The Missing Rung — NeoMarketing as the Recovery Layer
Parts 2 and 3 ended with a question the framework had created but not yet answered. The Revenue Tax Ladder showed a 15-percentage-point cliff between CRM (5–10%) and Adtech (20–25%). The TAT in Part 4 surfaced the customers who fall into that cliff — the B– drifting toward R1, the T– drifting toward R2, the Lost-Lead pool that should never have been allowed to go dark. Two frameworks pointing at the same gap from different angles. Both implying the same conclusion.
The gap is not a market opportunity to be filled with better adtech. It is an engine missing from the brand’s marketing stack.
The current ladder reads:
Organic / Direct: 0–5% CRM / Owned channels: 5–10% Adtech: 20–25% Intermediated: 30–40%+
The brand has owned channels for customers who are still listening. The brand has paid channels for customers it has lost. What the brand does not have is a layer for the customers who are drifting but not yet lost — the middle column of the TAT, where attention is weakening but a relationship still exists. These customers cannot be reached through standard CRM because the very things CRM measures — opens, clicks, transactions — are starting to fail. They have not yet drifted far enough to justify the 20–25% adtech tax of treating them as a new prospect. They are in between, and the marketing stack has no in-between.
This is the rung the ladder is missing. A 10–15% recovery layer that operates on owned identity but uses different mechanics than standard CRM. A layer designed not to push transactions but to rebuild attention. A layer whose unit cost sits below paid media because it runs on the brand’s existing data and existing customer relationships, but above standard CRM because it does work standard CRM cannot do: it competes for the customer’s attention against everything else in the customer’s life, not just against the customer’s inbox.
Call this layer NeoMarketing.
With the missing rung inserted, the ladder now reads:
Organic / Direct: 0–5% CRM / Owned channels: 5–10% NeoMarketing Recovery: 10–15% Adtech: 20–25% Intermediated: 30–40%+
The exact percentage will vary by category and implementation. The point is not the number. The point is the existence of the rung. A brand that has only CRM and Adtech is forced to choose between cheap channels that no longer work and expensive channels that do. NeoMarketing changes the choice.

NeoMarketing is not a single product. It is the architecture that occupies the missing rung. It does for the B–, T–, R1, and R2 cells of the TAT what CRM does for the B, T, N cells — but with different mechanics suited to the different problem. CRM converts attention into transactions. NeoMarketing first restores attention, then hands the restored customer back to CRM to transact. The two layers are complementary, not competitive.
Four engines occupy the NeoMarketing rung, each addressing a different cell of the TAT.
Atrium — the attention recovery engine. Atrium operates on the right and middle columns of the TAT — the customers whose attention is weakening or lost. The unit of Atrium is not the campaign or the message; it is the daily attention episode. NeoMails are the primary surface — daily emails designed not to sell but to reward the act of opening, embedding interactive magnets (quizzes, polls, mini-games, predictions) that give the customer a reason to engage independent of any transaction. Atrium’s job is to restore attention to the weakening and lost cells — moving R1 back toward B–, R2 back toward T–, and holding B– and T– customers from drifting further rightward. Meridian then carries each restored customer the final step leftward when the next transaction lands on an owned route.
Meridian — the LTV maximisation engine. Meridian operates on the B cell — the brand’s most valuable customers who are still listening. Where Atrium rebuilds attention, Meridian deepens the value of attention that already exists. Meridian runs the personalisation, recommendation, velvet-rope, and premium-tier work that turns a strong-attention Best customer into a higher-LTV Best customer. It is the engine for Never Lose Customers — the doctrine that says holding a B from drifting into B– is cheaper than recovering an R1.
Atrium works where attention is scarce. Meridian works where value is high. Atrium asks: how do we make this customer listen again? Meridian asks: what is the next best decision for this specific valuable customer? Together, they cover the gap between CRM and Adtech.
NeoNet — the cooperative recovery and acquisition network. NeoNet operates across brand boundaries. When Brand A’s R1 customer is highly engaged with Brand B’s NeoMail, NeoNet allows Brand A to reach that customer through Brand B’s owned attention — deterministically, identity-matched, at a fraction of the cost of Google or Meta reacquisition. The same machinery acquires New customers for Brand A by surfacing them through Brand B’s audience without renting that audience from a platform. NeoNet replaces platform tax with cooperative surplus.
ActionAds — the monetisation layer that funds the rest. ActionAds are in-email ad slots that appear in NeoMails. They monetise the attention NeoMails earn from customers who are engaged but not transacting today — the Permanent Spectator population, the T- customers being held in a low-cost orbit, the B customer reading the daily email between purchases. ActionAds make the NeoMarketing rung structurally self-funding: the attention the brand earns from its own customers generates revenue from advertisers willing to pay for that attention. The economics close on themselves. The recovery layer pays for itself.
The four engines compose into a single operating logic. Atrium recovers attention. Meridian compounds it. NeoNet extends it across the network. ActionAds funds it.

The doctrinal shift is sharper than it first appears. Traditional CRM treats customers as campaign targets. NeoMarketing treats them as moving states on the TAT. Traditional CRM asks: what message should we send? NeoMarketing asks: what state is this customer in, and what action will move them leftward or downward on the TAT? Traditional CRM escalates from owned channels to paid media when CRM fails. NeoMarketing inserts a recovery layer before that escalation, so the cliff is no longer the only available route.
The framework Parts 2, 3, and 4 built is now complete. The Revenue Tax Ladder has five rungs, not four. The TAT has an answer for every cell, not just the easy ones. The cliff has been closed.
Without the rung, the brand can diagnose the cliff but not cross it. With the rung, Alpha becomes operational.
What remains is the playbook.