Thinks 1967

NYTimes: “METR’s researchers attempted to track this by creating a benchmark of software engineering tasks — like debugging code, setting up servers and training small A.I. models. They hired expert software developers to do the tasks. Then they had A.I. agents attempt the same tasks. When an agent succeeded at a task, they logged the time it had taken the human expert to do the same work. They plotted the results on a single chart — task length on one axis, time on the other — and produced a trend line across years of A.I. progress. What they found was surprising. The length, in human-hours, of a task an A.I. agent was able to complete reliably was doubling roughly every seven months. More recently, with models like Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.5 and OpenAI’s GPT-5.2, the line took a sharp upward turn — the task length is now doubling every three to four months.”

SaaStr: “The durable moats in B2B in 2026 are not the ones that used to matter. They are: 1. Distribution. Who already has the customer’s trust and attention. 2. Data. Proprietary datasets that compound over time and that competitors genuinely cannot replicate. 3. Network effects. Real ones, not marketing-deck ones. 4. Brand. Actual brand, built over years, that customers trust when they’re nervous. 5. Speed of iteration. The ability to ship 10x faster than the incumbent. (Which, ironically, AI both enables and commoditizes at the same time.) Notice what’s not on that list: your feature set. Your localization footprint. Your integration catalog. Your admin panel. None of that is a moat anymore. None of it.”

WSJ: ““Feed the People!” has two important premises. The first is that nobody should call our food system “broken,” the all-purpose label that armchair revolutionaries slap on any aspect of the messy human condition that doesn’t measure up. “While we agree that there is much wrong with the food system, ‘broken’ is not the correct word to describe it,” the authors write, since the claim “offers no real vision of a better future and only vague gestures at systemic change.” Messrs. Dutkiewicz and Rosenberg sensibly argue that a vast modern society can only be fed safely and affordably by means of an efficient, industrial-scale food-production apparatus—which is exactly what we are fortunate to have. But they want us to work on improving the system to make it more healthful and sustainable and fairer to workers.”

Manu Joseph: “People, irrespective of economic class, have varying capacities for crime. Poverty is just an excuse for those who are predisposed to crime. Most of the poor, like most people, are incapable of serious crime. The entire luxury service industry rests on this fact. If poverty motivates people to steal, whole industries would collapse. The fear of law and perhaps the absence of human rights for the poor do explain a bit of the peace, but not entirely. The only factor that can explain why organized luxury coexists with the poverty of its service staff is that most of the poor do not wish to indulge in mayhem or theft, irrespective of the bad hand life has dealt them.”

Meridian: From Customer Engagement to Customer Outcomes

How automation becomes autonomy, and agents become Alpha

1

Prologue

NeoMarketing is the anti-martech operating system — a doctrine organised around three commitments to brands: Never Lose Customers, Never Pay Twice, Never Buy Fixed. Two engines execute the doctrine. Atrium is the attention engine for Rest and Next customers — the drifting 80% — with a ZeroCPM economic model. Meridian is the outcomes engine for Best customers — the revenue-generating 20% — with an Alpha pricing model.

This essay is about Meridian. It makes one central claim: that customer engagement, as a software category, has reached its ceiling — and that the next chapter is customer outcomes, which require a different architecture, a different operating model, and a different commercial contract. Thirty numbered points, across six sections, work through the full argument: why the ceiling exists, what the five doctrinal shifts are, how the five-layer architecture is assembled, why the Decisioning Agent must be separated from the Co-Marketer, how the three operator phases unlock Alpha pricing in stages, how the Alpha Agent is trained, why the moat is the traces rather than the model, how the governance of Beta works, why this could not have happened three years ago, and how a brand moves between engines as its customers move between states.

The claim is not that we have added agents to a CE platform. The claim is that agents, when combined with Context Graphs, BrandTwins, staged autonomy, and outcome-linked pricing, become something structurally different from every vendor in the category: an accountable system that earns only when the brand earns more than it was already earning.

Figure 1 — NeoMarketing architecture. Meridian is one of two engines.

The Ceiling of Automation

Why customer engagement hit a wall with Best customers

  1. CE helped marketers automate — but automation is not the same as intelligence.

Customer engagement platforms solved a genuine problem. They gave marketing teams journeys, triggers, templates, segmentation, orchestration, and dashboards. They made it possible to move from broadcast messaging to structured, personalised, multi-channel automation. For the era they were built for, that was transformative.

But automation was only ever the first step. A workflow is not judgement. A trigger is not understanding. A journey map is not an evolving model of a living customer relationship. Traditional CE turned marketers into operators of increasingly sophisticated machinery — but the machinery still needed humans to define every rule, anticipate every branch, and keep the logic updated as reality changed. The platform was the Ferrari; the brand team was still the ordinary driver. The result was capability without the execution bandwidth to match it.

Automation improved activity. It did not solve customer outcomes.

  1. The Best customer problem cannot be solved by more automation.

Best customers are where the economics live. The top 20% of a brand’s base typically generates 60-80% of revenue, the majority of cross-sell potential, most of the advocacy value, and the deepest relationship surface. They are also the most sensitive to irrelevance, fatigue, mistiming, and silent drift. Lose them quietly and you lose the engine.

You cannot manage these customers with more journeys or more segments. N=1 personalisation for Best customers is not a workflow problem; it is a reasoning problem. It requires understanding state, trajectory, memory, intent, and the next-best action at the level of the individual. A marketer can design ten segments, perhaps fifty. A marketer cannot continuously manage ten thousand high-value customer relationships as markets of one. The Best customer base is not a dataset to be queried. It is a portfolio to be actively managed, where every customer is a live position with a trajectory that changes continuously.

The ceiling of automation is reached when relationships demand judgement, but the system only knows rules.

  1. The incentive gap compounds the capability gap.

Even if brands could somehow operate traditional CE at maximum sophistication, there remains a deeper flaw: misalignment. The prevailing commercial model rewards inputs. Messages sent. Monthly transacting users. Records stored. Events processed. Channels enabled. Seats licensed. The vendor gets paid whether Best customers deepen their relationship with the brand or quietly drift toward Rest. The software bills either way. The brand absorbs the outcome.

This is not merely a pricing issue. It shapes behaviour on both sides. When activity is monetised, activity expands — more messages, more channels, more journeys, more sophistication. When outcomes are not monetised, outcomes become optional. The CE vendor has no structural reason to simplify, to restrain, or to optimise ruthlessly for measurable retention gains. The brand team, meanwhile, is overwhelmed trying to use all the capability they are paying for. Capability gap and incentive gap reinforce each other in a loop that has no corrective mechanism inside the current category.

Traditional CE did not just fail to solve the Best customer problem. Its economics ensured that failure had no real cost for the vendor.

  1. Agentic marketing arrived — but “agents as features” is not the answer.

The industry’s latest move is predictable: bolt agents onto the existing stack. An insights agent here, a content agent there, a copilot hovering over the dashboard. Useful, yes. Transformative, no. A platform with five agents bolted on is still a platform. The centre of gravity has not changed. The marketer is still configuring, still approving, still reconciling reports — now with marginally better tools and marginally more assistance.

By the end of 2026, every martech vendor will have announced agents. The agent badge will become as ubiquitous as the AI badge before it, and as meaningful. The real question is not whether agents exist. The question is what the agents are accountable for. An agent that drafts an email is a feature. An agent that generates a segment is a feature. An agent that underwrites measurable revenue uplift above a pre-agreed baseline is a fundamentally different kind of thing — because it sits inside a commercial architecture where its existence justifies itself only when outcomes materialise.

The breakthrough is not agents as add-ons. It is agents inside a system designed to generate and measure Alpha.

  1. The real shift is from customer engagement to customer outcomes.

This is the frame that matters, and it changes everything downstream. Customer engagement is measured in the activity of the system — sends, opens, clicks, journeys completed, segments created, messages delivered. All of these are inputs. Customer outcomes are measured in incremental revenue generated above the brand’s baseline, LTV extended, retention rate preserved, Adtech:Martech ratio reduced. These are results.

The system’s task in the engagement era was to help the marketer do more. The system’s task in the outcomes era is to decide what should be done for each high-value customer, execute it, learn from the result, and improve. The commercial logic changes with the operating logic. Input pricing becomes outcome pricing. SaaS fees become Alpha pricing. Software subscription becomes outcome underwriting. This is not a marketing refresh or a feature update. It is a category transition — from tools that help to systems that deliver.

Meridian begins where customer engagement platforms stop — at the point where the brand no longer wants better tools, but better outcomes.

**

“What happens to your vendor’s revenue if your retention improves?” If the answer is “nothing changes,” the vendor is a supplier. The difference between a supplier and a partner is accountability — and accountability starts with how the vendor is paid.

2

The Five Shifts

The doctrinal spine of the transformation

  1. Automation → Autonomy.

The first shift is conceptual, and it changes the division of labour between human and system. In the automation era, the marketer configures every branch of the journey in advance: if this happens, do that; if they open but do not click, wait two days and send the follow-up; if they have not engaged in 30 days, drop them into a reactivation flow. The system waits for the rules to be written. Judgement lives with the human.

In the autonomy era, the system decides. Which customer to engage today, which message to send, which channel to use, when to stay silent, when to escalate, when to wait. These are decisions the system makes continuously based on its evolving understanding of each customer and the outcomes it is being measured against. The marketer moves from operator to strategist — setting direction, defining constraints, reviewing outcomes, and intervening when the context shifts beyond what the system has seen before.

Automation follows instructions. Autonomy makes choices. That is the first great divide between CE as software and Meridian as an outcomes engine.

  1. Data → Context.

Most martech systems are built around records. They store events, attributes, transactions, and behavioural traces in increasingly unified forms — the CDP being the canonical version. This is useful. But storage is not understanding. A table of events tells you what happened. It does not tell you what matters, what is changing, or what is likely to matter next.

Meridian’s second shift is from raw data to structured context. Context Graphs transform rows and columns into evolving state. They do not simply record that a customer bought twice, opened last week, and browsed a category yesterday. They capture preference confidence, purchase momentum, fatigue signals, price sensitivity, response rhythms, and the decision traces that explain what interventions were tried and what actually happened as a result. Each decision made and measured enriches the graph. Each new customer interaction has the benefit of accumulated reasoning. The graph is not a better database. It is working memory — the substrate that lets an agent reason rather than just retrieve.

Memory replaces storage. State replaces static data. That is where real intelligence begins.

  1. Segments → BrandTwins.

Segmentation was a necessary abstraction for the pre-AI era. It let brands manage complexity by grouping customers into buckets defined by shared attributes. But segments are approximations, not relationships. They compress reality for computational convenience, and the compression costs exactly what matters most: the individuality that makes a Best customer valuable.

Meridian’s third shift is from treating customers as members of segments to treating each Best customer as a market of one. BrandTwins are AI-powered individual advocates that continuously model a single customer’s relationship with the brand. One Best customer may be momentum-rich but fatigue-sensitive; the right action is restraint, not outreach. Another responds to discovery and novelty but not to discounting; the right action is a product launch, not a promotion. A third is drifting quietly despite healthy surface metrics; the right action is intervention now, before dormancy is visible. The BrandTwin holds that individual understanding — and crucially, carries a micro P&L tracking revenue generated, cost invested, contribution margin impact, retention probability, and next-best investment opportunity.

At that point, marketing starts to resemble portfolio management. The customer is no longer a target. The customer becomes an account to be grown wisely.

  1. Operators → Oversight.

Meridian is not just a software shift. It is a human role shift, and the two evolve in parallel. In traditional CE, the operator is central — building journeys, reconciling reports, approving content, tweaking logic, and carrying the burden of day-to-day execution. That role is throughput-limited. One CSM can manage a defined number of campaigns, segments, or customers. Beyond that, the system cannot scale without more CSMs, which breaks the economics.

Meridian changes the trajectory. The CSM becomes a Martech Growth Engineer. The MGE then evolves further toward oversight, calibration, and governance as more of the execution burden migrates into the system. The human does not disappear; the human moves upward. From doing the work, to orchestrating the work, to governing the work. Too much commentary on AI imagines an adversarial relationship between human and machine — one replacing the other. Meridian’s model is different. The machine takes on increasing volumes of decisions; the human retains responsibility for the results. Accountability stays human even as execution becomes autonomous.

As autonomy rises, the human’s role becomes more strategic, more supervisory, and more accountable for outcomes rather than actions.

  1. SaaS fees → Alpha pricing.

The final shift is commercial, and it is the hardest to imitate because it forces conviction. Traditional martech charges fixed fees for access to capability — seats, MTUs, messages, events, features. The vendor gets paid whether the brand grows or stagnates. Meridian charges for value created above the brand’s baseline.

The logic is simple. The brand already has a trajectory without Meridian — that is Beta, the agreed baseline. Meridian’s job is to create Alpha above that. If there is no Alpha, there is no meaningful reward. Carry is calculated on the Alpha alone. This is not a reshuffled licence model with some performance bonuses on top. It is a structural change in the economics: software usage becomes outcome participation, and the vendor’s upside depends on exactly what the brand most cares about. A vendor who still charges the same whether the brand grows or shrinks is not a partner in any meaningful sense. A vendor whose economics depend on generating measurable uplift above a fixed baseline is betting alongside the client.

This is why Meridian is not merely a better CE platform. It is a different business model attached to a different intelligence architecture.

Figure 2 — The five shifts from customer engagement to customer outcomes.

3

The Architecture

Five layers — data, context, capabilities, decisioning, operator

  1. Layer 1 — Data sources. Commodity, not differentiating.

At the base of Meridian sits the familiar foundation: data. Transactional data captures purchases, orders, returns, and contract events. Behavioural data captures browsing, clicks, app sessions, and channel responses. World data captures context — category dynamics, competitor activity, seasonality, weather, macro signals. Nano-signals capture the moment — real-time intent, in-session behaviour, active-cart dynamics. All of this is organised through the TWIN framework: Transactional, World, Individual, Nano.

This layer matters enormously — the system cannot reason about what it cannot see — but it is not where the moat lives. Every capable martech team can plug into a CDP and pull comparable inputs. Data sources are necessary but not differentiating. Possessing data is not the same as possessing intelligence. Too much of martech still confuses the two.

Data is table stakes. The moat begins only when data is transformed into living context.

  1. Layer 2 — Context Graphs. The moat.

This is where Meridian becomes something more than a polished CE stack. Context Graphs are the proprietary substrate that turns raw data into reasoning context. Three graphs matter. The Customer Context Graph captures evolving customer state — affinities, rhythms, fatigue, hesitation, value trajectory, engagement depth, relationship temperature. The Product Context Graph captures the world of offers — inventory, substitutes, complements, margin economics, category structure. The Decision Trace Graph captures what was done, why, what alternatives were considered, what was expected, and what actually happened.

That third graph is the compounding layer, and it is what defends the architecture over time. Every intervention made and measured becomes part of the system’s future intelligence. Competitors can copy product claims, interface choices, even model architectures. They cannot easily recreate a mature corpus of decision traces built over years of real interventions on real customers at real brands, each with a measured Alpha outcome attached. The graphs compound; the other layers do not.

A segment tells you where a customer sits. A Context Graph tells you who they are, how they move, and what they are likely to do next. That difference is the difference between data and memory — and it is the only layer that cannot be shortcut.

  1. Layer 3 — Functional Agents. Capabilities, not chatbots.

Built on top of the graphs are four Functional Agents, each reading from the Context Graphs and producing structured outputs. The Insights Agent surfaces patterns, anomalies, drift signals, and opportunities. The Segmentation Agent groups customers dynamically — not as fixed buckets, but as evolving behavioural clusters that shift with new data. The Content Agent generates and adapts messaging for each context, tone, and channel. BrandTwins act as the N=1 customer-side layer, holding the individual model of each Best customer and speaking for that customer’s interests inside the system.

The distinction from generic agentic products matters. These are not conversational assistants designed to impress in demos. They are capabilities designed to feed a higher-order decisioning system with usable intelligence. A marketer does not chat with the Segmentation Agent; the Decisioning Agent queries it. A marketer does not ask the Insights Agent to summarise a dashboard; the Decisioning Agent ingests its outputs to inform specific interventions. Each Functional Agent is a feature inside an outcomes machine, not a standalone assistant.

Functional Agents produce intelligence. They do not consume it. That is what makes them different from every copilot being sold in the category today.

  1. Layer 4 — Decisioning Agent. The brain.

If the Functional Agents are specialised senses and muscles, the Decisioning Agent is the brain. It reads their outputs, weighs them against the Context Graph, and determines what should happen next for each Best customer: which message, which offer, which channel, which timing, which restraint. This is where the system stops describing reality and starts acting on it.

It is also, critically, where Alpha is generated. Alpha does not emerge from possessing data, graphs, or agents in the abstract. It emerges from making better decisions than the brand’s baseline trajectory, repeatedly, at scale. Every decision the Decisioning Agent makes either produces uplift above the Beta baseline or it does not. The quality of the agent is measured directly in measured Alpha — not in clicks, opens, or campaign completion rates. The Decisioning Agent is evaluated against economic outcomes, not intermediate metrics.

The Decisioning Agent decides what to do. Everything else in the stack exists to inform that decision or execute on it.

  1. Layer 5 — Co-Marketer. The operator.

At the top sits the Co-Marketer — the product surface through which humans interact with Meridian. This is the operator layer, but not in the old sense of manual execution. The Co-Marketer is the review surface, the explanation layer, the approvals interface, and eventually the oversight console.

Much AI commentary treats trust as a vague social issue. In Meridian, it is a concrete product design issue. The Co-Marketer must show what the system is doing, why it is doing it, what alternatives were considered and rejected, how impact is being measured, and when the human should intervene. Over time, the Co-Marketer progresses through three stages — from assistance, to orchestration, to autonomous operation with oversight. Each stage is not just a roadmap milestone but a distinct product with a distinct pricing model and a distinct level of institutional trust.

The Co-Marketer is the end of the stack not because it is the smartest layer. It is the end of the stack because it is where intelligence meets institutional trust.

Figure 3 — The five-layer Meridian architecture with Co-Marketer stage progression.

4

The Three Phases and the Alpha Agent

How brands progress — and how the Alpha Agent learns

Why the Decisioning Agent and Co-Marketer must be separated.

One of the most important architectural choices in Meridian is keeping the Decisioning Agent distinct from the Co-Marketer. It would be tempting to collapse them into a single component — “the AI layer” — and many agentic platforms do exactly that. But collapsing them is a mistake, and the reason is timelines.

The Decisioning Agent evolves through model quality, Context Graph maturity, and accumulated decision traces. It is a research and engineering problem. Its progress depends on data richness, reward design, calibration loops, and compute. The Co-Marketer evolves through human adoption, trust, and institutional comfort. It is a product and trust problem. Its progress depends on interface design, explanation quality, approval workflows, and the slow accumulation of institutional confidence inside brand teams. These two curves run at different speeds and are shaped by different forces. A brand team might be ready for autonomous decisioning long before the research has produced a trustworthy agent; or the research might produce a capable agent years before the brand team is comfortable handing over supervision.

Keeping them separate lets each compound on its own timeline. Collapsing them would force the slower of the two to bottleneck the faster. That is an architectural error with commercial consequences.

The Decisioning Agent is the brain. The Co-Marketer is the interface. The separation is what lets the system scale when the research is ready, and what lets the commercial relationship deepen only when trust is ready.

  1. Phase 1 — CSM assisted by M-Agents. Alpha1. The human proves the method.

Meridian does not begin with a leap to autonomy. It begins with a disciplined first phase in which the human still runs the work and AI augments selectively. A CSM or early MGE operates on a defined cohort of Best customers, supported by M-Agents — Meridian’s collective of task-specific marketing agents for segmentation, content, insights, and execution — to improve segmentation, messaging, timing, and intervention logic. The method is proven against a baseline, usually with a holdout cohort or matched control group.

Pricing in Phase 1 is hybrid — Alpha1 — combining a modest base fee with Alpha upside. The method is not yet proven to work at scale, the Decisioning Agent does not yet have enough traces to operate autonomously, and the brand has every reason to be cautious. The CSM has to deliver Alpha the hard way: decision by decision, with the Context Graph as working memory and the Functional Agents as assistants.

But Phase 1 is doing something more important than just delivering initial results. It is creating the training substrate for everything that follows. Each decision the CSM makes — which customer to engage, which message to send, why, and what happened afterwards — becomes part of the Decision Trace Graph. Phase 1 is not merely a pilot. It is the data factory that begins to teach the future system how good judgement works.

Phase 1 builds two things at once: commercial proof for the brand, and training corpus for the agent.

  1. Phase 2 — MGE with the Alpha Agent. Alpha1.5. The human scales the method.

In the second phase, the human role changes materially. The CSM becomes a Martech Growth Engineer, and the Alpha Agent begins to handle more of the execution burden under MGE supervision. The Alpha Agent is not just another functional AI tool. It is the Decisioning Agent operating inside the Alpha commercial structure, with the explicit purpose of generating measurable uplift above baseline.

The MGE is no longer the primary executor. The MGE is now an orchestrator, reviewer, and calibrator. Pricing shifts to Alpha1.5 — reduced base, larger Alpha share — because the MGE’s throughput expands dramatically. One MGE can now manage roughly 10X more brand accounts than before — the agent handles execution; the MGE focuses on calibration and oversight across portfolios. The economics open up not because fees went up but because the capacity to generate Alpha per hour of MGE time has multiplied.

Crucially, the MGE is not replaced. The MGE supervises, calibrates, and remains commercially accountable for the Alpha produced. Every week, the MGE reviews a sample of agent decisions, flags disagreements, and pushes those disagreements back into the training loop as new examples. The agent amplifies the MGE; the MGE does not disappear. This is the hinge phase where Meridian stops being labour-constrained and starts becoming system-constrained — which is exactly what Alpha economics require.

Phase 2 is where customer engagement stops being labour-constrained and starts becoming system-constrained.

  1. How the Alpha Agent is trained.

The Alpha Agent learns from a proprietary loop that the existing Meridian architecture is already producing as a byproduct of operation. Context Graphs hold the input state: who the customer is, what the product realities are, what the environment looks like, and how the relationship is evolving. Decision Trace Graphs hold the judgement layer: what action was chosen, why, what alternatives were rejected, what outcome was expected, and what actually happened.

Three training techniques sit on top of this corpus. Supervised fine-tuning teaches the agent to approximate strong MGE judgement — input state maps to MGE decision, trained across thousands of real cases. Reinforcement learning tunes the agent against actual Alpha — actions that generated uplift get positive reward; actions that damaged CRR (Click Retention Rate) or triggered fatigue get negative signal; the policy sharpens toward what demonstrably works. Calibration loops run weekly, with human MGEs reviewing samples of agent decisions, flagging disagreements, and generating new supervised examples that push the agent back into alignment with expert judgement as the brand context shifts.

This dual structure — rich input state plus labelled decisions plus measured outcomes — creates a training corpus that no generic marketing model can easily replicate. The Alpha Agent is not trained on generic marketing content scraped from the web. It is trained on decision-quality traces tied to real commercial outcomes inside real brands.

The architecture that runs Meridian is simultaneously the architecture that trains it. Every quarter of operation makes the next quarter of operation better.

  1. The moat is the traces, not the model.

This distinction is crucial because it cuts through much of the current AI hype. Models will improve, commoditise, and be replaced. A capable competitor can license a stronger base model tomorrow, fine-tune it on open datasets, and claim capability parity. What they cannot do overnight — or in a year, or perhaps in five — is replicate years of decision traces accumulated from real MGE work across real Best-customer cohorts at real brands, with real Alpha outcomes measured against real Beta baselines.

This is analogous to the structural moat that firms like Mercor have built in the broader AI economy: the scarcity is not compute or models, but expert judgement transformed into labelled training data at scale. A model is a commodity; an expert corpus is not. Meridian’s version is narrower and deeper: expert marketing judgement on Best customers, with attached economic outcomes, captured across verticals and brand types. A competitor starting today has no traces. A competitor with comparable tools but no operator history cannot produce a comparable agent. The architecture is open; the corpus is proprietary.

This is what gives Meridian a structural advantage that compounds rather than depreciates. Every new cohort, every new brand, every new quarter of operation adds traces to the corpus. The agent gets better because it has seen more. Competitors do not catch up by copying the architecture. They catch up only by running operator-layer engagements themselves — which means the first-mover advantage is measured in years of compounding traces, not in features shipped.

Any competent team can build an agent. Not every team can build a corpus of proven decisions that makes the agent measurably better every quarter.

  1. Phase 3 — Autonomous Co-Marketer with oversight. Alpha2. The method runs itself.

The third phase is where Meridian fully becomes an outcomes engine rather than a software-plus-services model. The system runs the work. The human governs outcomes, sets constraints, handles exceptions, and manages the trust boundary. Pricing shifts to Alpha2 — 100% variable, paid on Alpha alone.

At this stage, the brand is not really a customer in the traditional SaaS sense. It is a partner in a shared outcomes model. The Alpha Agent, now trained on hundreds of MGEs’ worth of decision traces across multiple brands, operates largely without day-to-day supervision. The human role shifts entirely to governance: setting direction, auditing outcomes, stepping in when novel context requires it, and making strategic calls that the system is not yet trusted to make. The MGE-to-autonomous transition does not eliminate the human; it moves the human from the decision layer to the accountability layer.

This is why Alpha2 is coherent as a commercial model. By Phase 3, the brand and the vendor have lived through enough quarters of measured outcomes that the shared ledger is trustworthy, the baseline governance is proven, and the commercial alignment has been tested against real uplift and real shortfalls. A brand cannot be sold Alpha2 without having lived through Alpha1 and Alpha1.5 first. Each phase earns the right to the next. The staged model is what makes a radical endpoint commercially credible.

Autonomy without accountability is dangerous. Accountability without autonomy is inefficient. Phase 3 is where Meridian combines both.

Figure 4 — How the Alpha Agent learns. Context Graphs as input, MGE decisions as labels, measured Alpha as reward.

**

“The moat is the traces, not the model.” Every MGE decision logged on a real Best customer with a real Alpha outcome is a training example no competitor can produce without first building the operator layer. The corpus compounds with every cohort, every quarter, every brand.

5

The Commercial Unlock

Why Meridian is a different business from software

  1. Alpha pricing is not performance-linked pricing.

It is tempting to describe Meridian’s model as performance pricing, but that undersells the structure significantly. Many vendors claim to be performance-linked when they merely add bonuses, discounts, or KPI-linked incentives on top of a conventional retainer. The retainer is the floor. The upside is an accelerator. The downside is nothing.

Meridian is more radical. The brand’s existing trajectory is Beta — what it would likely achieve without Meridian, locked in before execution begins. Meridian’s job is to generate Alpha above that. Carry is calculated on Alpha alone. If Alpha is zero, Carry is zero. There is no retainer. There is no management fee. There is no safety net on the vendor’s side.

The analogy is hedge fund economics with one important difference. The standard hedge fund structure is “2 and 20”: a 2% management fee charged regardless of performance, plus 20% carried interest above the benchmark. The manager earns the 2% whether they beat the market or not. Meridian removes the 2%. There is only the equivalent of carry, calculated against a fixed and pre-agreed benchmark. That is why the language of Alpha matters — it signals that the economic unit is not effort, not usage, and not activity, but value created above the base case.

Traditional SaaS charges for access to possibility. Meridian charges only for realised uplift.

  1. The three phases map to three pricing models.

A staged autonomy model naturally requires a staged commercial model. The progression matches how trust actually accumulates between a brand and an outcomes partner.

In Phase 1, Alpha1 combines a modest fixed component with Alpha upside, reflecting the continued role of human-led delivery and the early stage of the engagement. Neither side is yet willing to commit entirely to a purely variable model. The brand is not yet convinced that the method works at scale. The vendor is not yet confident that the Beta baseline is stable. A hybrid is appropriate.

In Phase 2, Alpha1.5 reduces the base and expands the upside share because the MGE-plus-Alpha-Agent system can carry significantly more operational load. The proof points from Phase 1 have made both sides more comfortable. The commercial terms can shift further toward outcomes.

In Phase 3, Alpha2 can move to a fully variable structure because the trust, measurement, and operating system have matured enough to support full outcome underwriting. Neither side needs to leap blindly into the end state. Brand and provider move together from hybrid to fully aligned economics, as evidence accumulates and as the Alpha Agent’s performance becomes predictable.

Trust is built operationally first and monetised commercially later. That is how Meridian makes a difficult pricing transition believable.

  1. Governance is what makes Alpha pricing auditable.

Outcome pricing fails when measurement is vague. Alpha claims become contested. Baselines drift. Both sides lose trust and the engagement collapses. Meridian therefore requires a governance architecture strong enough to make Alpha claims precise, defensible, and auditable from the outset.

Four elements are non-negotiable. First, the Beta baseline must be agreed before execution begins — locked, documented, and auditable. It cannot be a moving target or a self-reported improvement. Second, incrementality must be measured against a holdout, matched cohort, or comparable experimental design. Correlation is not causation, and Alpha pricing requires causation. Third, a shared ledger must record actions and their rationale — what was done, why, what alternatives were considered, what was expected, and what actually happened. This is not bureaucracy; it is the accounting system required when a vendor is paid for impact. Fourth, the NEVER Metrics dashboard must surface what actually changed each quarter: Alpha Generated, LTV trajectory, retention rate, Real Reach for Best customers, and the Adtech:Martech ratio as a broader indicator of leakage reduction.

The hardest operational problem in the model is not technical — it is the governance of Beta. Who sets it? How is it audited? What happens when category-level conditions shift and the baseline itself needs adjustment? These questions need answers before Phase 1 scales beyond pilots. A shared ledger with incrementality measurement from day one is the right answer, but it has to be contractually specified, not assumed.

Without a shared ledger, Alpha pricing sounds aspirational. With one, it becomes auditable. Governance is what turns the commercial model from a claim into a contract.

  1. The TAM shift is the strategic consequence.

The real significance of Meridian is not confined to better CE economics. It changes the size of the business being addressed — the total market that vendor and brand are transacting inside.

The conventional martech software market is approximately $50 billion globally. Large, crowded, and squeezed by consolidation, AI commoditisation, and buyer fatigue. Growth within this market is essentially zero-sum: vendor X wins a deal vendor Y loses. Meridian addresses a different and much larger pool. The AdWaste market — the portion of marketing spend brands use to reacquire customers they already owned, compensate for retention that should never have been lost, and fund reacquisition through paid channels — is approximately ten times larger at $500 billion. That is the pool Meridian plays for: the value trapped in silent drift, missed retention, and poor Best-customer capital allocation.

Beyond that sits participation in the transaction economics of e-commerce itself. Carry across a portfolio of brand relationships. A percentage of incremental revenue compounding over time. This is not incremental revenue inside an existing category; it is a different category entirely. Traditional software asks, “How much will the buyer pay for the tool?” Meridian asks, “How much value can be unlocked if Best customers stop fading and outcomes are underwritten?” That is a far larger question, and it reframes what kind of business Meridian is.

This is how a CE business stops being capped by seat economics and begins to participate in outcome economics.

  1. The distinction is not agents. It is the combined architecture.

In the end, Meridian’s claim does not rest on any single component. Not on Context Graphs alone. Not on BrandTwins alone. Not on the Decisioning Agent alone. Not even on Alpha pricing alone. Each of these ideas could exist in isolation and still fail to transform the category. Agents without Context Graphs produce noise. Context Graphs without agents produce static dashboards. BrandTwins without Alpha pricing produce expensive personalisation with no commercial discipline. Alpha pricing without the architecture produces a commercial claim the vendor cannot deliver on.

The power lies in the combination. Context Graphs as the reasoning substrate. BrandTwins as N=1 representation. The Decisioning Agent as the Alpha-generating brain. Staged autonomy as the operating path. Alpha pricing as the commercial proof of belief. Each layer depends on the ones below it; each commercial phase depends on the one before it. The system works as a system, not as a collection of features. Plenty of vendors will claim agents. Far fewer will build this entire stack. And fewer still will agree to be paid only when it works.

That is why Meridian is not “Netcore with agents.” It is the commercial and architectural system through which customer engagement becomes customer outcomes.

Figure 5 — Alpha economics. Beta baseline, Alpha uplift, Carry as Meridian’s share of Alpha alone.

6

The Wider Frame

Why now, how customers move, what can go wrong, and what the category shift means

  1. Why this could not have happened three years ago.

The natural sceptical question about Meridian is: if this is such an obvious evolution, why now? The honest answer is that three structural conditions had to converge, and all three are now in place.

First, AI capability. Until around 2024, language models were not reliable enough to make marketing decisions at N=1 resolution. They could generate content, summarise dashboards, and assist with configuration. They could not reason over a Context Graph and produce consistent, defensible decisions about what to do next for a specific customer. The frontier models of 2025-2026 can — and the cost curves have fallen far enough to make per-customer reasoning economically viable at scale.

Second, brand willingness. Three years ago, the dominant CMO conversation was about martech consolidation and platform rationalisation. Today, it is about AI adoption and outcome accountability. CFOs are asking sharper questions about marketing ROI. Boards are asking about platform dependency and Adtech:Martech ratios. The buyer is now asking the right questions — which is a necessary precondition for a new category to be sold, not just built.

Third, operator infrastructure. The MGE role did not exist in 2022. CSMs existed, but the commercial structure that lets a services layer operate on Alpha pricing — with the measurement discipline and the shared ledger required — had not been built. It is being built now, and the first cohort of MGEs is the proof that the progression is viable.

The architecture needs capable models, willing buyers, and a trained operator layer to work. All three arrived within the same eighteen-month window. That is why now.

  1. How customers move between Meridian and Atrium.

NeoMarketing has two engines because customers have different states and require different treatments. But customers do not stay in their states permanently — they move. A Best customer drifts into Rest quietly; a Rest customer reactivated through Atrium graduates toward Best as engagement deepens. The architecture has to handle both transitions cleanly.

The shared substrate makes this possible. Context Graphs run under both engines — at cohort resolution for Atrium’s Rest customers, where patterns and signals guide NeoMails, Magnets, and ActionAds; at individual resolution for Meridian’s Best customers, where the full decision-trace richness supports BrandTwins and autonomous Alpha generation. When a customer’s state changes, the graph does not have to be rebuilt. The same infrastructure supports both views of the same person.

Mu — the attention currency earned through NeoMails engagement — also travels between engines. A Rest customer who earns Mu through consistent engagement has a visible signal of reactivation. As their engagement deepens and their value grows, they graduate into Meridian’s territory and their BrandTwin begins to manage the relationship at N=1. Similarly, when a Best customer’s engagement decays, the BrandTwin flags the drift early and the customer can be moved back into Atrium’s attention loop before they require full reacquisition. The two engines are not competing for territory — they are complementary layers that handle customers at different stages of the relationship with shared infrastructure underneath.

Meridian and Atrium share a substrate by design. That is what lets them handle the full customer lifecycle without either engine owning the whole problem alone.

  1. The risks that could derail the model — and how they are mitigated.

It would be dishonest to present Meridian as a clean certainty. Three risks are real, and each needs an explicit mitigation rather than a hopeful assumption.

The first risk is Beta governance. If baselines are set loosely, Alpha becomes easy to generate by accident and the commercial model loses integrity. If baselines are set tightly, the vendor cannot earn even when doing genuinely good work and the model collapses under its own rigour. The mitigation is auditable Beta measurement — a pre-agreed baseline with holdout-based incrementality checks, documented in a shared ledger before the engagement starts. The discipline is commercial, not only technical.

The second risk is trust erosion during autonomy transitions. If Phase 2 or Phase 3 is attempted before enough trust has been built, brand teams will claw back control, the Alpha Agent will be overridden frequently, and the system will underperform. The mitigation is patience: brands earn their way into Phase 2 through Phase 1 evidence, and earn their way into Phase 3 through Phase 2 consistency. Skipping phases is not a feature; it is a failure mode.

The third risk is corpus contamination. If the training corpus absorbs bad decisions from weak MGEs, the Alpha Agent learns bad judgement and degrades. The mitigation is selective labelling — not every MGE decision becomes a training example, and only decisions with strong Alpha outcomes on well-characterised cohorts enter the supervised fine-tuning set. The moat is not the volume of traces; it is the quality.

Alpha pricing is not a magic commercial lever. It works only when the governance, the phasing, and the corpus discipline are treated as first-class engineering problems.

  1. What this means for the buyer — and the seller.

For the brand, Meridian is a different kind of relationship. The question is not “which CE vendor should we pick?” but “are we willing to underwrite a partner’s share in our marketing upside in exchange for not paying fixed fees when the upside does not materialise?” That question has never been on the table in martech procurement before. It changes who inside the brand is the decision-maker — finance, not just marketing — and it changes how the contract is structured. Every brand that engages with Meridian has to build new muscles: baseline measurement, holdout discipline, outcome accountability at the vendor interface.

For Netcore, Meridian is also a different business. Traditional martech is sold through product demos, feature comparisons, and annual renewals. Meridian is sold through proof points — Phase 1 outcomes, Alpha Generated, Beta baselines held and beaten. The sales motion is closer to investment banking or management consulting than to enterprise software. The commercial rhythm is quarterly Alpha reports, not annual renewals. The metrics that matter are retention rate, LTV trajectory, and Adtech:Martech ratio — not MTUs, seats, or messages sent.

For both sides, Meridian is a shift in category, not just in product. The vendor stops selling software and starts underwriting outcomes. The brand stops buying capability and starts buying Alpha. This is a different contract, a different conversation, and a different measure of success.

The category is not bigger martech. It is what comes after martech — an outcomes engine operating on a commercial architecture the software era could not support.

  1. Customer engagement is a complete category. Customer outcomes is the next one.

Every successful technology category eventually completes itself and becomes the ground on which the next category is built. On-premise enterprise software completed itself and became the ground for SaaS. SaaS completed itself and became the ground for CDPs and CEs. Customer engagement, as a software category, is now largely complete. The leading platforms do what they claim. The integrations work. The agents are being added. Further improvements will be incremental.

What comes next is not better customer engagement. What comes next is customer outcomes — the category that takes the capabilities CE built and wraps them in a different commercial and operating model. Meridian is one attempt to build that next category. There will be others. Some will try to retrofit outcome pricing onto existing CE platforms; most of those will fail because the incentive architecture and the internal measurement infrastructure will not support the transition. Some will try to build outcome engines without the underlying CE capabilities; most of those will fail because they will lack the Context Graph maturity and the operator relationships needed to generate Alpha consistently.

The winners will be the ones that do both — build the capability stack deeply, and build the commercial architecture that turns capability into accountability. That is the thesis behind Meridian. The category transition is underway, and the question is not whether it happens, but who moves first and with what conviction.

Customer engagement was the platform era. Customer outcomes is the partnership era. The shift is already beginning.

Figure 6 — Customer lifecycle. How customers move between Meridian and Atrium, with shared substrate.

Closing

Meridian is one of two engines inside NeoMarketing. The other — Atrium — does parallel work for Rest and Next customers, using inbox-native attention and ZeroCPM economics to zero the CAC. Together, they form the operating system for the end of AdWaste. This essay has been about the Best customer side of that story: how a CE platform evolves into an outcomes engine, how agents evolve into accountability, and how the vendor-client relationship evolves from software subscription to outcome underwriting.

The five shifts are the doctrinal spine. The five-layer architecture is the machine. The three phases are the path brands take through the transition. The Alpha Agent is the working core. Alpha pricing is the contract. Context Graphs and Decision Traces are the moat that compounds with every cohort, every quarter, every brand. These are not independent ideas loosely connected — they are a single system, and the system works because each element makes the others stronger.

Customer engagement platforms helped marketers automate messaging. Meridian makes customer engagement autonomous, accountable, and outcome-linked. That is the shift — and it is already underway.

Thinks 1966

NYTimes: “For decades, Americans scoffed at Russia’s rigid, centralized military and its inability to adapt. That picture is dangerously out of date. After four years of war in Ukraine, Moscow has developed an impressive, pragmatic approach to military innovation that prioritizes what works over what is elegant, what scales over what is ambitious, and what delivers battlefield results over what impresses on paper. Russia is reshaping the future of warfare in real time, building artificial intelligence-enabled command and control and, it appears, deploying fully autonomous weapons without the ethical constraints that govern Western militaries.”

Tyler Goodspeed: “There’s a two-step process to identifying historical economic recessions. The first step is quantitative. You must look at the statistical evidence. Was there an ongoing economic contraction? The second step is more qualitative. At the time, what were people concerned about economically? What were they lamenting? What were their economic concerns? That’s different from what they were blaming the recession on. When you look at the statistical evidence—the quantitative evidence—you very often see violent changes in the rate at which people are unemployed—sharp contractions, rather than gentle ones, where you tip or you slip into recession. With the qualitative evidence, you often hear people speak about “big shocks” or big clusters of shocks.”

WSJ: “Nish Ajitsaria, senior managing director, head of Aladdin Product Engineering, and the firm’s executive sponsor for AI, said he is chasing down a future in which AI becomes the default mode for executing most processes, from research to coding. Meanwhile, human roles will become less specialized, and more cross-functional, working in more nimble “squads” to oversee the AI’s busywork.”

Alex Imas: “After trying to streamline the store experience with fewer workers and more automation, [Starbucks] concluded that this had been a mistake. CEO Brian Niccol said that “handwritten notes on cups’’, ceramic cups, and “the return of great seats’’ had led more customers to “sit and stay in our cafes’’, showing that “small details and hospitality drive satisfaction.’’ More baristas are being hired per store and automation is being rolled back…Economics is the study of decision-making under constraints, i.e., scarcity. If advanced AI brings material abundance—if machines can produce many if not all forms of human production at very low marginal cost—does economics become irrelevant? No, we will still have scarcity, but the kind of scarcity that matters will change. Ultimately the answer to any question about the future economics of advanced AI begins with identifying what becomes scarce.”

Inbox Media Network: How the Next Ad Category Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight (Part 9)

9

Summary

  1. Every media network is born the same way

Not from a new technology. From someone recognising that an existing attention surface — already large, already habitual, already identity-linked — was being used for one purpose when it could be used for two. Newspapers. Television. Search. Social. Retail. Each time the surface existed first. The innovation was the monetisation architecture built on top of it. The Inbox Media Network is the same pattern, applied to the attention surface that has been hiding in plain sight for thirty years.

  1. The most underleveraged attention in marketing is not purchase-intent attention — it is relationship attention

Every media network built so far monetises attention at or near the moment of transaction. The Inbox Media Network monetises the attention that exists between transactions — when the customer is present in a relationship with the brand but not actively shopping. That attention is continuous, it is authenticated, and until now it has been commercially idle. The gap between those two kinds of attention is where the category lives.

  1. The inbox has four structural properties no other surface combines

Authenticated identity — a real, named, consented person, not a modelled audience. Relationship context — attention that exists outside purchase intent. Algorithm-free delivery — the message arrives because of the brand-customer relationship, not because a platform approved it. And portability — the same address, every device, every platform, for life. These four properties make the inbox the most durable first-party attention surface in existence. Each one is becoming more valuable as the open web degrades.

  1. The inbox has been underleveraged because brands built the wrong product on top of it

Sell and Notify. Those are the two message classes most brands use. Neither of them operates in the long middle of the customer relationship — the space between transactions where memory, habit, and affinity are either being maintained or lost. That gap is not a channel failure. It is a product failure. The channel was always capable of more. The product built on top of it was not.

  1. NeoMails are the missing product — the Relate layer

A daily email that earns attention rather than demands it. The APU — BrandBlock, Magnet, Mu, ActionAd — is the atomic unit. The BrandBlock gives the brand a voice before anything is asked. The Magnet earns participation in under sixty seconds. Mu creates continuity and habit through a visible, accumulating balance. The ActionAd funds the send — making the programme self-financing at scale. Together they create something that did not previously exist in most brands’ email programmes: a reason to open that has nothing to do with a discount.

  1. ZeroCPM is the economic inversion that makes Relate viable

In conventional email, every send is a cost. In NeoMails, ActionAd revenue covers the send cost. The Relate layer — which most brands never built because it had no commercial justification — is now self-funding. That is not a small accounting detail. It is the structural change that makes relationship attention economically rational for brands that would otherwise never invest in it. The channel stops being a cost centre and starts being an asset. The dormant base stops being dead weight and starts generating revenue.

  1. NeoNet turns a single brand’s attention surface into a cooperative media network

Every other ad network is adversarial: brands bid against each other, a platform extracts margin from every transaction, and the brand does not own the relationship. NeoNet is cooperative: brands exchange access to their own active NeoMail audiences — first-party for first-party, no auction, no intermediary. A customer cold for Brand A but still active in Brand B’s NeoMails can be recovered through a single tap. A genuinely new customer discovers Brand A inside Brand B’s inbox and subscribes in one action. Recovery points backward. Acquisition points forward. The same infrastructure serves both directions.

  1. The regulatory environment is a tailwind, not a headwind

Cookie deprecation, privacy regulation, AI content flooding rented surfaces, and CFO scrutiny of attributed email revenue — all four forces are converging simultaneously, and all four point in the same direction: first-party, authenticated, owned-channel attention is becoming scarcer and more valuable. The inbox does not need to become the future. It needs to be recognised correctly in the present. Every constraint the open web faces makes the case for the Inbox Media Network stronger.

  1. The category is real, the test is short, and the proof is measurable

The Inbox Media Network is not a vision waiting for validation. The pilot shows whether the dormant base re-engages, and whether the habit forms and holds. Six metrics — Real Reach, Click Retention Rate, reactivation rate, REACQ%, One-Tap subscribe rate, ActionAd completion rate — tell you whether the mechanism is working. If Real Reach rises and REACQ% falls, the surface is being built. Every brand that proves it at the node level makes the network more valuable for every other brand that joins. The network effect is structural, not incidental.

  1. If the habit forms, the rest compounds

That is the crux. Not ZeroCPM. Not NeoNet. Not the regulatory tailwind. The crux is whether a customer who receives a NeoMail on Tuesday opens it again on Wednesday, and again the following week, and builds a habit that makes the brand a daily presence rather than a periodic interruption. If that happens, the inbox becomes a live first-party surface, ActionAds become a real media layer, NeoNet becomes a credible distribution rail, and the database starts behaving like an asset rather than a liability. If it does not happen, the model does not work, however elegant the theory. The test is ninety days. The question is simple. The answer changes everything.

**

The Inbox Media Network is not a better email programme. It is a different model — one that says the database is not just a communication asset but a media asset. Not because it contains contacts, but because with the right product architecture it can contain live, repeated, monetisable attention. The next major ad category may not be built on a new platform at all. It has been hiding in plain sight.

Thinks 1965

NYTimes: “[Javier Milei] wants to use his presidency not only to slash the country’s budget but to wage an ideological war and rewire the country’s mentality. He wants to dismantle what he calls the “aberrant” concepts of social justice and economic equality and make the nation’s core principles capitalism, the free market, a limited state and individualism. “We are at war,” Mr. Milei said at a right-wing festival last year, and added: “We are fighting a cultural struggle, an ideological battle, a war for the survival of our freedom.” At political rallies and international summits, in public policies and a deluge of social media posts, Mr. Milei has relentlessly sought to infuse Argentina with his libertarian ideals. And turn it into a model for the world.”

WSJ: “China is making strides in open-source artificial intelligence. Eighty percent of developers worldwide who use open-source AI tools are building with Chinese models, according to an estimate by our colleague Martin Casado, general partner at Andreessen Horowitz. Research from our firm and OpenRouter shows a significant increase in the use of Chinese open models last year, reaching in some weeks a high of 30% of all AI usage. In January, Alibaba’s Qwen family surpassed 700 million downloads to become the most widely adopted open-source AI system on the planet.”

Derek Thompson: “In thinking about the right historical analogy for AI, I’ve become very interested in the early history of electricity in the early 1900s.

David Henderson: “Four facts about taxes: 1. High marginal tax rates cause economic harm. 2. High tax rates also cause tax avoidance. 3. Making tax rates the same for everyone would likely reduce the demand for government spending. 4. Most people, not just high-income people, think a proportional tax on income is more fair than a graduated tax with higher rates for higher-income people.”

Inbox Media Network: How the Next Ad Category Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight (Part 8)

Stress-Testing

If the Inbox Media Network is worth taking seriously, it should survive serious questions. Not the easy ones — not “is email old?” or “do people still open messages?” — but the structural ones that determine whether this is a real category or a persuasive narrative.

So let us end by stress-testing the model.

Question 1: Does the habit form strongly enough?

This is the most important question because it sits underneath everything else.

The entire architecture depends on a simple behavioural premise: enough customers must return for NeoMails often enough that a live attention surface actually forms. If that does not happen, the rest of the model weakens quickly. The BrandBlock loses its value. The ActionAd becomes a unit inside an underperforming channel. NeoNet has no meaningful inventory to route. The “media network” becomes a conceptual overlay on a weak behavioural base.

This objection is real.

NeoMails borrow some of their confidence from products that have proven the power of short, repeatable interactions. But the fact that a bounded habit works in language-learning apps or daily prediction games does not automatically mean it transfers to brand email. The motivation structures are different. The customer’s relationship with the brand is not the same as their relationship with a personal learning goal.

So the honest answer is not that the habit is guaranteed. It is that this is the crux to test first.

That is why the proof window matters. If Real Reach rises, if Click Retention Rate improves, if the dormant cohort begins returning consistently, the premise is being validated. If not, the architecture remains elegant but unproven.

The Inbox Media Network does not need every assumption to be right. But it needs this one to be right.

Question 2: Do the ActionAd economics actually hold?

ZeroCPM is one of the most attractive parts of the thesis. It is also the most obvious point of attack.

What if fill rates are lower than expected? What if only the largest senders with the strongest engagement attract enough advertisers? What if the economics work cleanly in theory and only patchily in practice?

These are fair questions.

The first answer is that the model does not require perfect fill rates to be directionally superior to the status quo. Even partial offset changes the economics of the Relate layer materially compared with conventional retention messaging, which is pure cost. A channel that is ninety percent self-funding is a structurally different proposition from one that costs the full send rate.

The second answer is that ActionAds do not need to behave like traditional ad inventory to work. Because they are action-based and identity-linked, the value of a single completion — a verified subscriber, a qualified lead — can carry significantly more economic weight than a large number of low-intent impressions elsewhere. The unit economics of action-based monetisation are more favourable than impression-based monetisation at equivalent scale.

The third answer is that this is why the category should begin with constrained, curated inventory — one ActionAd per NeoMail, brand-approved, relevant, measured — rather than an open exchange. That preserves quality while the economics prove themselves.

ActionAd viability is a real test. But it is a scaling and liquidity problem, not a conceptual contradiction.

Question 3: Will brands really cooperate inside NeoNet?

This is the hardest strategic question after habit formation.

The cooperative logic is clear on paper: brands exchange access to live first-party attention surfaces and reduce dependence on the auction economy. But what happens under commercial pressure? What happens when one brand feels it is exporting value — helping another grow, or building a future competitor’s audience?

That risk is real.

The answer is that NeoNet only works if brands are exchanging genuinely different pools of attention. A fashion brand, a financial-services brand, a travel platform, a food brand — these relationships are not mutually exclusive in a customer’s inbox. They occupy different attention slots and can therefore cooperate without simple zero-sum logic. The customer’s engagement with one does not reduce their capacity to engage with another.

The second answer is that the network must create symmetric value over time. Every brand must be both publisher and advertiser. Every participant must be able to recover or acquire through the network, not just monetise passively or spend aggressively. Asymmetric value extraction is what breaks cooperative networks.

The third answer is that the network must remain governed, not open. Partner curation, category distance, brand safety, consent handling, transfer logging, and commercial rules are not optional detail. They are the thing that stops NeoNet from collapsing into list-trading by another name. Governance is not a compliance layer on top of the product. It is the structural foundation of the commercial model.

The cooperative model can break under pressure. But it breaks only if governance is weak or matching logic is lazy. Those are design problems, not fatal flaws in the idea itself.

Question 4: Does monetisation degrade the inbox?

There is a reason many people instinctively recoil at the phrase “ads in email.” They imagine clutter. Low-quality sponsored units. An inbox becoming another feed.

This objection is not only understandable. It is necessary.

Because if the monetisation layer degrades trust, the whole model eats itself. The attention surface exists only as long as the customer finds the NeoMail worth opening. If monetisation overwhelms that experience, the surface dies and the economics disappear with it.

The architecture answer is restraint by design. One ActionAd per NeoMail. No open auction. No generic low-quality fill. No situation where the monetisation unit becomes the true payload of the message. The BrandBlock and Magnet must remain the primary reasons to open. The ActionAd must feel like a secondary, cleanly integrated action opportunity — not the reason the email exists.

Monetisation must remain subordinate to the relationship.

This is not a philosophical preference. It is an economic requirement. Degrade the relationship and the inventory disappears. The incentive structure enforces the restraint — which is more reliable than relying on editorial discipline alone.

Question 5: Does this cannibalise the existing business before the new one is proven?

This is the sharp internal question and the most uncomfortable one.

If NeoMails reduce promotional volume, if smarter sending lowers old-model throughput, if ActionAd revenue and transfer fees are not yet large enough to replace existing per-send revenue, then is the Inbox Media Network a way to disrupt oneself too early?

Yes, the tension is real. But the old model is already under pressure. The incrementality question is arriving in finance reviews. The attributed revenue numbers are being interrogated. The reacquisition spend hiding inside acquisition budgets is becoming visible. If a significant portion of the existing volume is low-incrementality volume, defending it indefinitely is not a durable strategy. It is borrowed time.

So the real question is not whether there is a cannibalisation risk. It is whether the old revenue stream is stable enough to defend without building the replacement.

It is not. And that is why the transition matters strategically — not merely as a new monetisation layer, but as a new answer to a market that is already beginning to distrust the old one. The sequencing matters: NeoMails launches on the dormant base, where there are no existing campaign sends to cannibalise. It proves itself there before touching the active base. The new revenue stream is validated before the old one is disrupted.

Question 6: Is this just a better theory than reality?

That may be the fairest question of all.

The series describes a coherent model. NeoMails create relationship attention. ActionAds monetise it. NeoNet scales it. The database becomes a media asset. Five wicked problems become more tractable. It is entirely reasonable to ask: what if the theory is tighter than the market?

The answer is that all new categories begin this way. The burden is not to prove the whole category instantly. It is to prove the key mechanism in bounded experiments and let the category emerge from repeated local validation.

That is why the pilot matters. That is why the fortnight metrics matter. That is why the early nodes matter more than the grand claim.

The Inbox Media Network does not need immediate total proof. It needs enough proof that the surface can come alive — that the habit forms, that the economics clear, that the network creates value for the brands that join it first.

If that happens, the rest is execution, economics, and network-building.

If it does not, the idea deserves to fail.

The final test

So where does this leave us?

Not with certainty. But with a sharper question.

The Inbox Media Network does not need every assumption in this series to be right. It needs the core behavioural one to be right: that relationship attention can be earned often enough, and maintained cheaply enough, to become a repeatable habit at scale.

If that is true, then the inbox becomes a live first-party surface. ActionAds become a real media layer. NeoNet becomes a credible distribution rail. And the database starts behaving like an asset rather than a liability.

If it is not true, then the model does not work, however elegant the theory.

Not with “believe me.” Not with “the future is obvious.” But with the real crux, stated plainly.

If the habit forms, the rest compounds. If it does not, nothing else matters.

Thinks 1964

WSJ reviews “The Revolutionary Center”: “What to make of his plea that liberalism needs a “great rebalancing”? Mr. [Adrian] Wooldridge spells it out: Dial back the elitism; decentralize democracy; rid liberalism of its recent taste for extremism; make left-liberals value excellence again; make neoliberals get a conscience; and, most intriguingly, make liberalism more pessimistic, less “drunk on hope.” “The most pressing liberal task,” Mr. Wooldridge writes, “is not to create a utopia. It is to prevent terrible things from happening.” Prudence is in short supply, and it is this very scarce resource that requires us “to block the roads to hell before building the stairways to heaven.” Liberals of the world unite—but curb your ambition.”

FT: “Implicit in this work is the assumption that, one day soon, the world’s robot population will explode and that we are not prepared. If, as many are predicting, that number grows from millions into billions, where will we find the resources to build them? Who will take care of them? Where will they go when they die? The creative machinists want to build robots that answer these questions themselves. Robots that “eat” and “heal” and “reproduce”, and what is reproduction but the ultimate form of self-repair? One day, Wyder told me, we’ll purchase not a robot but a bagful of robot, filled with building blocks. The blocks will assemble themselves to take whatever shape and perform whatever task.”

Ben Thompson: “My bet is that owning demand will ultimately trump owning supply, suggesting that the underlying principles of Aggregation Theory lives on. To put it another way, I think that OpenAI will need to win with better products, not just more compute; then again, if more compute is the key to better products, then does supply matter most? Regardless, they’ll certainly be focused on delivering both to the enterprise customers who are driving Anthropic’s astonishing growth. The real cost may be the consumer market they currently dominate, given that Meta has nothing to lose and everything to gain.”

SaaStr: “If you’re a B2B vendor and you can’t ship an AI feature that is genuinely best-in-class … don’t ship it. Because your best customers, the ones who would actually pay for it, are going to try it once, see the 0% sentiment score and the empty recommendations tab, and decide your platform “doesn’t really do AI.” And then they’ll buy the AI point solution.  This could potentially all change down the road.  But not today.  Today, you lose with a 60% AI Solution.”

Inbox Media Network: How the Next Ad Category Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight (Part 7)

Story

Maya did not think she had a media business.

She ran marketing for a large consumer brand with the usual moving parts: acquisition on Google and Meta, CRM on email and WhatsApp, a loyalty programme, a performance team, an analytics team, a finance review every month, and a board that kept returning to the same question in different language: if the database is so large, why does growth still cost so much?

The numbers looked healthy enough in isolation. Email-attributed revenue was respectable. Open rates were acceptable. Campaigns performed. Paid acquisition was expensive, but then everyone’s was. Nothing on the dashboard screamed crisis.

And yet, every quarter, Maya felt the same unease. The active email base was not compounding. The same customers seemed to keep buying, often with the help of a discount. The dormant base kept growing. The reacquisition budget kept rising. The CRM team defended the channel. The finance team trusted it less each cycle.

It was Arjun, the youngest person in the room, who broke the pattern.

He had joined the analytics team nine months earlier and was still new enough to ask the uncomfortable questions. One afternoon he walked into Maya’s office with a spreadsheet and a tone that suggested he had found something he could not quite believe.

“I think we are looking at the database the wrong way,” he said.

Maya half-smiled. “That is usually how these conversations begin.”

Arjun sat down and opened his laptop. He did not begin with email performance. He began with the dormant base.

“We have millions of email addresses,” he said. “We actively reach about a fifth of them. The rest we treat as dead weight, or we suppress them because they hurt engagement. Then, six months later, performance campaigns bring some of them back and we call them acquisitions.”

Maya nodded. She had heard versions of this before.

Then he showed her a different slide.

It was not a conversion chart. It was a value chart.

“Here is the problem,” he said. “We only monetise the database when someone buys. We don’t monetise the relationship before the transaction, and we don’t monetise the attention between transactions. We have a communication asset that we only use at the moment of sale.”

Maya leaned forward.

Arjun continued. “Retailers built media businesses because they realised shopper attention had value even before the customer checked out. We have something similar. Not shopper attention. Relationship attention. But we have never productised it.”

That was the first moment the idea clicked for her. Not fully, but enough.

A week later, they approved a pilot.

Not a company-wide transformation. Just one cohort. Customers who had bought once or twice, gone quiet, and not responded to conventional promotional emails in months. The CRM team would normally either suppress them or send another round of offers. Instead, this group would receive NeoMails for a fortnight to see if they could be reactivated.

The format looked strange at first to people inside the company. The email did not lead with a discount. It did not begin with “last chance” or “we miss you” or an urgent offer with a ticking clock. It opened with a BrandBlock — a small, low-pressure expression of the brand’s world. Then came the Magnet: a quick choice, a prediction, a quiz, something completable in under a minute. Mu accumulated. One ActionAd sat below. Nothing felt heavy. Nothing looked like the usual rescue campaign.

What the dormant customer received

One of those addresses belonged to someone who had bought from the brand fourteen months earlier. Rated it well. Then gone quiet — not because she had stopped liking the brand, but because nothing pulled her back. The promotional emails arrived and she ignored them. She was not angry. She was simply elsewhere.

On a Tuesday morning, something different arrived.

The subject line read: Style question — 60 seconds. Your take matters.

She opened it. Not because of an offer — there was no offer. Because the subject line sounded like a question rather than a request.

Inside, a brief BrandBlock: two sentences about how the design team was deciding between directions for the upcoming season. Then the Magnet: two images, two directions. Which one resonated?

She tapped the left option. Immediately: You’re with 43% of respondents. The creative team will see this. And below: a small Mu balance, rising by ten.

She closed the email. The whole interaction took thirty-eight seconds.

She did not think about it again. But something small had happened. The brand was no longer a promotional sender. It had become, in a minor key, something that asked her opinion and remembered her answer.

By the end of the fortnight, she had opened five NeoMails. Not every one. But something had shifted. Her Mu balance was building. The Magnets had varied — a trivia question, a prediction card, a quick poll on how she preferred to discover new styles. Each one took under a minute. Each one left a signal in the brand’s first-party data that no paid media campaign could have generated.

One NeoMail contained an ActionAd: a one-tap subscription to a complementary accessories brand. She tapped. Her email was pre-filled. One tap, and she had joined a second NeoMail stream without thinking of it as subscribing to an email list.

She did not know that tap had generated revenue for the fashion brand. She did not need to know. The transaction was invisible. The value was mutual.

What Maya saw at the end of the fortnight

The first cohort report changed the shape of the conversation.

Real Reach for the cohort had risen materially. A meaningful share of dormant addresses had become active again. The cost of sending had largely been offset by ActionAd revenue. And the paid reacquisition spend for the cohort had begun to fall — because fewer of those customers needed to be won back through the usual channels. They were already back.

It was not yet a revolution. But it was enough to force a different question.

What if the database was not just a list to message or suppress? What if it was a surface to activate?

That was when NeoNet entered the conversation.

A partner brand in a complementary category had a highly active NeoMail audience. Arjun proposed a simple test: place a One-Tap Subscribe ActionAd for Maya’s brand inside the partner’s NeoMail. No landing page. No cold audience targeting. No auction. Just an invitation inside a live inbox interaction.

The results were not enormous. They did not need to be. They were clean.

New subscribers came in through a surface Maya had not had access to before. A few previously dormant customers, still warm elsewhere in the network, re-entered the brand’s orbit without a platform charging rent on the way back.

That was the second moment it clicked.

NeoMails were not just a new email format. NeoNet was not just a clever ad placement layer. Together, they were making the database behave differently.

What had looked like dead CRM weight now looked like relationship attention. What had looked like email cost now looked like inventory. What had looked like reacquisition inevitability now looked, at least partly, like a design failure.

At the next review meeting, Maya did not show the pilot as an email experiment.

She showed it as the first working node of an Inbox Media Network.

Her CFO asked the obvious question: “Are you telling me we have been sitting on a media asset without treating it like one?”

Maya paused. Then answered more bluntly than usual.

“Yes,” she said. “But only because we didn’t yet have the product to bring it to life.”

The database had not changed. The channel had not changed. The customers had not changed.

What had changed was the architecture built on top of them.

And once Maya saw that, she could not unsee it.

Thinks 1963

WSJ on retirement: ““For people who’ve had careers that have given them both an identity and status—and consumed most of their energy and attention—stopping work can feel like stopping everything,” says Ruth Finkelstein, executive director of the Brookdale Center for Healthy Aging at Hunter College in New York. “It takes a recovery process to be able to enter a chapter that’s defined differently.” Such a process often begins with a plan; after all, if career and ambition are central to your existence, replacing them with nothing isn’t going to work.”

SaaStr on Forward Deployed Engineers: “FDEs sit at the intersection of product, engineering, and customer success. They go on-site or deep into a customer environment, understand the actual workflows, and configure the product to work inside those workflows. They’re not building from scratch. They’re not doing basic support. They’re doing the hard middle work of making software actually land in the real world. This role has existed for a long time. Palantir essentially built their entire go-to-market around it. You couldn’t buy Palantir’s product and self-serve your way to value. You needed their people inside your organization, configuring and training the system for your specific context. That model worked. It was expensive and it didn’t scale the way SaaS was supposed to scale. But it worked, because complex software in complex environments requires human judgment to deploy well. Now almost every serious AI product has the same requirement. And almost no one has enough of the people who can do it.”

Jensen Huang: “In the end, something has to transform electrons to tokens. The transformation of electrons to tokens and making those tokens more valuable over time is hard to completely commoditize. The transformation from electrons to tokens is such an incredible journey. Making that token is like making one molecule more valuable than another molecule, making one token more valuable than another. The amount of artistry, engineering, science, and invention that goes into making that token valuable, obviously we’re watching it happen in real time. The transformation, the manufacturing, all of the science that goes in there is far from deeply understood and the journey is far from over. I doubt that it will happen.”

NYTimes: “The strange way that A.I. looks like a genius at one moment and dense in another is what researchers, engineers and economists call “jagged intelligence.” They use this term to explain why A.I is racing ahead in some areas — like math and computer programming — while still struggling to make headway in others. The term, which is widely used by the people building A.I. and analyzing its effects, could help reframe the debate over whether these systems are becoming as smart as, or even smarter than, humans. Instead, researchers argue, A.I. is something completely different: far better than humans at some tasks and far worse at others.”

Inbox Media Network: How the Next Ad Category Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight (Part 6)

NeoMails and NeoNet are the Building Blocks – 2

The cooperative network: NeoNet

NeoNet is what takes a single brand’s NeoMail surface and turns it into a media and growth system.

Most ad networks are adversarial by design. Brands bid against each other for the same audience. A platform extracts margin from every impression. The brand does not own the relationship. NeoNet works differently. It is cooperative. One brand’s active NeoMail audience becomes another brand’s potential recovery or acquisition surface — first-party for first-party, no auction, no platform intermediary taking rent.

This matters because attention is not evenly distributed. A customer may be cold for Brand A and still highly active in Brand B’s NeoMail stream. In the old model, Brand A had to go to a paid platform to reacquire that person at auction price. In the new model, Brand A can reach them through Brand B’s active first-party inbox surface at cooperative cost.

That creates two directions of value.

Recovery points backward. A drifting or dormant customer can be recovered through another brand’s active NeoMail audience — without either brand entering a paid media auction.

Acquisition points forward. A genuinely new customer discovers Brand A inside Brand B’s NeoMail and subscribes in a single tap. The relationship begins inside the network, funded by the network, without a platform intermediary.

The quality filter is structural. An identity enters NeoNet only after demonstrating live engagement — opening at least one NeoMail. Static list volume does not qualify. The surface is not historical. It is current. The audience receiving a NeoNet ActionAd is not a stored collection of addresses. It is a cohort of people actively opening emails, completing Magnets, and building Mu balances — a categorically different advertising audience from anything a conventional ad network delivers.

The comparison that clarifies the category

Retail Media Networks monetise shopper attention — at the moment of purchase intent, on the platform’s own surface, through sponsored listings and display. The asset is purchase behaviour. Access requires being a marketplace with significant transaction volume.

Commerce Media Networks extend the same principle off-site — the same first-party shopper identity used to reach the customer across other publishers and contexts. Broader access, same intent-adjacent targeting logic.

The Inbox Media Network monetises relationship attention — between transactions, across cooperating brands, through action-based units that complete inside the inbox. The asset is the brand-customer relationship and the authenticated identity that underpins it. Access requires what every brand already has: an email database and a customer relationship.

That last point is the one worth sitting with. Retail Media required a marketplace. Commerce Media required significant transaction volume in a category. The Inbox Media Network requires what every brand with a CRM already owns. The barrier to entry is lower. The addressable market is larger. And the inventory — the relationship attention sitting idle in every dormant database globally — has never been monetised before.

The proof is a pilot away

The Inbox Media Network is not a vision waiting for validation. It is a testable proposition with a short feedback loop.

A brand takes a cohort of dormant email addresses, sends NeoMails, and measures six numbers:

  • Real Reach — is the engaged base growing?
  • Click Retention Rate — is the habit forming?
  • Reactivation rate — are dormant customers returning?
  • REACQ% — is paid reacquisition spend falling on this cohort?
  • One-Tap subscribe rate — does cooperative acquisition convert?
  • ActionAd completion rate — is the commerce media layer generating revenue?

If Real Reach rises and REACQ% falls, the mechanism is working. The attention surface is being built. The Inbox Media Network has its first node.

And every brand that joins makes the network more valuable for every other brand. More NeoMail audiences mean more recovery probability, more acquisition surface, more ActionAd inventory. The network effect is structural, not incidental.

The right moment

Retail Media Networks took twenty years to reach $100 billion. Commerce Media is growing faster because the infrastructure logic was already understood. The Inbox Media Network starts with infrastructure that is more developed than either — decades of email infrastructure globally, hundreds of millions of permissioned identities already in brand databases, AMP for Email making the surface interactive, and regulatory forces pushing every advertiser toward first-party, authenticated, owned-channel solutions.

Brands still have no satisfying answer to the core problems: reacquisition waste, CAC dependence on platforms, silent customer drift, episodic traffic that collapses between campaigns, and attention sitting idle in every dormant database. The Inbox Media Network is a structural answer to all of them — not a better version of the existing model, but a different one.

It says the database is not just a communication asset.

It is a media asset.

Not because it contains contacts. But because, with the right product architecture, it can contain live, repeated, monetisable attention.

The next $100 billion media category may not be built on a new platform at all.

It may already be sitting inside your CRM, waiting for the right product to bring it to life.