are reshaped by AI but still defensible — particularly counter-positioning, where incumbents cannot adopt the new model without destroying their own economics. Alpha pricing in martech is exactly this kind of moat: traditional vendors cannot tie revenue to outcomes without rebuilding their entire business. Cornered resource is the most volatile category in the AI era — what was a cornered resource in 2022 (proprietary models, rare engineering talent, exclusive data partnerships) often becomes commoditised within 18 months, and increasingly within six.
  5. Some moats resist erosion. Brand, switching costs, regulatory position, trust, and proprietary process can slow competitors down even when they cannot compound. Other moats compound with use — network effects, data flywheels, learning curves, decision memory, and ecosystem participation can make the advantage stronger with every cycle. The strongest AI-era moats actively compound rather than merely persist. A static moat in an AI world is a slowly bleeding moat. Defence requires accumulation. Every interaction must add memory. Every decision must improve the next decision. Every customer must deepen the system’s understanding. Every partner must increase the value of the network. Every cycle must make imitation harder.
  6. This is the AI-era test for durability, the question to ask of every component of an Alpha Engine: does the system become more valuable every time it is used? If yes, Alpha may compound. If no, Alpha will collapse back into Beta. A competitor can copy a visible feature. It is much harder to copy the history that made the feature work. They can copy the email format; they cannot copy the accumulated customer state. They can copy the agent interface; they cannot copy the decision traces. They can copy the campaign; they cannot copy the learning loop. Multipliers — the loops that make each action create more value next time — are not a separate category from moats. They are a species of moat: moats that strengthen with use rather than simply resist erosion.
  7. The corrected hierarchy now resolves cleanly. Alpha must be created, protected, and compounded. Created through Alpha Thesis and Alpha Engine. Protected through moats that resist erosion. Compounded through loops that strengthen with use. The end-state is not necessarily monopoly — most consumer brands never become monopolies, and “monopoly” overstates what most businesses should aim for. The realistic and valuable end-state is category leadership with sustained Alpha: durable above-Beta economics, defended by compounding moats, that compound returns to shareholders over a long horizon. Nike, Lululemon, ASML, Visa, Patagonia, Costco — different categories, same pattern: spread maintained for decades, defended by compounding loops that strengthened with each cycle.

6

Why Digital B2C Needs a Marketing Alpha Thesis

  1. Many consumer businesses are trapped in Red Ocean economics, and the trap has tightened with each year of the platform era. Products are easier to copy than ever. Platform costs have risen sharply across most digital B2C categories over the past five years. Marketplaces tax every transaction. Discounts erode margins. Influencer channels saturate within months. Creative formats get copied within days. Customers drift silently while brands celebrate acquisition and pay repeatedly for people they already had. This is broken Beta, not edge. Maya’s brand may report a healthy gross margin and a flattering blended CAC, but if 65% of her acquisition spend is reacquiring people who bought before, the headline number is broken Beta dressed up as growth.
  2. The traditional B2C playbook is becoming Beta at speed. Better ads, better content, better segmentation, better automation, better influencer campaigns, better retargeting, better offers. Every competitor can do these. AI will make them cheaper, faster, and more common, which means none of them is a source of durable spread. The CMO who in 2023 took pride in a 15% improvement in click-through rates from a new creative agency now finds that improvement available to every competitor by 2026, generated by a $50/month AI tool. The race to the bottom on tactical marketing efficiency is already running, and the finish line is a margin-free baseline. Running faster on this treadmill does not create Alpha. It maintains parity, then eventually loses to whoever has lower cost of capital.
  3. So where can a digital B2C company still create measurable Alpha? In many places. Product velocity, brand depth, supply chain efficiency, community ownership, pricing architecture, sourcing edge, distribution density, bundling, and capital efficiency are all live sources. A fashion brand may win through design velocity. A beauty brand may win through trust and community. A grocery business may win through supply chain. A premium brand may win through cultural meaning. It would be wrong to claim marketing is the only place to find B2C Alpha. But for many digital B2C and D2C companies, those other levers are either saturated or sit outside marketing’s direct control.
  4. The CMO has limited influence on supply chain strategy. The CMO has limited authority over pricing architecture. The CMO can influence brand and community but rarely controls them end-to-end. Marketing is the lever the CMO actually controls, and it is also the lever where the largest measurable leak in the business currently sits. The defensible reformulation is therefore: for many B2C/D2C companies, marketing is the most underdeveloped and measurable source of Alpha — because most brands are still leaking attention, paying twice for customers, and treating owned relationships as low-yield assets. This is not a claim that marketing is the only Alpha source. It is a claim that marketing is the source most CMOs can act on, with the largest hidden spread, and the cleanest path from thesis to dashboard.
  5. The shape of the problem is consistent across digital B2C categories. Brands have databases full of customers. They were acquired at high cost. They bought once. They opened, clicked, browsed, engaged. Then the relationship decayed. The brand kept sending campaigns, but the customer stopped responding. Eventually, the customer was labelled inactive, suppressed, forgotten — and later reacquired through Google, Meta, marketplaces, affiliates, or retargeting. The dashboard called it acquisition. The P&L knew better. The owned channel existed; the relationship did not. The customer was technically reachable but practically absent.
  6. This is the core of what I have called AdWaste: brands paying repeatedly for customers they already earned once. Roughly $500 billion globally annually is spent reacquiring customers who were already acquired, retained briefly, and then lost. A marketing Alpha Thesis for digital B2C should therefore focus on two linked questions: can we lower CAC by reducing repeat CAC, and can we raise LTV by keeping customers engaged longer? That converts marketing from campaign management into business Alpha. The opportunity is not to do marketing better. It is to convert marketing from a cost centre into an Alpha source.
  7. The measurable B2C Alpha metrics make this concrete and bring the framework to a CFO’s desk. CAC below category Beta. Repeat CAC reduced or eliminated. LTV above category Beta. Higher Click Retention Rate. Higher Real Reach. Lower REACQ%. Higher repeat purchase rate. Better contribution margin. Lower discount dependency. Faster payback period. Higher revenue from owned channels. This is where the NeoMarketing promises stop being slogans and become financial claims. Never Lose Customers becomes a thesis for higher LTV. Never Pay Twice becomes a thesis for lower CAC. Never Buy Fixed becomes a thesis for outcome-aligned vendor economics. Marketing Alpha is not “better campaigns.” It is a measurable spread in the economics of customer ownership.

7

NeoMarketing as the B2C Alpha Engine

  1. What follows applies the framework to one Alpha Engine in one domain I know deeply: NeoMarketing for digital B2C. The framework is general; the engine is specific. A manufacturer may build its Alpha Engine around supply chain; a bank around risk and trust; a SaaS company around domain workflows and outcome pricing; a healthcare business around clinical data and verified outcomes. For digital B2C businesses, the largest hidden spread typically sits in customer attention and relationship economics — which is where NeoMarketing enters.
  2. NeoMarketing is not the only possible Alpha Engine for digital B2C. But it is a particularly compelling one because it attacks the single largest hidden leak in consumer business economics: AdWaste. Its core claim is simple and worth restating in the framework’s vocabulary: NeoMarketing creates Business Alpha by converting owned customers from a decaying asset into a compounding asset. It does this through two engines that work on different parts of the customer base. Atrium operates on the Rest customers (drifting and at risk of reacquisition) and Next customers (acquired through cooperative attention rather than paid auctions). Meridian operates on the Best customers (the revenue-generating minority). Together they cover the full base.
  3. Atrium addresses the attention problem. Most brands have email addresses, mobile numbers, app installs, purchase history, and permission. What they lack is recurring attention. Their owned channels exist, but the relationship has decayed. The customer is technically reachable but practically absent. Atrium changes the purpose of email and owned channels — it treats attention as an asset to be earned, measured, rewarded, and monetised, not as a free entitlement that can be drawn down infinitely. Owned channels are not distribution pipes. They are attention surfaces, and attention is an economic asset.
  4. The mechanisms inside Atrium are simple to list and hard to replicate. NeoMails create regular attention habits — emails worth opening because they reward attention with value, not just promotional content. They are not blasts; they are relationship messages built around utility, interaction, and anticipation. BrandBlocks give the brand presence inside the email — voice, perspective, story, category point of view — earning familiarity rather than asking for the click. Magnets create the reason to open — quizzes, predictions, polls, preference forks, micro-games — turning the email into something the customer wants to participate in, not just read. Mu rewards attention and creates continuity across sessions, building a portable attention currency that customers earn and spend, making engagement visible and cumulative. NeoNet enables cooperative customer recovery without paying adtech auctions — when a customer is no longer responding to one brand but is engaged with another, recovery happens through a trusted attention surface rather than through Google or Meta. ActionAds fund attention and create ZeroCPM economics — communications cost nothing to deliver because they self-fund through embedded action units.
  5. The Alpha produced by Atrium is measurable and shows up across categories of metric: higher Real Reach, better CRR, lower REACQ%, lower repeat CAC, more revenue from owned channels, monetised attention yield, lower dependence on adtech, higher engagement in Rest and Test customers. Atrium’s role in the Alpha Thesis is clear: it reduces the cost of attention. It converts a decaying asset (owned channels with diminishing engagement) into a compounding asset (owned channels with daily habit and self-funding economics).
  6. Meridian addresses the relationship and outcome problem on the other side of the customer base. For Best customers, the challenge is different. These customers are valuable, but they are not guaranteed. They can drift. They can become less engaged. They can be over-messaged, under-served, mistimed, misunderstood, or taken for granted. Best customers leave politely — not in a cliff but in a drift. Traditional martech cannot manage millions of individual customer trajectories at this resolution. It segments, campaigns, automates, and reports. But customers are not static segments. They are moving states, and Meridian is built to model them as such.
  7. The mechanisms inside Meridian are deeper and more proprietary than Atrium’s. Context Graphs track customer state and trajectory: attention, affinity, fatigue, intent, preference confidence, value potential, risk of drift, and next best intervention. BrandTwins represent N=1 customer needs as continuously updated AI advocates that can negotiate, recommend, and serve at individual scale. M-Agents execute continuously across channels rather than firing campaigns episodically — Insights Agents, Content Agents, Shopping Agents, Segmentation Agents coordinate actions across channels. The Alpha Agent and Co-Marketer optimise outcomes against pre-agreed baselines, generating uplift that is measured against a control rather than declared as success. Alpha pricing aligns vendor incentives with measurable uplift — Beta is the brand’s pre-existing trajectory, Alpha is incremental revenue above Beta, Carry is the vendor’s share of Alpha only.
  8. The Alpha produced by Meridian is also measurable: higher LTV, better retention, higher repeat purchase, more cross-sell and upsell, lower churn, better Best customer growth, higher margin per customer, stronger incrementality against control groups. Meridian’s role in the Alpha Thesis is equally clear: it increases the value of attention. Where Atrium converts dormant relationships into compounding ones, Meridian converts engaged relationships into N=1 individualised value extraction at scale.
  9. Atrium reduces the cost of attention. Meridian increases the value of attention. Together they create the measurable spread between category Beta and brand Alpha — proven on a per-brand dashboard, not in a strategy deck. Or, even more compactly: Atrium lowers CAC. Meridian raises LTV. NeoMarketing creates the spread. Maya’s brand is no longer running a marketing department that competes on tactical execution against every other competent brand. It is running an Alpha Engine whose output is measured in basis points of spread above category Beta.
  10. Why this is defensible — leading to durable Alpha — comes down to the moat structure underneath. Context Graphs are a learning moat: every brand contributes context, every interaction sharpens the model, every decision becomes memory, and the value to each participant rises as the network grows. NeoNet is a network moat that strengthens with each new participant — the marginal recovery cost falls as the cooperative inventory grows. Mu is an attention-economic moat: it creates continuity across brand relationships and makes attention portable across the network in a way no individual brand could create alone. Alpha pricing is a counter-positioning moat: incumbent fixed-fee martech vendors cannot adopt outcome pricing without destroying their existing revenue model, sales compensation structures, and revenue recognition policies. A competitor can copy NeoMails. They cannot copy the million decisions, signals, relationships, and outcomes that made NeoMails work. That is the difference between a feature and an Alpha Engine.

8

From Alpha Thesis to Alpha Business

  1. A business becomes an Alpha Business only when it repeatedly creates, measures, protects, and compounds Alpha across cycles. Not one clever campaign. Not one productivity gain. Not one AI deployment. Not one temporary advantage. A repeatable system. The seven-step operating sequence captures it: define Beta, state the Alpha Thesis, build the Alpha Engine, measure the Alpha, protect with moats, compound through loops, reinvest the Alpha into the next cycle. Each step has owners. Each step has metrics. Each step has a quarterly review. Without the system, a company can produce a year of Alpha and call itself excellent; with the system, it produces a decade of compounding spread and becomes an outlier in its category.
  2. The CEO test is short and sharp. Can you state your Alpha Thesis in one sentence, with numbers, that an outside auditor could verify within 12 months? If your strategy cannot survive that compression, it is not a thesis. It is a hope. Most CEOs will fail this test on first attempt — not because they lack strategy, but because the strategy has never been written this precisely. Forcing the compression is the discipline that turns strategic narrative into operational Alpha Thesis. The first draft will be wrong. The fifth draft will be defensible. The tenth will be operational. The willingness to write it ten times is itself a sign of seriousness.
  3. The CFO test is the dashboard test. Can you point to the Alpha Metrics on a dashboard refreshed every quarter, showing benchmark, spread, and direction? If the metrics do not exist, the engine is not running. If the metrics exist but do not move, the engine is broken. If the metrics exist and move in the right direction at the right magnitude, the thesis is being delivered. The dashboard is not a vanity exercise. It is the only mechanism that converts strategy into accountability. Boards that demand it get clarity; boards that accept narrative without numbers get drift, and drift in the AI era is fatal.
  4. The board question of the AI decade follows directly from the first two tests. Where is our Alpha coming from, and what protects it from collapsing back into Beta? Companies that cannot answer this in 2026 will struggle to defend their valuations in 2028, because the AI premium is shifting from “uses AI” to “uses AI to produce measurable spread.” The first question — where does Alpha come from — forces specificity about the source. The second question — what protects it — forces honesty about durability. A business that answers both will outperform. A business that answers neither is operating on momentum, and momentum is not a strategy.
  5. Every business will need an Alpha Thesis. The thesis will look different by industry, but the discipline of writing one is universal. For a manufacturer, it may be supply chain and process power — measurable spread on cost per unit, defect rate, working capital cycle. For a bank, it may be trust, risk, and distribution — measurable spread on loss ratios, approval rates, lifetime profitability per customer. For a SaaS company, it may be domain workflows and outcome pricing — measurable spread on retention, NRR, time-to-value. For a healthcare company, it may be verified trust and clinical data — measurable spread on outcomes per dollar, regulatory wins, patient retention. For a logistics company, it may be density and prediction — measurable spread on cost per delivery, on-time fulfilment, utilisation. For a digital B2C brand, it may be NeoMarketing: owned attention, deeper relationships, lower repeat CAC, higher LTV.
  6. The pattern is consistent across these examples and visible only when the thesis is named. The winners will not be the companies that merely use AI. They will be the companies that use AI to create measurable economic edge from proprietary loops. That edge will not show up in a press release. It will show up on a dashboard. It will not be defended by narrative. It will be defended by compounding mechanics — context that deepens, networks that densify, learning curves that lengthen, decision histories that lengthen the imitation lag for any competitor attempting to copy it.
  7. The AI era will not eliminate strategy. It will make strategy more important than at any point in the last fifty years, because the ground is moving under every business at the same time. When tools are universal, edge must come from what is proprietary: attention, context, trust, networks, execution, relationships, decision memory, and economics. Every business will need an Alpha Thesis. The companies that find one, measure it, protect it, and compound it will become the Alpha Businesses of the AI age. Everyone else will spend the next decade running faster on the same treadmill, with the same tools, against the same baselines, and arriving at the same place as their competitors.
  8. In the Age of AI, Beta will be available to everyone. The winners will be Alpha Businesses — companies that create measurable economic edge from proprietary attention, intelligence, relationships, and compounding loops. The work for every leadership team in 2026 is to translate this thesis into their own industry, their own benchmarks, their own engine, their own dashboard, and their own moat. The discipline is to do it now, before the AI premium expires and the question becomes not whether the company is using AI — that will be table stakes — but whether the company has built something that AI alone cannot replicate.

**

In the Age of AI, Beta will belong to everyone. Alpha will belong to the few who know where their edge comes from — and can prove it.

Thinks 1971

WSJ: “To observe the hit from AI fears, it can be helpful to split the sector into four main categories: “Vertical” software that serves specific industries, “Horizontal” software that serves a range of businesses, Cybersecurity and identity-verification software, and Software-engineering software.”

CollabFund: “We are in the early innings of a fundamental shift in how we understand the human body. The current medical model is reactive and episodic — you feel sick, you see a doctor, you get a snapshot. But your body is a complex machine running 24/7, and it deserves a software layer that can actually keep up. That’s the idea behind what founder Will Ahmed from WHOOP calls the Health OS: continuous monitoring, proactive intelligence, and personalized coaching — all built on one of the most comprehensive longitudinal health datasets in existence. WHOOP has collected over 24 billion hours of continuous physiological data from more than 2.5 million members. That data, combined with a new medical-grade device and a generative AI coaching layer, positions WHOOP to bridge the gap between consumer wellness and clinical healthcare in a way no one else can.”

Bloomberg (via Mint): “With everyone’s attention fixed on powerful chatbots like ChatGPT and Claude, it’s been easy to overlook the growth of another field of artificial intelligence: world models. These systems can grasp three-dimensional space and physics, providing the foundation for everything from robots to smart glasses to self-driving cars—and a capability that today’s chatbots lack.”

NYTimes: “[China’s] Geely has built a business model designed to handle volatility. It is one of the few automakers that can compete across all four major powertrains: gasoline, gasoline-electric hybrids, plug-in hybrids and fully electric. That breadth allows it to shift quickly as conditions change.”

NeoMails: Never Pay Twice

Published May 25, 2026

1

Keep. Recover. Earn.

Every CMO carries a quiet arithmetic they would rather not name. The budget grows year after year. A large share of it goes to Google and Meta. A large share of that goes not to acquiring new customers but to reaching people the brand already acquired — customers whose email IDs, purchase histories, and preferences already sit inside its own systems.

The bill for the same customer, paid twice. Once to get them. Again to find them when the owned channel went quiet.

This is the hidden waste inside modern growth. It is what NeoMarketing names in one phrase: Never Pay Twice.

The whole NeoMails pitch to a CMO is, in the end, a pitch to stop paying twice. Not to abandon paid media. Not to fire the agency. Not to reinvent the marketing organisation. Simply to stop paying the duopoly to do what owned channels were supposed to do — and largely stopped doing — over the past decade.

Three benefits follow from that single idea. They map, usefully, to BRN — the segmentation of every customer base into Best, Rest, and Next.

Keep. The Best customers are the ones who still open, still click, still buy — but whose attention is quietly thinning. This is the most invisible and most expensive form of drift. Every Best customer who slides into Rest is a customer whose LTV will have to be defended, reacquired, or replaced. The industry has spent a decade building downstream retention tactics — churn models, win-back campaigns, loyalty programmes that activate after the damage is done. NeoMails sit upstream of all of them. A Relate cadence on the active base keeps the relationship warm between transactions, without forcing a sale in every message. A customer who never drifts does not need to be reactivated.

Recover. The Rest customers are the ones who have gone silent — usually the majority of any three-year-old database. The conventional answer is a discount-led win-back, and the conventional result is a low-single-digit reactivation rate. The reason these campaigns fail is that they send Sell emails to people who stopped caring about Sell emails. NeoMails start elsewhere. A Magnet — a prediction, a quiz, a one-tap opinion, a moment of self-discovery — offers the dormant subscriber a reason to open that is not a coupon. The emotional contract resets. The email offers rather than asks. Reactivation at a fraction of the original acquisition cost is the highest-return activity available to a marketing team, and it has been sitting uncultivated because no one was sending the right kind of email.

Earn. The third benefit changes the economics of the channel itself, independent of which customer segment is being reached. ActionAds — native, contextual, action-first units embedded inside the Magnet — generate yield without breaking trust. In a conservative case, the yield covers a meaningful share of what the email programme already costs. In a stretched case, it covers all of it. The email earns before it asks to sell. Partially self-funding in year one; structurally closer to ZeroCPM over time.

Keep. Recover. Earn. Three moves under one doctrine.

The CMO’s question changes along the way. It stops being “how much more should I spend?” and becomes “how much of what I’m spending is repairing a channel I should never have let fail?”

2

Maya asks the hard questions

Maya, the CMO, had read the one-pager. She had also been in enough vendor meetings to know the pitch was not what mattered. The questions were.

“Let me start somewhere uncomfortable,” she said. “Why should I believe email can do this now when it hasn’t for the last five years?”

“Because the problem was never the channel,” the vendor said. “It was what we were sending down it. Email stopped working when every message became Sell or Notify. The inbox started filtering it out, and customers stopped opening. NeoMails are the third kind of email — Relate. That is a category most brands do not send at all today. The channel did not break. The content category went missing.”

Maya raised an eyebrow. “Fine. What do I stop doing if I start doing this?”

“Nothing, at first. NeoMails sit alongside Sell and Notify, not in place of them. The cadence is light — a short, daily Relate moment that keeps the relationship warm. The bigger ‘stop’ happens later, when the owned channel starts working again. That is when you stop paying Meta to bring back customers you already owned. The reduction in paid reacquisition is the real budget shift, not an upfront cut.”

“So this is a new win-back programme.”

“No. A win-back programme is a Sell email with a bigger discount. This is the opposite. The first job is to earn attention, not to ask for a purchase. If you lead with a discount, you train the customer that the relationship is only about price. If you lead with a Magnet, you train the customer that the brand is worth opening even when nothing is being sold.”

Maya leaned forward. “Let me be blunt. Are you telling me ActionAd revenue will fund my whole email programme in year one?”

The vendor did not flinch. “No. Not in year one for most brands. The year-one claim is narrower: ActionAds cover a meaningful share of what email already costs you. Full self-funding is plausible later, once active-base volume and yield both scale. ZeroCPM is the asymptote, not the opening case. If someone promises it to you in year one, be suspicious.”

Maya nodded slowly. “That I can work with. What do I tell my CFO?”

“Tell them this: we are not asking for more email spend. We are making the email programme partially self-funding while reducing future paid reacquisition. Same budget, better economics, a recoverable dormant base, and a new revenue line that did not exist before. A channel that used to cost now also earns.”

“And the brand team will ask about trust. What do I tell them?”

“The same thing the design of NeoMails has to answer every day. The Magnet earns the moment. The Brand Block carries your voice. The ActionAd is curated — an offer to do something useful, not an interruption. If any of those three fail, the whole system fails. The model is built so the customer must get value first. Otherwise the attention is not there for anyone to monetise.”

Maya was quiet for a moment. “And NeoNet?”

“Think of NeoNet as the compounding layer. Once your NeoMails are earning attention daily, a complementary brand’s ActionAd inside your email is a cheaper way for them to acquire a subscriber than paying Meta. The reverse is also true — their email becomes your acquisition surface. No auction. No duopoly tax. A cooperative, consented exchange of attention between brands who already respect it.”

“So the shape is: keep my active base active, recover the ones who drifted, earn from the channel itself, and eventually acquire through a network that does not run on bids.”

“That is the shape.”

Maya looked at the slide one more time. “Never Pay Twice,” she said, half to herself. “I can work with that sentence.”

3

What compounds once it works

The three primary benefits — Keep, Recover, Earn — are the argument a CMO takes into the first meeting. They are also only the entry point.

Three further benefits start compounding once the primary loop is working. None of them stands on its own as a pitch. All three become meaningful once the channel has been restored.

Acquire. The first compounding effect is cooperative acquisition through NeoNet. Once a brand’s NeoMails have real engaged attention flowing through them daily, that attention becomes valuable inventory for another brand seeking subscribers. An ActionAd inside your NeoMail becomes their acquisition path; their NeoMail becomes yours. A subscriber acquired this way is not a lookalike guess from an auction. They are a real person who engaged with a related brand and consented to receive more. The quality is higher than paid media, the cost is a small transfer fee rather than a full auction CAC, and the economics improve as the network grows — the opposite of the paid curve, where each additional customer costs more than the last. This is what Never Pay Twice looks like on the acquisition side: brands introducing each other’s customers instead of paying the same platform to do it for them.

Retain. The second compounding effect is better onboarding of newly acquired customers. Today, most new subscribers enter the database and immediately begin the slow walk back out. They receive a welcome sequence, a few promotional emails, and then the regular campaign calendar — which eventually becomes silence. Acquisition without relationship continuity is deferred waste: a new dormant customer in the making. NeoMails change what happens after acquisition. A new subscriber enters a Relate cadence from day one. Light-touch, useful, interactive, non-extractive. The brand stays present for reasons that are not transactional, which is precisely when continuity is most fragile. Customers who are kept warm from the start do not have to be reactivated later.

Grow. The third compounding effect is the one CFOs eventually notice. The ActionAd revenue is only the first visible economic layer. The larger commercial upside arrives when reactivated customers start buying again. A customer who reopens the channel becomes reachable again — for recommendations, education, personalisation, and eventually commerce. The reactivated cohort is no longer dead weight inside the database; it is a revived audience with forward LTV. The commerce revenue is harder to model and slower to arrive, but it is the largest of the three secondary benefits — and it is the payoff for having Kept and Recovered the relationship in the first place.

Together, the six benefits form a ladder rather than a list. Keep preserves what you already have. Recover reclaims what you let drift. Earn makes the channel economically honest. Acquire lowers the cost of growth. Retain protects the new customer before drift begins. Grow turns the revived base into future revenue.

All of it rests on one doctrine.

Never Pay Twice. Stop paying the duopoly to reach customers you already own. Stop paying to reacquire what your owned channel should never have let slip. Stop paying for broadcast on a medium that was designed for relationship.

NeoMails are not a better campaign format. They are what email was supposed to be before it was industrialised — a place where a brand shows up daily for reasons other than the transaction, and in doing so earns the right to transact when the moment arrives.

The CMO who sees that clearly has already won half the argument with their CFO.

Thinks 1970

Deirdre Nansen McCloskey: “A dominant paradigm these days in economics is “neo-institutionalism,” pushed for decades by Douglass North (1920–2015; Nobel 1993) and now the orthodoxy at the World Bank. It says, like a recipe book, “Add institutions and stir.” Institutions such as sharecropping or land reform or modern courts are seen as causal. Much of the evidence is historical. Much of it is mistaken.”

WSJ: [United Airlines CEO Scott] Kirby keeps pressing executives to improve the experience of flying United, repeating one phrase that has become a mantra: “Your job is wow.”  “They all looked at me, like, what the hell does that mean?” he said. It means he wants customers to think: “Wow, I’ve never seen an airline do this.””

ET: “Every once in a while, a decade arrives that quietly but decisively resets the trajectory of a city. For New York, it was the 1890s, when bridges, subways and skyscrapers stitched together a modern metropolis. For Singapore, the 1980s marked its transformation from a port city into a global hub. Dubai’s reinvention began in the 1990s; Shanghai’s in the noughties. For Mumbai, that decade may well be the 2020s. Over $60 billion is currently flowing into the city’s infrastructure, an investment scale Mumbai has never seen before. A second international airport, new expressways, a 16-line metro network, redesigned local train rakes, sea links, tunnels and transit-oriented development zones are all coming together, almost simultaneously.”

NYTimes on “what the rise of A.I. and the gutting of books coverage across U.S. media will mean for literature”: “Book reviews may survive if only because, as Elizabeth Hardwick observed, publishers need praise for their new releases “as an Easter basket needs shredded green paper under the eggs.” But the breakup of the monoculture, the rise of algorithms and the flattening of taste mean that critics will never, for better and worse, have the consecrating power they once did.”

NeoMails: Reclaiming Email as Relationship Infrastructure

Published May 24, 2026

1

Email’s failure — from relationship to broadcast

Email did not fail because people stopped checking their inboxes. It failed because brands forgot what the inbox was for.

For three decades, email rode on inherited gravity. People opened it because that was where life happened — personal notes, work exchanges, confirmations, conversations that mattered. Brands piggybacked on that habit. The inbox already had a magnet; marketing merely borrowed it.

That era is over. Personal communication migrated to WhatsApp, iMessage, Slack, and social apps. The inbox remained, but its centre of gravity shifted. What was once a place of anticipation became a place of accumulation — receipts, alerts, promotions, reminders, the endless queue of “last chance” messages pretending to be urgent. Brands did not create this shift alone, but they adapted to it in the worst possible way. As the natural pull of email weakened, they pushed harder.

The result was predictable. More volume. Lower relevance. Less attention. More decay.

Modern email marketing still behaves as if the old rules apply. If engagement is falling, the answer must be better subject lines, sharper segmentation, another automation journey, more personalisation, more AI. But these are optimisations within a broken frame. They improve the message while leaving the medium unchanged. And the medium, as brands now experience it, is hostile to continuity. Each email arrives as a disconnected event. Nothing accumulates. Nothing carries over. Nothing makes the recipient think, I want to come back tomorrow.

That is the heart of the failure. Email moved from relationship to broadcast.

Broadcast treats the inbox as a pipe. A brand has something to say, so it sends. The logic is always sender-led — what does the brand want the customer to know, do, or buy right now? The recipient’s attention is treated as available inventory. If a message underperforms, another follows. This is why so much email now feels like wallpaper. It appears, asks, and disappears.

This is also why brands end up paying twice. First to acquire the customer, then — after months of neglect inside the owned channel — to reacquire the same customer on Google or Meta when the relationship has faded. The inbox was supposed to be the alternative to rented reach. Instead, in its current form, it is one of the main reasons rented reach remains necessary.

The diagnosis becomes clear once you name what the channel actually contains. Email today is dominated by two modes and is missing a third.

Sell is the first. Promotions, launches, recommendations, price drops, cart reminders. Necessary, but extractive.

Notify is the second. Order confirmations, receipts, OTPs, shipment alerts, policy updates. Useful, but purely transactional.

Brands live inside these two modes and oscillate endlessly between them. What has disappeared is the third mode — the one that originally gave email its emotional weight.

That third mode is Relate.

A Relate email is not built around the brand’s urgency. It is built around the customer’s willingness to return. It offers a reason to open that is not reducible to “buy now” or “here is an update.” It can carry a quiz, a prediction, a streak, a useful brand story, a small interaction. It gives the recipient something to do, not just something to read. It earns attention first and uses it well second.

That shift is much bigger than format. It changes what email is for. The inbox stops being a delivery mechanism and becomes a relationship surface again — one capable of continuity, daily habit, and eventually monetisable attention.

NeoMails are the third kind of email. Not better broadcast. A different category altogether.

2

Reactivate the silent majority; turn email into a revenue surface

Benefit 1: Reactivate the silent majority.

The most valuable asset most brands possess is not the website, the app, or the social following. It is the email database — millions of identities accumulated through purchases, sign-ups, and referrals over years. But that asset is usually misunderstood. Brands think of it as audience. In reality, only a fraction of it is truly reachable.

The arithmetic is uncomfortable and familiar across categories. A small share of the database is active and responsive. A much larger share sits in limbo — not unsubscribed, not formally churned, not removed, just functionally silent. These are customers who once engaged, once bought, once paid attention, and then drifted. They are not lost in the legal or technical sense. They are lost in the only sense that matters: they no longer show up.

This silent majority is where NeoMails begin.

The conventional reactivation playbook is well-rehearsed and almost uniformly weak. It starts with “We miss you.” It offers a discount. It tries again with a bigger discount. It lives in the sidebar of the marketing calendar and converts at a low single-digit percentage.

The reason these campaigns fail is that they are still Sell emails, sent to people who stopped caring about Sell emails. You cannot re-engage someone by repeating the behaviour that drove them away. By the time a customer has faded, more selling is the least effective thing you can do. The relationship has cooled. The person is not waiting for a sharper coupon; they have simply stopped finding your messages worth their time.

NeoMails take a different path. The Magnet — the small interactive unit inside each NeoMail — is not the commercial end-goal. It is a bridge back into the inbox. A quiz. A prediction. A one-tap opinion. A moment of self-discovery. If the user engages, they re-enter the active base not out of obligation but out of interest. The emotional contract resets. The email is offering, not asking.

This changes the underlying economics of the list. A dormant subscriber is a sunk cost; a reactivated subscriber is an asset recovered. The base that used to shrink each quarter begins to expand, because the bottom of the funnel is no longer draining into permanent silence.

The strategic consequence is larger than the numerical one. The dormant base is the most under-valued asset in modern martech. Every brand already paid to acquire it. Reactivating it at a fraction of the original acquisition cost is the single highest-return activity available to a marketing team — and it has been sitting uncultivated, because no one was sending the right kind of email.

Benefit 2: Turn email into a revenue surface.

Email has been a cost centre for as long as it has been a marketing channel. The programme runs whether anyone opens or not — platform fees, delivery, CRM integration, agency support, month after month regardless of outcome. What the programme earns has always been argued over indirectly, through attribution models the CFO never quite trusts and the CMO never quite owns. For a channel that reaches more customers more often than any other, email has spent three decades without a revenue line of its own.

NeoMails rewrite this economic relationship. Because the Magnet inside a NeoMail can carry a contextual ActionAd — a native, action-first unit embedded inside the experience, not across it — the email itself begins to earn.

The philosophy matters here. This is not about cluttering the inbox with banners or degrading trust for short-term yield. The aim is not to sell attention. It is to fund attention-building. ActionAds are not hope-for-a-click display units. They are useful next steps: subscribe to a relevant digest, sample something complementary, start a streak, join a prediction, try a new service. The customer must get utility first. The brand must get relationship depth. The system must generate enough value that attention is treated as something to be sustained, not extracted.

Individually, these yields are modest. Aggregated across a healthy active base and a daily cadence, they are not. In a conservative case, the revenue generated by the NeoMail programme covers a meaningful share of the cost of running email. In a stretched case, it covers all of it. The channel crosses from cost centre to self-funding surface — and, at higher yields, to a net contributor. This is the ZeroCPM asymptote, and it is closer than most CMOs assume.

Call this the Attention P&L for email. The email earns before it asks to sell.

The second-order effect is political rather than financial. For the first time, the email team has something to say when the CFO walks in. The conversation stops being “justify the spend” and becomes “here is the revenue the programme generated this month.” A cost centre with a revenue line is a different kind of asset inside a company. It earns a seat at the table.

3

Lower the cost of growth; create a cooperative acquisition loop

Benefits 3 and 4 are two halves of a single argument. Both answer the same question: why does growth cost so much, and who is it paying?

The answer, in most marketing organisations, is: a tax paid to Google and Meta, much of it to acquire customers the brand already owned. NeoMails attack the tax at its source.

Benefit 3: Lower the cost of growth.

The modern marketing playbook treats growth as synonymous with paid media. Double the budget on the duopoly, refine targeting, optimise creative, repeat. For a decade this worked, because the platforms were cheap and the attribution was flattering. Both conditions have reversed.

CAC has been climbing quietly year after year — a small compounding tax on every business that builds growth on rented attention. Targeting is blunter since iOS privacy changes. Attribution is a statistical haze. Auctions are crowded. And most of what brands now pay the duopoly for is not new customers at all. It is paid recovery of customers who were already in the brand’s orbit — sitting in the CRM, on the email list, last seen weeks or months ago.

This is where email’s failure shows up on the P&L. When the owned channel cannot hold attention, you are forced to rent it back from someone who can. Every rupee spent reacquiring a lapsed customer through paid media is a quiet admission that the relationship infrastructure broke.

NeoMails attack the problem at source. When the owned channel keeps the active base engaged, fewer customers drift into dormancy. When the dormant base can be reactivated inside email, fewer customers need to be re-bought through paid channels. Paid spend does not disappear, but its role changes — from routine top-up to genuine incremental acquisition.

Growth cost is lowered structurally, not through optimisation. No amount of bid management can match the economics of a channel you already own that starts working again.

The doctrinal framing is simple: paid media is what you buy when your owned channel has failed. Fix the owned channel, and the paid bill shrinks.

Benefit 4: Create a cooperative acquisition loop.

There is a second, rarely-named failure in the current growth model. Every brand in a category bids against every other brand for the same audiences on the same platforms. The auction is structurally designed to extract maximum spend from all participants. No brand wins; the platform wins.

In this system, every brand is an island. Each builds its own list, runs its own campaigns, and then goes separately to Google or Meta when it needs more customers. There is no cooperative logic in the inbox, even when categories are complementary and audiences overlap naturally in interest.

NeoNet introduces a different model: cooperative acquisition through trusted attention surfaces.

When a person opens and engages with a NeoMail from Brand A, that surface can also carry an ActionAd from Brand B. Not a disruptive banner — an in-place, low-friction pathway to subscribe to a relevant digest or join a useful NeoMail from another brand. The step is native to the interaction because the customer is already present, already identified, and already in an engagement mindset.

A subscriber who opts in this way is not a lookalike guess. They are a real person who has engaged and indicated interest. The quality of the acquisition is higher than paid media, and the cost is dramatically lower — a small transfer fee rather than a full auction CAC.

The network effect compounds. Every brand that joins adds attention inventory for every other brand. Every subscriber acquired cooperatively is one the duopoly did not charge for. The marginal cost of acquiring the next customer falls as the network grows — the opposite of the paid media curve, where each additional customer costs more than the last.

Benefits 3 and 4 together answer Never Pay Twice. You stop paying to reacquire what you already own, and you stop paying the duopoly to introduce you to customers another brand could have sent you directly.

The old model said: acquire outside, sell inside, reacquire later. The emerging model says: relate inside, monetise attention, grow through cooperation.

4

Slow the drift — and reclaim email as relationship infrastructure

Benefit 5: Slow the drift of active customers.

The loudest failure in email is dormancy. The quieter, costlier one is drift.

Most active customers do not disappear dramatically. They do not announce departure. They weaken in motion. The open rate drops from regular to occasional. The click rhythm thins. The interval between visits stretches. Purchases slide from near-term to maybe later. The relationship is still technically alive, but its centre of gravity is moving away. In most systems, this is invisible until it becomes obvious — and by then, it is late.

This is the movement from Best to Rest.

Traditional email is poorly suited to this moment because it has only two instincts: notify or sell. If the customer is active, send offers. If there is an event, send an update. But these are not the right interventions for every phase of a relationship. Sometimes what the customer needs is not another promotional push but a softer rhythm — a low-pressure, attention-preserving touch that keeps the relationship warm without trying to convert immediately.

NeoMails used on the active base become precisely that: a Relate cadence. A compact, daily, interactive moment that keeps the brand present in a useful, chosen, non-extractive way. The goal is not to force a purchase. The goal is to ensure the customer remains in an active, transacting, mentally-available state for longer.

Even modest success here matters disproportionately. If the active window extends from a few weeks to a few months, the brand gets more purchase opportunities, more attention continuity, and fewer future recovery costs. Drift slows. The funnel leaks less. CAC pressure eases downstream because fewer people need to be reacquired later. And unlike a heavy promotional strategy, this does not work by accelerating fatigue. It works by preserving warmth.

This is why Benefit 5 is, in strategic terms, the largest of the five — even though it is the hardest to model. Preserving attention upstream is worth more than reactivating it downstream. A customer who never drifts does not need to be reactivated. A Best customer who stays Best does not need to be replaced.

The industry has spent a decade building retention tactics downstream — churn models, win-back sequences, loyalty programmes that kick in after the damage is done. Drift prevention sits upstream of all of them. It is cheaper, simpler, and more durable. All it requires is that the email channel speaks for reasons other than the transaction.

Closing: Reclaim email as relationship infrastructure.

Most of what is wrong with modern marketing is downstream of a single original sin: the industrialisation of the relationship channel.

Email was the first digital medium built for one-to-one communication — the closest thing the internet ever had to a letter. Over three decades, brands collectively decided to treat it as a broadcast conveyor for offers and notifications, and the channel quietly paid the price. Open rates fell. Dormancy rose. Trust eroded. The inbox became a place people visited reluctantly, filtered aggressively, and ignored by default.

The response so far has been to chase attention elsewhere — on platforms that charge rent and control the relationship. It has not worked. It will not work. You cannot build durable customer relationships on channels you do not own.

NeoMails offer a different route. They do not reject Sell and Notify; they restore the missing third — Relate — and, in the process, rebuild the economics of the channel beneath it. Dormant customers come back. Active customers stay longer. The email earns rather than only costs. The acquisition loop turns cooperative rather than extractive.

Taken together, the five benefits describe something larger than a product. They describe infrastructure. Roads changed logistics. Payments changed commerce. Identity changed software. NeoMails change what email can do when it is no longer treated as a broadcast pipe — giving the inbox continuity, memory, participation, and economic depth.

Infrastructure is not a tactic. It is a layer that changes what becomes possible above it.

For too long, email has been treated as something brands use when they want something from customers. NeoMails point to a different future: email as a place customers return to because there is something there for them first. That one reversal — from sender urgency to recipient value — changes everything downstream.

The inbox is still the only place in the digital economy where a brand can speak to its customer directly, daily, on infrastructure it owns. It is time to remember what that is for.

NeoMails do not just improve email. They reclaim it.