Thinks 1908

Asian Paints CEO Amit Syngle: “Based on our research, a lot of our marketing efforts have been shifting from just a central initiative to regional markets and micro marketing. For example, in Tamil Nadu, we launched Varnamaalai, a shade guide based on the soaps that Sun TV was showcasing. In West Bengal, we did a pack which had the elements of Durga Puja, the Howrah Bridge and the trams of Kolkata. Because of regionalisation, paint cans, which were earlier used in bathrooms and kitchens, are now adorning living rooms. While it has led to a significant increase in our marketing budget, we think it is a worthwhile return on what we spend, rather than just spending on a national framework, which we continue to do.”

Bloomberg: “India is fast becoming one of the world’s biggest AI user bases. The question now is how it can turn that scale into superpower status rather than just training Silicon Valley for free. That will be a tall order for a country largely caught flat-footed by the boom. But let’s start with the basics: The three main building blocks of AI are talent, compute (including high-end chips and infrastructure), and data. India doesn’t lack engineers, but it currently doesn’t have foundational research training at scale or enough advanced processors at public labs and universities. What it does have, in abundance, is data. It should start treating this like a strategic asset rather than leaking it out as a free export.”

Activate: “After years of discussion about India’s potential in AI, the first wave of AI-native unicorns is now beginning to form across infrastructure, applications, and foundation models. Some are being built to power India’s own AI ecosystem, while others are building global products from Indian talent. For the first time, both of those stories are unfolding at the same moment.”

Arnold Kling: “I think that the potential for AI to increase productivity is very high. But I look at faculty at universities, for example, and think that the chances for realizing these productivity gains are pretty low. To take advantage of AI, you need to be willing to completely re-think your mission and your role. My guess is that the professionals at large incumbent organizations who are most willing to do that are also the ones most likely to leave and strike out on their own. What organizations will be left with are the folks who are inclined toward denial and resistance.”

Profile in Financial Express

An excerpt from the story by Gopika Nair:

His summary of the journey is unusually calm. “No regrets. Always look forward,” Jain thought after thinking for a few seconds. “Entrepreneurs have to be optimistic. Your odds are completely against you.”

And then, unexpectedly, he names his two best decisions. “One is the arranged marriage to my wife,” he said, followed by a laugh. “She has been the backbone throughout my life.” The second was selling IndiaWorld when he did.

When I ask him how he looks back on 35 years of building, selling, pivoting and starting again, Jain does not romanticise the arc. He reduces it to a simple tally. “I look at it as sort of two and a half successes and probably 30–40 failures,” he said. IndiaWorld counts as one. Netcore is another. The political experiment, perhaps half. The rest, he shrugs, were attempts, ideas tried, tested, discarded.

Failure, he insists, is routine. “Just as you don’t let success get to your head, you don’t let failure get to your head,” he said. The numbers, then, are not the point. What matters is the habit of returning to work the next day, of finding the next problem, of building again.

Thinks 1907

Bloomberg: “Far from freeing up engineers for a life of leisure, increasingly capable AI coding agents—including Anthropic PBC’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex—have over the past few months created a kind of productivity paranoia among executives and, by extension, the people who work for them. These agents do more than generate text or images, as consumer-facing chatbots do. Instead they plan, execute and complete tasks on behalf of their human users, even creating their own agents to do the work for them. That may mean building and debugging an app, scheduling a meeting or buying a pair of pants, all with minimal human oversight. The fact that AI agents can produce more code than mere humans in less time has morphed into a sense that they therefore must. As OpenAI’s president, Greg Brockman, recently put it on X, it “feels like such a wasted opportunity every moment your agents aren’t running.””

Ajay Shah on the Indian IT industry: “From the point of view of investment and corporate finance, big changes are required. Historically, Indian IT firms have exhibited the financial characteristics of stable utilities. There was a bias toward distributing cash to shareholders rather than reinvesting it in research and development. This strategy of capital allocation must change. The financial system must transition from pricing these firms as low-risk utilities to valuing them as complex, adaptive, technology integrators. Management teams must alter how they communicate with capital markets. Boards must show their portfolio of technological bets to the financial system, outlining the risk of their AI investment and its potential return. The world will always want intellectual capability. The constraint on growth is not the capability of algorithms but the availability of human ingenuity. The task for India is to double down on producing, owning, and growing intellectual capital, in the emergence of a firm culture of knowledge and innovation.”

TheMaxSource: “Zero based budgeting requires every expense to be justified from the ground up, as if the company were starting fresh. This method is not simply about cutting costs. It is about allocating money only to activities that create real value. For founders and executives, zero based budgeting brings clarity, accountability and speed. It eliminates autopilot spending and replaces it with intentional decision making.”

McKinsey: “India’s retail landscape is deeply fragmented, shaped by decades of traditional distribution networks, regional supply chains, and a political economy that reinforces support for micro, small, and medium-size enterprises (MSMEs) as an important driver of employment. Nearly 60 million MSMEs form the backbone of this ecosystem, collectively contributing close to $1 trillion in value to the economy every year, which is roughly 30 percent of national GDP. These MSMEs operate across multiple subsegments defined by category, geography, scale, and formality. Fragmentation is structural and likely to persist, creating a unique environment where small sellers and local traders coexist alongside large national and international retailers. We therefore believe this large, fragmented, and growing group of sellers will seek services and digital solutions that are fit-for-purpose: unbundled, flexible, lower-cost and more “consumer direct” relative to offerings provided by today’s dominant marketplaces.”

A Tuesday in the NeoMails World

1

Priya, Category Manager, Mumbai

A product is not what it claims to do. A product is what people do, repeatedly, without being pushed.

NeoMails are easier to understand that way — not through frameworks or economics, but through behaviour. So here are three people, on the same Tuesday morning, each inside the NeoMails system from a different vantage point.

Priya is the customer. Maya is the CMO. Arjun buys the ActionAds. They have never met. But this morning they are all operating inside the same ten centimetres of inbox.

The question behind all three stories is simple: what does NeoMails feel like when it is working?

Note: The names of brands and individuals in these stories are illustrative. They do not reflect actual usage or endorsement.

**

8:04am. Priya’s alarm went off seven minutes ago. She is still in bed, phone in hand, doing what she does every morning before her feet hit the floor: scanning her inbox.

Most of it is what it always is. A bank statement. A flight reminder for a trip she has not yet planned. Three newsletters she subscribed to in a moment of optimism and has not opened in two months. A promotional email from a brand with a subject line that says LAST CHANCE in capital letters, which makes her want to close the app entirely.

Then this: Ajio NeoMails · µ 2,847 · Will India chase or set a total today?

She opens it almost accidentally, the way you open a game notification.

Ajio is showing her a curated selection of kurtas — three she looked at last week. She does not tap Shop Now. But she sees them. The brand is present without demanding anything.

She scrolls down to the Magnet. She has been following this WePredict thread for three days — a running cricket prediction that unfolds across emails, each one revealing the previous day’s result and posing the next question. Yesterday she staked 35 Mu on the prediction and called it correctly — the bet returned 100. The Ledger at the bottom of the email updated in real time, which gave her a satisfaction she did not entirely expect.

Today’s question loads inside the email. No browser redirect. She taps Set — the pitch has been behaving strangely in recent games, she saw the highlights last night — and her answer registers instantly.

She has just interacted with Ajio’s email programme on a morning when she has no intention of buying anything from Ajio. That is not a failure of the email. It is the point.

Below that, an ActionAd: a travel insurance provider with a one-tap quote. She has a trip she has not sorted insurance for. She taps. Her details are saved inside the email, no redirect, no form. She will get a quote later.

At the bottom, Gameboard Status. Currently Live: WePredict. Coming Up Next: Geography Quiz. She feels a faint pull of anticipation. She did well in the geography quiz last week.

Total time inside the email: 68 seconds. She puts her phone down and gets out of bed.

She has not thought once about email marketing. She does not know her streak is now 19 days, or that her MuCount puts her in the top 30% of engaged users. She just had a good morning.

Then something interesting happens, later that week: she buys something. Not because the email shouted. Because the relationship stayed warm. The brand stayed present. The distance between her and the brand quietly shrank.

For the first time in years, an email channel did what it was always meant to do: hold a relationship, one small moment at a time.

2

Maya, Chief Marketing Officer, Bengaluru

8:47am. Maya has been at her desk since 7:30. She has a 9am with the CEO and a 10am with the CFO, and she is preparing for both with the same set of numbers — numbers that, six weeks ago, she could not have shown anyone without embarrassment.

The NeoMails pilot went live 42 days ago on a segment of 180,000 customers who had not opened a brand email in more than 90 days. Her performance marketing agency had been quietly retargeting them on Meta for the better part of a year — paying, in effect, to reach people who had already opted in to hear from the brand directly.

Before approving the pilot, she ran a simple internal test. She subscribed herself as a customer under a personal email address and asked three questions after one week: would I open this if I were not the CMO? Would I open it twice? Would I trust it? The answers were yes, yes, and yes. That was enough to proceed.

She opens the dashboard. The numbers have been good for three weeks running, but they still look slightly unreal each time.

58% CRR on the NeoMails segment — was 17% on standard sends to the same cohort
34% Real Reach on the pilot segment — was 9% before the pilot launched
11,200 customers reactivated — 2+ opens and 1+ interaction in 30 days
Zero Meta retargeting spend on this segment — paused on day one

What the pilot revealed, more than the numbers, is a different way to run her week. Monday is no longer campaign calendar. Monday is attention stability. She asks: where is attention growing, where is it shrinking, which Magnet formats are building habit and which are creating fatigue? She is starting to think like a product manager rather than a campaign manager.

She has also started to see the system clearly. Mu and the Magnet create the open. The Ledger makes progress visible. The BrandBlock rides on earned attention instead of fighting for it. That is not a campaign sequence. It is a behavioural engine.

The CFO meeting is the one Maya is most focused on. She is not walking in with a campaign result. She is walking in with a structural change in the economics of the owned channel. 11,200 customers came back without a single rupee of paid reacquisition. The avoided CAC is real and cashable. The Real Reach on the pilot is nearly four times what her standard programme delivers.

There is one number she cannot yet present cleanly but thinks about most: prevention value. Of the 11,200 reactivated, how many would have gone dormant again and appeared in her Meta retargeting queue for a second or third time? She does not have a clean model. But she knows it is significant, and she knows it belongs in a different line of the P&L than anyone has ever put it.

At 8:58 she closes the dashboard. Two minutes until the CEO meeting. She is, for the first time in a while, looking forward to it.

If NeoMails become a daily destination, the brand is no longer renting attention back from platforms. The brand is rebuilding a private attention asset. That is the point where marketing becomes infrastructure.

3

Arjun, Head of Growth, fintech lending platform, Gurugram

9:20am. Arjun is in his second meeting of the morning, half-listening, scrolling through the ActionAd performance report from last week’s NeoMails run.

He has been running performance advertising for six years. He is fluent in the standard funnel: impression, click, landing page, drop-off, retargeting, more drop-off. He has optimised every step. Clicks are not outcomes. He has known this for years. Clicks are a hope, followed by a form, followed by a journey the user may or may not complete. Every step away from the original moment of attention is an opportunity to lose them.

What drew him to ActionAds was one thing: the action happens inside the moment of attention, without a redirect. One tap to submit a lead. One tap to get a quote. The gap between intent and outcome collapses from a journey into a single gesture.

But what the report shows surprises him. The actions are not evenly distributed. They cluster — and the clustering follows the Magnet.

After a Hot or Not interaction — fast, light, playful — users are in a low-friction mood. One-tap actions with minimal commitment perform strongly. After a WePredict — a considered forecast where the user has taken a position — users are in a higher-intent mode. Actions involving a pledge or subscription outperform. After a passive Magnet — a story, a daily fact — users are in a reflective, unhurried state. Thoughtful offers with a soft CTA land better than urgent ones.

The same user behaves differently depending on what they just did. That is the missing layer in performance advertising: state.

Most adtech ignores state entirely. It targets based on identity and past behaviour — who you are and what you have done — but not where your mind is right now. The Magnet creates a real-time attention state that the ActionAd can arrive inside. The ActionAd is not interrupting attention. It is expressing itself within attention already won by someone else’s design. That is not an incremental improvement on programmatic. It is a different surface with a different logic: fewer impressions, higher demonstrated intent, clean one-step actions, measurement that does not depend on cross-domain attribution.

He has three questions for the NeoMails team: can he specify Magnet type as a targeting parameter? Can he see attention state data alongside action data? Can he run different creative against WePredict openers versus Hot or Not openers?

He already knows he wants the answers to be yes.

**

8am to 10am.

Three people. Three motivations. Priya opens because it is a daily product she has quietly started to anticipate. Maya invests because it restructures the economics of attention without platform dependency. Arjun participates because it delivers actions inside a moment of intent, not clicks into a journey of attrition.

The common thread across all three: NeoMails succeed when they stop behaving like marketing and start behaving like a habit.

From campaigns to cadence. From persuasion to product. From rented attention to earned attention. From AdWaste to a relationship asset.

If you can earn 60 seconds a day, you don’t have to buy back customers later.

Nobody in this story used the words “email marketing”. Nobody talked about open rates or subject line optimisation. Nobody paid Google or Meta for access to a customer they already had.

The inbox just worked — the way it was always supposed to. That is the NeoMail promise: experienced in real life, not explained on a slide.

Thinks 1906

Scott Dyreng: “This term, I am experimenting with AI-assisted tools that are bringing back team culture by using AI to encourage more, not less, human interaction. Teams record their meetings, and internally developed AI tools analyze their interactions. Did one person do all the talking? Did someone interrupt constantly? Did the team ask good questions or slide into polite agreement? Did anyone summarize decisions and assign next steps? Did the team actually debate alternatives or simply divide the work and disperse? When the first results came in, I was blown away. The new tools compelled students to interact and gave them feedback they can use to hone those skills. In the workplace, people often have only vague impressions about team dynamics. In school, we can make patterns visible while students can still change them.”

India Dispatch: “India’s software and IT-enabled exports were roughly $205 billion in FY25, per the RBI’s annual survey of software export companies. The claim that this entire edifice was built on “one value proposition” — cheap developers — highlights great misunderstanding in what these companies actually do for a living. The technology stacks of the world’s largest enterprises are sprawling, non-monolithic, and take years to adapt to each new wave — and the work Indian IT companies do is overwhelmingly not greenfield coding. Custom application maintenance alone accounts for roughly 35% of a typical Indian IT company’s revenue, per HSBC’s service-line framework: incident management, service requests, change requests and problem resolution across architectures where SAP, Salesforce, Snowflake, Databricks, Guidewire and ServiceNow coexist in configurations unique to each client.”

WSJ: “The elements of the periodic table that revolutionised chemistry as a scientific field more than 150 years ago are now at the heart of a momentous modern commercial and geopolitical battle. The contest is playing out from corporate boardrooms planning mining megadeals to US efforts to form a “critical minerals” trade zone to counter China’s influence. Dozens of the world’s nearly 100 naturally occurring elements are in growing demand for crucial industrial uses, making their supply expensive, prone to shortages or vulnerable to international tensions.”

Daniel Coyle, author of  Flourish: The Art of Building Meaning, Joy, and Fulfillment: “Things that appear risky on the surface, especially in a business environment where we are averse to risk, actually reflect a deep distinction that not many people understand. We typically suffer from a “straight-line illusion.” Though we think of “complicated” and “complex” as being the same, there’s a profound distinction between those two words. Complicated things come together the same way every time. For example, I can give you the instructions for building a Ford Mustang car. If you have all the materials and you follow the instructions, you will have a Mustang at the end, without question. Complex things change when you interact with them. The question that highlights this distinction is “Is this problem more like building a car, or is it more like raising a teen?” Obviously, there’s no set of instructions I could give you to raise a teen. That’s complex. If you have a complicated system, the best approach is to have expertise. Find an expert who can figure out what to do.”

NeoMails: The Attention and Monetisation Surface Brands Already Own (Part 13)

The Inbox Is the Next Surface

Every generation of the internet has had a surface that concentrated human attention at scale. Search. Social. Mobile notifications. Each surface looked obvious in retrospect — and was profoundly underestimated in prospect.

The next surface is the inbox. Not because it is new — it is fifty years old. But because it has structural properties that no other channel can match: personal, permissioned, identity-linked, algorithm-free, and habitual. And because the tools to make it genuinely worth inhabiting — interactivity, incentivisation, individualisation, and inbox-native monetisation — are only now becoming available.

NeoMails are the bet that the inbox’s best years are ahead of it. That the quiet asset sitting inside every brand’s database — hundreds of millions of email addresses representing relationships that were once active, once valuable, once chosen — can be reactivated not through more spending, but through better building.

The prize is not incremental. Across the world, there are billions of broken brand-customer relationships. Not broken because the products were bad or the brands were dishonest, but broken because attention was not maintained. Each of those broken relationships is an invisible cost: the REACQ spend that appears nowhere in any budget as a retention failure, but everywhere in the performance marketing line as ‘growth’.

NeoMails are the infrastructure for repairing those relationships at scale. Daily value, delivered directly. Attention earned, not bought. Monetisation that funds itself without eroding trust. A habit built one 60-second interaction at a time, compounding over weeks and months into something that looks nothing like email marketing and everything like a product customers have chosen to let into their daily lives.

The attention economy’s next frontier is not a new platform. It is the one you already own — and have been underleveraging for twenty years.

There was a time when opening your inbox felt like possibility itself. NeoMails are the attempt to make it feel that way again. Not through manipulation. Not through urgency. Not through the endless cycle of acquire, neglect, decay, and reacquire that has defined the relationship between brands and customers for two decades.

Through something simpler, and more durable: something genuinely worth opening.

Every day.

Thinks 1905

Terence Tao: “Today there are a lot of very tedious types of mathematics that we don’t like doing, so we look for clever ways to get around them. But AIs will just happily blast through those tedious computations. When we integrate AI with human workflows, we can just glide over these obstacles. I also think mathematicians will start doing math at larger scales. Think about the difference between case studies and population surveys in sciences. If you were to study a disease in the 18th century, if it was a rare disease, you might study one patient who has this disease and record all their symptoms and take meticulous notes. But in the 21st century, you can do a clinical trial and you can administer a drug to 1,000 people and do statistics and get much more precise information about the efficiency of your drug. Mathematics is still very much at the case-study level. A paper will take one or two problems and study them to death in a very handcrafted, intensive way. That’s our style. But what AI tools enable is population studies.”

WSJ: “If the traditional 40-hour schedule gets in the way of your productivity, focus or well-being, it’s time to rethink your workweek. That isn’t feasible for everyone, of course. But a lot of us have jobs where a different work structure makes more sense. Perhaps you’re in a job that would benefit from longer, uninterrupted work periods. Or you focus better when you work early in the day, or late at night. Or you work with people in other countries or time zones, and need to be available during their business day. I’ve worked remotely for more than two decades, and over that time, I’ve experimented with many different ways to structure my schedule. Here are four that have been effective for me, and that could inspire experiments of your own.” ” The suggestions: meeting-free Mondays, the reverse workday, the split workday, and the project sprint.

FT: “Across Asia, Africa and the Middle East, hundreds of international offshoots and collaborations have been established by Chinese universities in the past decade. These outposts are capitalising on the rising prestige of China’s universities, which have undergone a three-decade-long transformation in both scale and quality. In 2010, only one mainland Chinese institution ranked in the top 50 of the QS World University Rankings, a closely watched global league table. By 2025, that number had risen to five, and they were positioned higher up the table. “Chinese universities’ climbing in global rankings is real. It’s not a ‘mystery bounce’ but the result of three decades of sustained, targeted investment,” says Denis Simon, an American academic.”

Greg Ip: “Technology enables us to produce more or better products with less hours of work. Over time, this makes us richer. It’s why we produce many times more food with far fewer farmers than 150 years ago and our factories crank out more products with a smaller workforce than in 1979. Technological advancements always cost some people their jobs—those whose skills can be easily substituted by tech. But their loss is more than offset through three other channels. The new technology enhances the skills of some survivors, who become more productive and better paid; it helps create new businesses and new jobs; and it makes some stuff cheaper, increasing consumers’ incomes, adjusted for inflation, which can be spent on other stuff, generating yet more jobs. These offsets explain why, through the sweep of U.S. history, technological advance hasn’t, by itself, raised unemployment for the country as a whole.”

NeoMails: The Attention and Monetisation Surface Brands Already Own (Part 12)

What Has to Be True for NeoMails to Win

NeoMails are a bet. A well-reasoned bet, with strong structural logic and early evidence behind it — but a bet nonetheless, on a new behaviour in a channel that has trained customers to expect very little. It is worth being clear-eyed about what has to be true for the bet to pay off.

The Open Must Be Earned, Not Forced

The entire architecture of NeoMails depends on the customer choosing to open — not out of urgency, not because the brand spent money on a subject-line optimisation tool, but because the email has earned a place in daily routine. That means the Magnet portfolio has to be genuinely good. Not adequate. Not acceptable. Good enough that a customer opens for the Magnet on days when they do not care at all about the brand.

This is an uncomfortable truth for marketers: the NeoMail must be worth opening even if it never mentioned the brand’s product. The brand is present — in the BrandBlock, in the from-line, in the Mu currency — but the primary reason to open cannot be the brand. It has to be the experience. Any dilution of Magnet quality in service of commercial messaging is a trade that costs more than it saves.

The Repeat Must Create Real Continuity

A single great NeoMail is marketing. A hundred consecutive NeoMails that each deliver something worth experiencing is a product. The distinction is everything. Marketing creates a moment; products create a relationship. The Mu mechanics, the streak system, the serial Magnet formats — all of these exist to make each NeoMail feel like a chapter in an ongoing story rather than a standalone send. If the continuity breaks — if the streak is not maintained, if Mu feels arbitrary, if the Magnet format is repeated too often — the habit breaks with it.

The hardest operational challenge in NeoMails is content velocity: the need to produce, rotate, and refresh Magnet content at a pace that prevents staleness while maintaining quality. This is a content production problem as much as a technology problem. It requires investment in Magnet formats, content pipelines, and quality benchmarks that most email teams are not currently structured to sustain.

The Trust Must Be Non-Negotiable

The inbox has a long memory. Every spam folder that filled up in the early 2010s was a collective customer verdict on brands that had violated trust. Every unsubscribe wave that followed each new email marketing trend was a market signal that customers had reached their limit. The inbox trust deficit is real and deep, and NeoMails are asking brands to ask for it back.

That requires the trust architecture to be not just adequate but exemplary. One ActionAd per NeoMail. No competitors. Brand-approved categories only. NeoMails-only unsubscribe that does not cascade to all brand communications. These are not features — they are the price of entry for a channel that customers have learned to distrust.

If NeoMails feel like a new form of adtech, they will die. If they feel like a genuine daily consumer product that happens to include one useful offer, they will become the most trusted regular email a brand sends.

The distinction between those two outcomes is made in dozens of small design decisions: how the ActionAd is placed, how the unsubscribe is handled, how the complaint rate is monitored, how quickly the kill switch is deployed. Trust is not built by policy; it is built by behaviour.

The Brands Must Shift Their Mental Model

Finally — and perhaps most difficultly — NeoMails require brands to change how they think about email. Not as a campaign channel to be optimised for individual send performance, but as a product to be built, sustained, and measured over a 90-day, 180-day, annual horizon. The metrics are different. The investment cadence is different. The success criteria are different.

The brands that get there first will build a structural advantage that is genuinely difficult to replicate: a daily, habitual, trusted presence in their customers’ inboxes, earning attention without paying for it, funding itself through inbox-native monetisation, and eliminating the AdWaste cycle that currently drains their marketing budgets every quarter. That is not a campaign result. That is a moat.

Thinks 1904

SaaStr: “Software engineering accounts for nearly 50% of all AI agent tool calls. Healthcare, legal, finance, and a dozen other verticals are barely touched, each under 5%. That’s 300 vertical AI unicorns waiting to be built.”

WSJ: “Today, even with the rise of videogames, board games in the U.S. are more than holding their own. Thanks to Kickstarter, the crowdfunding platform, lower costs of production and online communities, players can enjoy hits like Settlers of Catan, Wingspan, Exploding Kittens and Ticket to Ride, a modern game about railroads that brings the capitalist theme of the 1800s full circle. People still play physical games because “they’re totally different experiences,” U.K.-based game historian David Parlett says. “Digital games have only extended the range of games available, not replaced it. Many people prefer to maintain the real-life experience of handling traditional materials in a communal, real-life setting.””

Notion CEO Ivan Zhao: “If your product cannot be used by agents, I don’t think the future is very promising for you.”

CollabFund on cognitive resourcefulness: “When resources are scarce, humans often bypass conventional thinking and take unfamiliar paths to solve problems. In this case, cognitive resourcefulness caused [NBC Sports’] Miller to reimagine what sports television could be. Without dollars to spend, he truly had to think. To solve. To create…The answer to a lack of resources is not to follow others. Rather, the answer is to be different. To be creative. To think outside the box.”

WSJ: ““The Powerful Primate” becomes important when the author departs prehistory for modernity. Hotter furnaces and better steel, he reminds us, produced powerful engines for agriculture and energy generation and led to dramatic gains in food production and long-distance transportation. Public lighting reduced crime. Mr. Ennos highlights the relationships between new energy technologies and improved material life. When natural gas replaced firewood and coal, for instance, home heating was improved. Fossil fuels unlocked the power needed for living standards to rise almost everywhere. Global energy production has grown sixfold since 1950, while the economic output of humanity has increased 15-fold in that period.”

NeoMails: The Attention and Monetisation Surface Brands Already Own (Part 11)

The Economics — How Broken Relationships Become Revenue

Attention without economics is art. NeoMails are designed to be a self-funding system — and at scale, a profitable one — without charging the brand for sending. The economics work across three distinct layers, each of which generates value independently and compounds when combined.

Layer One: ZeroCPM

The ActionAd inside each NeoMail generates revenue from a third-party partner. That revenue covers the cost of the send — making the channel economically neutral for the brand before any commercial outcome is achieved. This is ZeroCPM: zero cost because the emails pay for themselves. For a brand that currently pays for every email send regardless of engagement, this is a structural shift in the economics of owned-channel marketing. The owned channel stops being a cost centre and becomes, at minimum, cost-neutral.

At scale, ZeroCPM becomes a meaningful line in the marketing P&L — not just a mechanism for covering send costs, but a revenue stream in its own right, generated from the attention the NeoMails programme has earned.

Layer Two: Avoided Reacquisition Cost

Every dormant customer reactivated through NeoMails is a customer the brand does not need to buy back from Google or Meta. The avoided CAC is real, cashable value — money that does not appear in a revenue line but does appear in a CAC line that is materially lower. At any positive reactivation rate, at zero incremental cost, this is strictly better than the alternative of paying full market rate to re-acquire the same customer through paid channels.

The depth of this saving becomes clear when you consider what brands are currently spending on reacquisition. If 60-80% of ‘new customer’ spend is actually REACQ spend — as the data consistently shows — then a systematic reduction in that rate represents not a marginal improvement, but a restructuring of the marketing cost base.

Layer Three: The Global Prize

The full scale of the opportunity only becomes visible when you aggregate it. There are millions — globally, billions — of email addresses sitting in brand databases that have gone quiet. Not deleted, not opted out, simply silent. Each represents a broken relationship. Each represents a customer who was once commercially active and could be again.

If NeoMails can generate even one rupee per email ID per month in net value — through a combination of avoided REACQ cost, ActionAd revenue share, and incremental commercial activity from reactivated customers — the aggregate prize is staggering.

In India alone, a single email address typically appears across dozens of brand databases simultaneously. Aggregated across major consumer categories, the total count of brand-customer relationships sitting dormant in Indian databases runs to several billion — each one a connection that was once earned and is now silent. Globally, it is an order of magnitude larger.

NeoMails is not a feature improvement. It is a category. The inbox, reconceived as an attention and monetisation surface, is an asset class that has never been properly valued or systematically exploited. NeoMails are the instrument for doing so — at scale, with trust intact, and without the platform tax that every other channel demands.