Answering the Objections
Outcome-based marketing systems trigger predictable objections. They should. Healthy scepticism is part of sound executive decision-making. The objections deserve direct answers.
“Attribution will be disputed.”
This is the most common concern and the most easily resolved.
Meridian does not rely on last-touch attribution — the flawed model that credits the final click while ignoring everything that preceded it. Last-touch attribution creates endless disputes because it is fundamentally arbitrary. Why credit the last touch and not the first? Why credit any single touch when the customer journey involved dozens?
Meridian relies on uplift measurement. The methodology is straightforward: create two statistically identical populations. One receives Meridian-driven interventions. One receives business-as-usual treatment. Measure the difference in outcomes — retention, revenue, profit — between the two groups. That difference is the uplift. That uplift is what gets paid.
This is incrementality testing. It is the same methodology pharmaceutical companies use to measure drug efficacy. It does not require attribution modelling. It does not require arguing about which touchpoint deserves credit. It requires only measuring the delta between treatment and control.
The measurement can be rigorous. Random assignment ensures the groups are comparable. Statistical testing ensures the difference is real rather than noise. Holdouts can be maintained over time to verify that uplift persists rather than fading. The methodology is well-established. The disputes dissolve.
“You will need too much data. What about privacy?”
A credible system must be built with governance as a first principle, not an afterthought.
Context Graphs are designed for structured intelligence and restraint. The architecture enforces data minimisation: only the signals necessary for decisions, nothing extraneous. Every action is traceable through the Decision Trace Graph — what data was used, for what purpose, with what outcome. The system can explain why any intervention was made.
“Restraint is intelligence” is a design principle, not a marketing slogan. Meridian knows when not to act. It recognises when another message would erode trust rather than build it. It understands that attention is finite and abuse is cumulative. This restraint is only possible with governance infrastructure that tracks attention budgets and respects boundaries.
The mature intelligence system is not the one that maximises messages. It is the one that maximises relationship value while minimising intrusion.
“Outcome pricing sounds like agency performance fees. We have been burned.”
Many organisations have been burned by performance promises that delivered excuses instead of results. Agencies committed to outcomes and then explained why external factors prevented delivery. The creative was not approved in time. The budget was cut mid-campaign. The market shifted unexpectedly. The competitor launched a promotion.
Meridian is different in kind, not just degree.
It is a productised model, not a services engagement. The intelligence is systematic, operating continuously through autonomous agents rather than depending on which account manager happens to be assigned this quarter. Outcomes are tied to customer profit metrics — retention, repeat purchase, contribution margin — not vanity ROAS that can be gamed through channel shifting or measurement manipulation.
The model improves daily through continuous learning. Agencies improve annually through staff changes and strategy reviews, if they improve at all. The feedback loops are not comparable.
And critically, the accountability is real. If Meridian does not deliver uplift, it does not get paid. The excuses do not matter because the measurement is objective. Either the treatment group outperformed the control group or it did not. The results speak for themselves.
“What if the model fails?”
This objection contains its own answer.
If Meridian fails, the vendor does not get paid. The brand has risked nothing except the time spent on integration and the opportunity cost of the pilot period. The financial exposure sits entirely with the vendor.
This is precisely the point of Alpha pricing. It transfers risk from the brand to the provider. Traditional enterprise software puts the risk on the buyer: pay upfront, hope for results, absorb the loss if results do not materialise. Alpha pricing inverts this: the vendor invests first, delivers results, and gets paid only when value is created.
The willingness to offer Alpha pricing is itself a signal of confidence. Vendors who refuse outcome-based structures are implicitly admitting uncertainty about whether their products actually work. Vendors who accept are making a statement: we believe in this enough to bet on it.
“Why can only you build this? Will everyone else not copy it?”
Anyone can copy a feature. Very few can copy a signal moat.
Meridian’s edge comes from unifying three signal streams that most systems treat separately:
- Engagement signals from owned channels — what customers open, ignore, click, dwell on, abandon, return to. These signals reveal attention patterns and preference dynamics that no other source can provide.
- Channel signals from messaging infrastructure — responses to emails, behaviour on WhatsApp, interactions with push notifications, timing patterns across communication modes. These signals reveal channel preferences and responsiveness that engagement data alone cannot capture.
- Discovery signals from on-site search and browse — queries entered, refinements made, products viewed, paths abandoned, recommendations clicked or ignored. These signals reveal intent and consideration that messaging data alone cannot see.
When these three signal streams feed the same Context Graph, learning compounds across the entire customer experience. The insight from a search query informs the email timing. The email response refines the product recommendations. The recommendation click updates the BrandTwin’s preference model. The cycle continues, each signal enriching the others.
This integration is the moat. Competitors who have only engagement data see part of the picture. Competitors who have only discovery data see a different part. The complete view requires all three — and building that integration from scratch takes years of infrastructure investment and data accumulation.
Every brand that joins the system makes the system smarter. Anonymised patterns across hundreds of brands create consumer intelligence that no single-brand solution can match. The model learns that customers who behave like this tend to drift for these reasons and respond to these interventions — not from one brand’s limited data but from the collective experience of an ecosystem.
This is precisely how adtech built its moat. Google and Meta aggregated signals across millions of advertisers to enable precision targeting that no single brand could achieve alone. The more advertisers participated, the smarter the system became. That network effect is why they dominate acquisition.
Meridian applies the same principle to retention. Every brand on the system makes the system smarter. Anonymised patterns across hundreds of brands create consumer intelligence that no single-brand solution can match.
This is the network effect that becomes defensible. Early adopters benefit from the intelligence that later adopters contribute. The gap compounds over time.
