Published May 5, 2026
In an age of infinite scroll, the most powerful relationship product may be one that earns just a minute — and makes that minute worth repeating
1
The Philosophy the Inbox Was Missing
I grew up listening to Just A Minute on BBC World Service. [Here’s a sampling.]
For those who did not, the format was deceptively simple: one contestant, one topic, sixty seconds, three rules. No hesitation. No repetition. No deviation. Nicholas Parsons presided with the calm authority of someone who had seen everything and found all of it delightful. The buzzer would interrupt, a point would be awarded, the round would end.
It finished.
That sense of completion is more important than it first appears. Much of modern digital product design is built around the opposite principle. Infinite scroll does not want to finish. Feeds do not want to end. Autoplay does not want to stop. The most successful attention products of the past fifteen years have all been engineered to remove stopping cues, elongate sessions, and convert curiosity into compulsion. Their core logic is simple: if attention is valuable, then more time spent must always be better.
Brands copied the same instincts. More emails, more nudges, more urgency, more retargeting, more frequency. The result is what younger generations now call brain rot — not a failure of content quality but a failure of architecture. An infinite feed is never finished. That incompleteness is not a side effect. It is the product. The residual unease of never having reached the end is the mechanism by which these platforms hold attention.
There is a cognitive science name for this: the Zeigarnik effect. Incomplete tasks occupy working memory; complete tasks release it. An infinite scroll produces a form of low-grade anxiety — the sense of having consumed without finishing. NeoMails are built on the opposite premise. They are not trying to capture as much time as possible. They are trying to make one minute worthwhile — and to make that minute feel finished. The mild satisfaction of having done a small thing is not incidental to habit formation. It is the mechanism of it.
The three JAM rules as design principles
The BBC programme’s three rules map, with unexpected precision, onto what a worthwhile inbox interaction requires.
No hesitation means the value has to arrive immediately. A contestant who pauses before beginning loses the point. In NeoMail terms, this is the role of the BrandBlock. The brand’s voice, context, and perspective appear first — before anything is asked of the reader. The message begins cleanly. Value delivered before anything is asked of the reader.
No repetition means familiarity without staleness. A speaker who recycles a word or phrase loses the point. For the Magnet — the interactive element at the heart of the NeoMail — repetition is the death of habit. The format must be recognisable enough to require no learning, but the content must change every time. Familiar enough to feel easy, fresh enough to feel worth returning for.
No deviation means the format must honour its own purpose. A NeoMail that opens with a discount is a Sell message in disguise. A Magnet that is really a product-preference survey with a quiz skin on top is still a brand asking for something, not giving something. The reader sees through it immediately, and the trust the format has built begins to erode.
These are not arbitrary constraints. They are the conditions under which a sixty-second inbox interaction remains worth repeating indefinitely.

The APU as the atomic unit
The APU — Attention Processing Unit — is the design architecture that makes the JAM philosophy operational. Three components, three jobs, one bounded minute.
The BrandBlock gives the NeoMail identity. The brand speaks first, in its own voice, before anything is asked. The Magnet gives it lift — the reason this email is worth opening today rather than archiving with the rest. And Mu gives it memory — the accumulation that connects today’s interaction to tomorrow’s, and tomorrow’s to the weeks that follow.
Together they create something no conventional email format has produced: an interaction with a beginning, a middle, and an end. A message you can complete.

Social platforms monetise attention by extending duration. The APU monetises attention by increasing quality and continuity per minute. These are not just different strategies. They are different philosophies of what attention is for.
The inbox does not need more content. It needs a better minute.
Just A Minute ran for decades. It outlasted a hundred trendier formats. It built a loyal audience not by demanding more time but by being reliably worth the time it asked for. One minute. Finished. Repeated. That is the model.
2
The Magnet: Design Science for the Most Important 20 Seconds
If the APU is the unit, the Magnet is the load-bearing element inside it.
BrandBlock gives the minute identity. Mu gives it memory. But without the Magnet, the NeoMail is still a better-formatted email — more thoughtful, perhaps, but still passive. Still something to consume rather than participate in. The Magnet is what changes the fundamental posture of the interaction. It converts the reader from recipient to participant.
That distinction matters because people do not return to a brand’s inbox for information. Information is available everywhere in quantities no one can process. People return for participation, anticipation, progress, and the closure of a small thing completed. The Magnet delivers all three in under sixty seconds. Understanding how requires treating Magnet design not as content creation but as a design science.
Two axes that organise the space
Before cataloguing formats, the architecture that makes sense of them. Every Magnet sits on two dimensions.
The first is what you risk: free to play, where participation earns Mu on accuracy or completion, versus pay Mu to play, where the reader stakes currency for the possibility of winning more. The free formats minimise activation energy — anyone can participate right now at no cost. The stake formats introduce commitment — the reader has skin in the game, which changes the quality of attention brought to the interaction.
The second is when you find out: instant result versus deferred result, where the reader returns tomorrow to see how a prediction settled. Instant formats close the loop immediately. Deferred formats create cross-session engagement by design — you predict today, return tomorrow.
These two axes produce a natural gradient of engagement intensity. The free, instant Magnets build the daily habit. The stake-and-wait Magnets deepen it for committed users. A well-designed NeoMail programme uses both, with the free formats dominant at onboarding and the stake formats introduced as the Mu balance gives users something worth risking.
Four families, four psychologies
Opinion and social — free, instant, earn Mu. The psychology here is self-expression. Humans have a consistent and underestimated preference for registering an opinion and discovering what others chose. A preference fork — Would you rather, Hot or Not, This or That — resolves in seconds, requires no prior knowledge, and generates the most accessible engagement of any format. The social signal that follows — most people said B; you said A — creates a mild belonging that is distinct from anything a promotional email can produce. New formats in this family extend the mechanic: Rank these four, Caption contest (pick the funniest from four options), Rate this (a product, a moment, an idea). All share the same engine: express yourself, see the crowd.
Skill and knowledge — free, instant, earn Mu on accuracy. The psychology here is the curiosity gap and the competence reward. A question creates micro-tension. The correct answer resolves it. The satisfaction is in knowing — or in discovering you were wrong in a way that is informative rather than punishing. The brand’s role is to make the topic adjacent to its world without making it a product pitch. A financial services brand quizzes on market trivia; a food brand on ingredient origins; a fashion brand on emerging designers. The key design constraint: questions that reward knowledge feel satisfying; questions requiring specialist information unavailable to most readers feel like homework. The taxonomy is rich: Trivia quiz, Emoji decode (guess a brand or film from emoji), Price is right (closest wins), Connections (odd one out), Word game (Wordle-style, four letters, three tries), True/false blitz (five rapid-fire statements), Blind brand test, Before/after reveal, Spot the difference.
Prediction — stake Mu, deferred result, reputational compounding. The psychology here is investment. Once Mu is staked on an outcome, the reader has skin in the game. This is the only family that creates cross-session engagement by design. You predict today. You return tomorrow not because the brand asks you to, but because you want to know if you were right. The Predictor Score — the compounding, portable record of forecasting calibration — is unique to this family. Over time, a high Predictor Score becomes a reputation, and reputation becomes a reason to return entirely independent of any brand agenda. Formats: WePredict teaser, Fast forecast (will X happen today?), Crowd vs expert (agree or disagree with an analyst’s call).
Games of chance — pay Mu to play, winner-takes-most, instant. The psychology here is risk and reward. Unlike Skill Magnets where accuracy earns Mu, Chance Magnets require burning Mu to play. Book cricket, scratch card, pick a door, double or nothing, horizontal roulette — these are highest-engagement for users with established Mu balances and lowest-appropriate for onboarding. They should appear later in the NeoMail journey, when the Mu balance gives the reader something worth risking.

The design discipline: familiar novelty
What separates a Magnet that sustains a daily habit from one that entertains once is a constraint that sounds simple and is genuinely hard to execute: familiar novelty. The format must be recognisable enough that no cognitive load is spent understanding how to participate. But the content must vary enough that returning feels different from yesterday.
A Wordle-style word game can run daily — the format is fixed, the word changes. A preference fork can run daily — the structure is fixed, the choices are fresh. A trivia quiz fails if the questions become predictable within the brand’s narrow topic range. The format earns the return; the content justifies it.
Magnet design is less about content creation and more about format design. Once the format is right, content can vary endlessly — and increasingly, AI can help supply that variety at scale. But no amount of content abundance compensates for a weak underlying format.
The failure modes
Three ways Magnets break. Too much friction: a Magnet that requires reading a paragraph before participating has already failed — the interaction must be legible within five seconds. Brand questionnaire in disguise: “Which of these products would you most like to see?” violates the no-deviation rule and the reader sees through it immediately, and trust decays. Repetition without variety: the same question structure week after week with cosmetic variation leads to category fatigue far faster than brands expect.
The Magnet is not decoration inside the APU. It is the engine. The BrandBlock earns the brand’s presence once the reader is already participating. Mu earns tomorrow’s return. The Magnet earns this open — and earns the right for everything else to follow.
Design it well and the minute is worth repeating. Design it poorly and no amount of Mu will compensate.
3
BrandBlock and Mu: How One Minute Becomes a Relationship
A good Magnet can make a NeoMail interesting. But one interesting interaction is not yet a relationship. The reason the APU matters is that the other two elements — BrandBlock and Mu — transform an engaging minute into something that compounds over weeks and months.
The Magnet creates participation. The BrandBlock makes that participation belong to the brand. Mu ensures that today is not disconnected from yesterday. That is how one minute becomes a relationship.
BrandBlock: the brand earns the right to be present
The Magnet produces a rare state in the inbox: an attentive, participating reader. That is the precise moment the brand inherits. In conventional email, the brand tries to force attention first and hopes for participation later. In a NeoMail, the sequence reverses. Participation comes first, and the BrandBlock benefits from the reader’s activated state.
That makes the BrandBlock strategically important. It is not an ad slot. It is not filler. It is where the brand’s world is expressed — voice, perspective, category point of view, product context, the small signals that make this minute belong specifically to this brand and not some generic engagement machine.
A fashion brand may frame the season or style mood. A financial services brand may place a market moment in context. A food brand may tell a brief origin story. A beauty brand may spotlight an ingredient or technique. The BrandBlock does not have to sell to be commercially useful. In fact, its usefulness depends on not selling too directly. The customer has just participated. The brand’s job at that moment is to convert participation into familiarity — not to interrupt it with an offer.
The design constraint is strict: the BrandBlock cannot carry a promotional offer. A NeoMail that opens with a discount is a Sell message in disguise. The trust built over weeks of consistent Relate is not instantly destroyed by one violation — but it is nicked, and nicks compound.
Mu: the visible memory of the relationship
Every conventional email arrives from nowhere. It does not know about the one before. It does not acknowledge the reader’s history with the brand. The backend may remember everything. But from the customer’s point of view, the inbox has no memory — each send is a stranger introducing itself, regardless of how many times the introduction has been made.
Mu changes this structurally.
But Mu should not be mistaken for a conventional loyalty programme. The distinction is important enough to state plainly.
Loyalty programmes reward spend. Mu rewards showing up. Loyalty points usually sit in the background until redemption. Mu sits in the foreground as continuity. Loyalty is about delayed transaction incentive. Mu is about making the relationship itself feel cumulative.
The Mu count visible in the subject line tells the reader, before the email is opened, that yesterday mattered. That showing up left a trace. That this interaction is part of something larger than a one-off message. A Mu balance built over weeks represents something real: time given, decisions made, habits maintained. That accumulated weight makes the next open more likely — not because the reader is chasing points, but because the relationship has a record, and records feel worth continuing.
Mu also functions, in ways conventional martech cannot replicate, as a leading indicator of attention decay. A falling Mu balance — a slower earn rate, a broken streak — predicts drift before open rate does. Open rate is binary: the email was opened or it was not. Mu velocity measures the quality and consistency of engagement over time. A brand monitoring Mu balances across its Rest segment has an early warning system that no campaign dashboard provides.
Earn vs stake: how Mu creates two kinds of engagement
Free Magnets earn Mu — participation is rewarded with accumulation. This is the daily habit mechanism. Low friction, immediate reward, easy to repeat.
Chance Magnets require staking Mu. This deepens the system. The customer is no longer just collecting; they are committing. Once Mu can be risked — in prediction or games of chance — it begins to feel more alive. Not because it has become money, but because it now shapes behaviour in two directions: earning and burning.
A NeoMail programme that only offers free Magnets is sustainable but shallow. The Mu balance grows but never feels truly valuable because it is never at risk. One that introduces stake-based experiences at the right point — after the habit is established, after the balance is meaningful — creates the intensity of engagement that makes Mu feel like a real currency rather than a decorative counter.
How one minute compounds into a relationship
Day one: the reader opens out of curiosity. The Magnet is quick. The BrandBlock is noted. Mu appears in the next subject line. Week two: the format requires no learning to enter. The streak is visible. The activation energy of opening has fallen. Month two: the brand is part of a weekly inbox pattern. The BrandBlock is absorbed by a reader already in motion. Month six: the Mu balance represents genuine attention investment. The Predictor Score has a history. The relationship has a record — and records are harder to abandon than novelties.

No conventional email programme creates this arc. The APU is the only inbox format designed for accumulation, and accumulation is what transforms a sequence of interactions into a relationship.
The commercial implication
The APU does not replace Sell and Notify. It earns the right for them to be heard. A customer who has spent three months in a light NeoMail rhythm is different from one who receives only promotions and transactional messages. The former has continuity. The latter has interruption. When the time comes for a launch, a replenishment reminder, or an ActionAd, the brand speaks into a relationship that has stayed warm rather than trying to restart one from scratch.
This may be the deepest difference between infinite-scroll systems and APU systems.
Feeds maximise duration. APUs maximise recurrence with closure. Feeds want you to stay. APUs want you to return.
For brands, return may ultimately matter more than duration. And return, built on the foundation of a completed minute repeated over months, is what the APU is specifically designed to create.
Nicholas Parsons once observed that Just A Minute worked because the constraints forced a quality of attention that open-ended formats never required. The speaker had to be genuinely present. No hesitation, no repetition, no deviation — not arbitrary obstacles, but the exact conditions that made the minute worth the attention it asked for.
The APU imposes the same discipline on the inbox. The BrandBlock must earn its presence. The Magnet must be worth completing. Mu must mean something because it accumulates from choices that cost time.
The inbox does not need endless content. It needs the right minute, every time. Bounded, worthwhile, and repeated with memory until the minute becomes a relationship.
That is the Just A Minute philosophy. And that is what the APU is built to deliver.
















