Thinks 1989

FT: “How did stalemate become the pattern of our century? And how can it not have something to do with the internet? Unequal performance often rests on unequal knowledge. That is much harder to achieve now. If a tactic works on the battlefield, the other side can share it among their comrades at digital speed. If a political movement whips up its members online, the opposing movement learns to do the same. (Pre-internet, the two sides might not have even encountered the other.) An industrial secret is easier to pinch if a photo of it can be emailed home in seconds. This is doubly true if, as is often the case now, the secret is itself just a piece of code, not an engine or warhead. In our world, an initial advantage does not last for long. ”

Bloomberg: “Global investors, who not long pushed India close to rivaling China in emerging-market portfolios, are now chasing themes the country’s market largely lacks: chip manufacturing, computing infrastructure and AI models. While India has talent, demand and digital scale, few of its corporate champions are directly linked to that buildout. That increasingly leaves the market tied to the domestic consumption story.” [via NDTV Profit]

Thinking Machines Lab: “An interaction model is in constant two-way exchange with the user—perceiving and responding at the same time. Some domains take such interactivity as a given—the physical world demands that robotics and autonomous vehicles operate in real time. Audio full-duplex models are another example where interaction is bidirectional and continuous. Applying the same principle, we set out to build an interaction model native to this regime—one that perceives and responds in the same continuous loop, across audio, video, and text. The result is a system architected around two ideas: a time-aware interaction model that maintains real-time presence, and an asynchronous background model that handles sustained reasoning, tool use, and longer-horizon work.”

Carl Benedikt Frey: “We have been told that A.I. will take people’s jobs. What no one mentions is that many of those jobs are landing on us. The A.I. revolution involves a huge transfer of labor — not from worker to machine but from worker to consumer. The ability to do everything ourselves may be satisfying, but it can gradually overload us with busywork without our noticing. Tasks that we used to delegate will still be done. They will simply move out of the work force and into the household as new forms of invisible, unpaid labor. The movement toward self-service is one of the most powerful and least appreciated forces in the history of work.”

The Alpha Operating System: D2C Customer Economics Framework

An operating system for D2C customer economics — a name for the framework the D2C Tax-onomy essay built

1

A Framework needs a Name

The D2C Tax-onomy essay  built a complete architecture. It diagnosed the hidden tax in every transaction. It introduced the Revenue Tax Ladder. It classified every sale into seven mutually exclusive buckets. It added Offer Tax as a hidden cost layer. It mapped customers through the Transactions-Attention Table. It identified the missing rung between CRM and Adtech. It converted the diagnosis into seven Alpha Plays and a new dashboard.

But the architecture still needs one thing: a name. A framework without a name is a thesis. A framework with a name is a system. The two are not the same operational object. Without a name, a framework does not travel. It gets remembered as a long essay, a clever chart, or “that transaction-tax idea.” It does not become a shared operating language across the constituencies that have to coordinate to make it work.

Consider what already-named systems look like. RFM is sixty years old and still cited weekly because it has three letters that travel. The BCG Matrix is half a century old and still appears in board decks because it has a noun. Net Promoter Score does no analytical work that other satisfaction measures don’t do — it dominates because Net Promoter Score is a phrase that survives meetings and memos and quarterly reviews. AIDA, the 7Ps, MQL-to-SQL, OKRs, SaaS Magic Number — each acquired authority not through superior analytical depth but through the gift of a name compact enough to move.

The D2C Tax-onomy framework has the substance. It does not yet have the noun. Until it has one, it will be cited rather than adopted and implemented as a system with a stable architecture and a measurable outcome. Naming is the bridge from idea to infrastructure.

This essay names it.

Alpha Operating System

The framework is the Alpha Operating System. AOS.

The word Alpha names the outcome. The framework is not trying to improve activity for its own sake. It is trying to create uplift above the baseline — the incremental contribution profit that comes from paying less tax per transaction, moving customers faster to the next transaction, and preventing the same customer from being bought twice. Alpha is the unit of value the system produces.

The phrase Operating System names the scope. AOS is not a dashboard, a matrix, a campaign method, or a product pitch. It is the managerial system that connects diagnostics, intervention, measurement and governance into one coherent operating rhythm. It tells a CMO how to read revenue, how to read customers, where to intervene, and how to prove whether the intervention created Alpha.

In one sentence: the Alpha Operating System is a customer-economics framework that helps D2C brands reduce Revenue Tax, shorten Time-to-Next-Transaction, and generate measurable Alpha above Beta.

The one-line promise stays simple:

AOS — Buy New efficiently.  Own Repeat completely.  Recover before paying twice.

2

The Nomenclature

The naming hierarchy matters because each term should do exactly one job. AOS is the umbrella. The Revenue Tax Ladder and the TAT are diagnostic instruments. NeoMarketing is the recovery engine that occupies the missing rung. The Seven Alpha Plays are the operational moves. The AOS Dashboard is the governance layer. Beneath those top-level components, the four NeoMarketing sub-engines — Atrium, Meridian, NeoNet, ActionAds — do specific work within the recovery layer. Keeping each name doing one job preserves the architecture’s clarity.

LEVEL NAME ROLE
Umbrella framework Alpha Operating System (AOS) The full customer economics system
Economic diagnostic Revenue Tax Ladder Classifies routes by the cost to create transactions
Transaction classifier Seven Transaction Buckets Places every sale in exactly one bucket
Hidden cost layer Offer Tax Adds discount, coupon, free shipping and incentive cost
Customer-state diagnostic TAT — Transactions-Attention Table Maps each customer by transaction depth and attention recency
Segment language BRTN Best, Rest, Test, Next — canonical commercial segmentation
Recovery engine NeoMarketing The missing rung between CRM and Adtech (10–15%)
   Sub-engine Atrium Restores attention on weakening and lost cells
   Sub-engine Meridian Converts restored attention into transactions; maximises LTV
   Sub-engine NeoNet Cooperative recovery and acquisition across brand boundaries
   Sub-engine ActionAds Monetises non-transacting attention; funds the recovery layer
Operational moves The Seven Alpha Plays Interventions that move customers and transactions
Governance layer AOS Dashboard Ten metrics measuring Tax, Time, and Alpha above Beta

Why not the alternatives

Three names presented themselves as candidates. Rejecting each one sharpens AOS.

Not NeoMarketing — too narrow. NeoMarketing names a specific engine inside the framework: the recovery layer between CRM and Adtech. Naming the whole framework after one of its parts collapses the architecture. The Tax Ladder is not NeoMarketing. The TAT is not NeoMarketing. The Alpha-above-Beta accounting is not NeoMarketing. If the umbrella is called NeoMarketing, the diagnostic work gets mistaken for a product pitch, and that weakens the framework’s trust with finance audiences. AOS can include NeoMarketing without being reduced to it. AOS preserves hierarchy.

Not Alpha Ladder — metaphor collision. The phrase has rhetorical power — every brand is on the Alpha Ladder; the question is whether customers are climbing or falling — but the framework already contains a ladder, and that one is the Revenue Tax Ladder. Calling the umbrella also a ladder forces the reader to disambiguate every time the word appears. Which ladder do you mean? That ambiguity costs more than the rhetorical gain. There is a deeper structural problem: a ladder is a single-axis metaphor, up or down. The framework is explicitly two-dimensional. Transactions move down the Tax Ladder along one axis; customers move leftward and downward through the TAT along a different two-axis pattern. The umbrella metaphor must accommodate both movements. Ladder does not. AOS preserves dimensionality.

Not Alpha Marketing OS — caps the ceiling. Adding Marketing to the name solves a real anchoring problem — the reader knows immediately what discipline the framework belongs to. But the cost is a cap on the framework’s intellectual range. The framework is genuinely larger than marketing as a department. The Tax Ladder is customer economics. The TAT is customer-state engineering. The Alpha-above-Beta measurement is finance language. Marketing operates the framework, but the framework is not about marketing in the way that media-mix modelling is about marketing. It is about the economics of the customer base. CFOs and CEOs should be able to own the language too. The word Marketing can sit in the subtitle and the sales copy. It does not need to sit inside the name. AOS preserves the ceiling.

Three rejections, three features preserved: hierarchy, dimensionality, ceiling. AOS is what remains when all three constraints are satisfied.

3

What Changes when the System has a Name

Naming is not vanity. It is a coordination mechanism that turns a long-form thesis into something operationally tractable across multiple constituencies. Four conversations change when AOS becomes a noun.

The CMO conversation. AOS turns scattered concerns into one operating language. Rising CAC, discount dependency, weak repeat performance, marketplace leakage, declining CRM reach, lapsed Best customers, retargeting waste — these stop being seven separate symptoms requiring seven separate diagnoses and become measurable movements inside one system. The CMO can now describe quarterly performance in one frame: Tax reduced, Time compressed, Weakening Pool stabilised, Alpha generated. One operating language replaces seven disconnected dashboards.

The CFO conversation. A CFO reading a slide that says “We are implementing the Alpha Operating System” is not in the same conversation as one reading “We are trying a new marketing approach.” The first sentence presupposes a system being deployed, with measurable outputs, against a baseline. The second sentence triggers the “yet another marketing initiative” filter that CFOs apply to protect their attention. The question moves from whether marketing generated revenue to what tax was paid to generate it and whether the uplift exceeded the Beta baseline. That makes the framework board-ready and budget-defensible in a way unnamed marketing thinking is not.

The agency and partner conversation. Today’s standard contracts pay agencies against impressions, clicks, ROAS, or campaign-level revenue — proxies for outcome rather than outcome itself. Under AOS, the contract can be written against Alpha Generated, audited through the AOS Dashboard, with the agency receiving a Carry on Alpha above Beta. Work gets tied to specific measurable movements: reducing Paid Repeat Leakage, shifting repeat transactions from Adtech to CRM, recovering R1 cohorts before paid media, reducing Offer Tax, accelerating N to T and T to B. The pricing model already exists in finance — Beta + Alpha + Carry is exact hedge-fund economics. Without the system named, the contract has no anchor; with the system named, the contract has a referent.

The vendor conversation. A martech vendor stops selling features (email volume, push reach, search relevance) and starts selling an operating system. The features become the components that operate AOS — but the customer is no longer purchasing email-sending capacity, they are purchasing the system that produces Alpha through whichever components are needed. That is a different market category, addressed to a different buyer (CMO and CFO jointly, not just the head of email), at a different price point (outcome-based, not seat-based). The name is what makes that repositioning sayable.

In each of these four conversations, the framework existed beforehand. The conversations changed only because the framework acquired a noun the four constituencies could refer to in common. That is what naming does. It is the lowest-cost, highest-leverage coordination move available to any framework once it has the substance to justify the noun.

The honest caveat

A name is necessary, but it is not sufficient. AOS will matter only if it can be run. It must classify real transactions, map real customers, trigger real interventions, and produce measurable Alpha above a pre-agreed Beta baseline. Otherwise it becomes another elegant framework that lives in a deck.

The next step after naming is proof. A CMO should be able to run an AOS audit in thirty days. Classify the last quarter’s transactions into the Seven Buckets. Calculate Effective Transaction Tax per bucket. Identify Paid Repeat Leakage. Build the first TAT distribution. Size the B–, T– and R1 pools. Estimate the Alpha opportunity. Then run a ninety-day pilot on one or two Alpha Plays — typically Play 6 (Shift Repeat Adtech to Owned, deployable within existing CRM stack) and Play 4 (Protect Best from Becoming Rest, the highest-ROI move on the grid). Measure against pre-agreed Beta. Book Alpha only against what beats the baseline.

This is the correct sequence. The D2C Tax-onomy essay built the framework. This essay gives it a name. The workbook that follows makes it operational. The name is not the end of the work. It is the point at which the work can finally travel.

The framework had to be built before it could be named. Now that it has a name, the next work is building proof.

Alpha Operating System.  Buy New efficiently. Own Repeat completely. Recover before paying twice.

Thinks 1988

WSJ reviews “Inside the Box”: ““In the abstract,” Mr. [David] Epstein writes, “we often overvalue limitless freedom and choice.” One survey he cites found that most people believe that “total freedom” spurs creativity. But from art to entrepreneurship, he argues, constraints can unleash rather than stifle great work: “In seeking more freedom we frequently hamper our best efforts, because what we really need are helpful boundaries.”” More: “There’s a better way to make decisions. To understand it, you should know about Herbert Simon, a pioneer of artificial intelligence and cognitive psychology, as well as a Nobel laureate in economics. Mr. Simon demonstrated that for most decisions, humans can’t really evaluate the options available — there are too many, our information about them is incomplete and our minds aren’t built to weigh them all — and so we rely on mental shortcuts. He coined the term “satisficing” — a portmanteau of satisfy and suffice — to describe how we consider a limited set of options, then choose one that is good enough and move on to live our lives. When Mr. Simon faced a decision, he considered a few alternatives, sometimes asked for advice, chose and moved on. He didn’t agonize, and he didn’t second-guess. “The best is enemy of the good” was the mantra he lived by.”

FT: “We are living in the age of asymmetry. Power flows less from size or wealth than from the ability to convert imbalance into leverage.”

WSJ: “The capitalist makeover has allowed Sweden to do what few industrialized countries have managed in recent years: shrink the size of the state. That has enabled the government to sharply lower taxes and, economists say, sparked a surge in entrepreneurship and economic growth. Its total public social spending bill—which includes healthcare, education and all welfare payments—has fallen to 24% of gross domestic product, similar to the U.S. and well below the over 30% for nations like France and Italy.”

Menzie Chinn’s and Douglas Irwin: “Imports are the benefit of trade, and exports are its cost. Imports directly increase consumers’ utility by making higher utility combinations of goods available than under autarky. Exports, however, do not directly benefit anyone inside the country; they are goods that are produced but given up to other countries. However, the revenue earned from the exports is what pays for the imports that enable consumption to be higher. In other words, the gains from trade arise from imports, and exports are the cost of acquiring imports.” [via CafeHayek]

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 10)

The New D2C Dashboard

Every framework eventually has to land on a dashboard. The Revenue Tax Ladder, the TAT, the missing rung, the seven plays — none of these matter if the Monday morning review still reports total revenue, blended ROAS, and aggregate LTV. A brand that cannot read its revenue and its customers at the level the framework demands cannot run the framework. It can only describe it.

Most D2C dashboards are built for activity and attribution. They show revenue, orders, CAC, ROAS, conversion rate, repeat rate, AOV, channel contribution, campaign performance, and cohort retention. These metrics are useful — they answer the question what happened? They do not answer the Alpha question: what tax did we pay, how long did the customer take, and what state did the customer move to?

Ten metrics — five about revenue and tax, five about customers and time — translate every framework in Parts 2 through 6 into something the brand can measure quarterly, monthly, weekly.

The Tax half of the dashboard

  1. Revenue by seven buckets. Every transaction assigned to one of the seven buckets — Intermediated, New Direct Organic, New Direct CRM, New Direct Adtech, Repeat Direct Organic, Repeat Direct CRM, Repeat Direct Adtech. This is the base table. Without it, the brand cannot distinguish good revenue from expensive revenue. Total revenue hides composition. Bucket revenue reveals quality. The first question in every review should be: how much revenue came from each bucket, and how is the mix shifting quarter over quarter?
  2. Effective Transaction Tax. Route Tax plus Offer Tax, calculated per transaction, averaged across the bucket. A Repeat Direct CRM bucket showing a 5–10% Route Tax but a 25–30% Effective Tax is silently running adtech economics through its own email list. The CFO and the CMO must see the same number. Either show both, or stop pretending owned channels are cheap.
  3. Paid Repeat Leakage. The single most diagnostic metric in the dashboard.

Paid Repeat Leakage = Repeat Direct Adtech Revenue ÷ Total Direct Repeat Revenue

A low number means the brand owns its repeat engine. A high number means the brand is paying again for customers it already had. A Paid Repeat Leakage above 30% in any quarter is a structural relationship failure, not a campaign performance success. Every CMO should know this number. The standard ad-platform dashboard will not report it; the brand has to build it.

  1. Owned Repeat Ratio. The mirror of Paid Repeat Leakage.

Owned Repeat Ratio = (Repeat Direct Organic + Repeat Direct CRM) ÷ Total Direct Repeat Revenue

This is the cleanest single measure of whether the brand’s CRM is actually doing the job it claims to do. A strong D2C brand should see this ratio rise over time. If it falls, the brand is becoming more dependent on rented attention even for existing customers.

  1. Identity Capture (% of all transactions converted to Direct ID, by surface). What percentage of total revenue is happening on surfaces the brand does not control? Intermediated revenue may be necessary and profitable, but if its share rises without a parallel identity-capture strategy, the brand is building sales without building relationships. Pair this metric with Identity Capture Rate — for every platform sale, what percentage of customers were converted into direct identity within 30 days through QR codes, warranty registration, NeoMail subscription, replenishment club, or Mu offers? The goal is not to fight the platform. The goal is to prevent every platform customer from remaining permanently platform-owned.

The Time half of the dashboard

  1. TAT distribution. What percentage of the customer database currently sits in each of the nine TAT cells? The healthy distribution has weight in N, T, and B (the Strong column), modest counts in N–, T–, B– (the Weakening column, accepted as inevitable but managed), and a controlled R1 + R2 pool (the Lost column, sized to be recoverable on the NeoMarketing rung). A distribution heavy on the right two columns is an attention crisis the transactions dashboard will report six months later. A brand can have a good quarter and still be creating next quarter’s AdWaste.
  2. Weakening Pool — B– plus T– counts. The two cells where intervention costs are lowest and ignored intervention costs are highest.

Weakening Pool = B– customers + T– customers

These are customers with purchase proof and weakening attention — not yet lost, not yet expensive to recover, but on the slope. If the weakening pool grows, the CRM team must change strategy from Sell to Relate. This is the metric that should appear on the CMO’s dashboard before any acquisition number.

  1. R1 Recoverable Value and Recovery Conversion Rate. Not all Rest is equal. R1 is the high-priority recovery pool: former Best customers who have lost attention. The dashboard should show R1 count, R1 historical revenue, expected future LTV if recovered, and the cost of recovery through owned, NeoMarketing, and adtech routes. This turns recovery from a campaign idea into a capital-allocation decision.

Paired with the value metric is the conversion metric:

Recovery Conversion Rate = (B– → B conversions via Meridian) ÷ (R1 → B– attention recoveries via Atrium)

This is the cleanest possible split between the two engines’ contributions. A high Atrium recovery rate with a low Meridian conversion rate says the brand is good at restoring attention but bad at monetising it — a Meridian problem. A low Atrium recovery rate with a high downstream conversion says the brand is good at converting attention when it has it, but not good at restoring it — an Atrium problem. Without separating the two, the dashboard cannot tell which engine to fix.

  1. Time-to-Next-Transaction. The clean operational expression of the Time lever from Part 1, measured per state transition rather than as a single median:

N → T: time from identity to first transaction T → B: time from first or second purchase to Best B → B–: time from strong attention to weakening B– → R1: time from weakening to lost R1 → B or T: time from recovery to active state

A brand should not only ask whether customers repeat. It should ask how quickly they repeat, through which route, and at which transition the system is slowest.

  1. Alpha Generated. The headline outcome metric. The uplift in (Revenue minus Effective Tax) times Frequency, measured above the brand’s pre-agreed Beta baseline, attributed honestly to the NeoMarketing interventions. Alpha cannot be claimed against zero; it can only be claimed above what the brand would have done anyway. Some customers would have repeated regardless. Some paid campaigns would have worked regardless. Alpha is only the improvement above that expected path. If Alpha is rising, the framework is working. If Alpha is flat while total revenue rises, the brand is growing Beta, not Alpha.

The dashboard as governance

The ten metrics together produce a different kind of weekly review.

The old dashboard asks: revenue is up, ROAS is healthy, campaigns performed. The new dashboard asks: Which revenue was low-tax? Which revenue was bought? Which repeat revenue was reacquired? Which customers are weakening? Which Best customers are about to become Rest? Which platform buyers have been identified? Which discounts are hiding inside CRM? Which customers moved down the TAT? Which customers drifted right? How much Alpha was created above Beta?

That is a different conversation entirely. One in which the CFO and the CMO are looking at the same numbers, the procurement officer and the head of growth are aligned on what each channel is genuinely worth, and the agency partner can be paid against Alpha rather than against impressions. This is the operating system the framework has been building toward.

The Tax-onomy of Transactions in Parts 2 and 3 was the diagnostic. The TAT in Part 4 was the customer map. The missing rung in Part 5 was the engine. The seven Alpha plays in Part 6 were the playbook. The dashboard in this part is the governance.

A D2C brand running this system has answered the question the essay opened with: where does Alpha come from when Beta belongs to everyone?

It comes from paying less tax per transaction, from reducing the time to the next transaction, and from never paying twice for a customer the brand already owned. It comes from running the brand’s marketing not as a channel mix but as a portfolio of customer states, each priced and managed for the specific Alpha it can generate.

The road to Alpha is now visible. It has been visible since Part 1. But it was not walkable until the framework — Ladder, TAT, missing rung, plays, dashboard — was complete.

Buy New efficiently. Own Repeat completely. Recover before paying twice.

Thinks 1987

WSJ: “The shale-drilling boom that began two decades ago not only flooded U.S. markets with oil and gas, it transformed the country into the world’s largest energy exporter. From crude oil and liquefied natural gas, or LNG, to other products such as propane and wood pellets, the flow of fuel from U.S. ports has put a big dent in the national trade deficit and helped to stabilize overseas markets during war and other periods of scarcity.”

NYTimes: “Buddhism, born on the Indian subcontinent in the sixth century B.C., has no holy book, no commandments, no prophets. Yet its teachings spread throughout Asia, mingling with local beliefs and customs along the way — and changing the continent forever.”

FT: “India has had a sharp pullback in private equity dealmaking, with investors deterred by high valuations demanded by business owners and mounting uncertainty over the country’s economic outlook. Private equity deal value in India fell 33 per cent year on year to $19.6bn in 2025, according to data released in a report on Thursday by Bain & Company and the Indian Venture and Alternate Capital Association….Private equity funds are becoming cautious about deploying capital into India as economic disruption mounts and valuations remain stubbornly high.

Andy Kessler: “[Goodwill’s] Mr. Preston sums it up, “The idea of seeing the dignity and potential of every human being, and helping them realize that for a better future, has always been what we do.” So should we all.”

Arun Gupta: “The institutions that once provided people with stable careers are weakening. People feel it, but they can’t fully name the anxious feeling. Over the past few decades, we’ve built our careers for a relatively stable world. But generations will have to build their careers for a rapidly changing one. These crisis moments don’t break systems, but they do reset expectations. Historically, crisis moments produce generations defined not by what went wrong, but by how people respond to it. That’s what we’re calling the “mission generation”—how we respond to this new changing environment where we see technological, geopolitical, and environmental uncertainty, great power competition, and now AI, leading to some level of individual and societal crisis. But with that, we pose the counterintuitive idea that our systems have been built for stability, and that in this era, stability itself may be the new risk…In moments like this, the only thing that will be constant in a changing world will be mission and purpose. In a world that feels unstable, mission becomes your form of stability.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 9)

The Seven Alpha Plays – 4

Play 7 — Monetise Non-Transacting Attention. From N, N–, R2, some L to attention revenue. Primary lever: new revenue stream. NEVER served: adjacent to Never Pay Twice.

Not every identified customer will buy soon. Some may never buy. But if they still pay attention, they still have value. Traditional CRM sees non-transactors as failed conversion opportunities. NeoMarketing sees a second possibility: attention can be monetised, safely and selectively, without destroying trust. This is the role of ActionAds inside NeoMails. A customer who opens, plays, predicts, answers, or interacts is giving the brand something valuable — attention and signal. If that customer is not ready to transact, the brand can still create value through relevant ActionAds, partner offers, samples, surveys, or lead actions. The key is that monetisation comes after attention is earned, not before. The larger point is that D2C brands have been monetising only buyers. NeoMarketing lets them monetise attention, not just transactions.

The seven plays as a system

Each play, taken alone, generates some Alpha. Taken together, they compose into a closed loop. Plays 1 and 2 create the identified database the other plays operate on. Plays 3 and 4 keep customers transacting at low tax. Plays 5 and 6 substitute high-tax routes with low-tax routes for both reacquisition and repeat. Play 7 funds the layer that makes Plays 4, 5, and 6 economically viable.

None of the plays requires giving up Adtech entirely. What they require is using Adtech for the job it is genuinely good at — legitimate New customer acquisition where no cooperative route exists — and stopping the use of Adtech as the default tool for every problem the marketing stack does not yet have a better answer for.

This is the practical meaning of the two levers from Part 1. Less Tax is not an abstract goal — it means fewer transactions in Intermediated and Repeat Direct Adtech, and more in Repeat Direct CRM and Organic. Less Time is not an abstract goal — it means faster N → T → B movement, and fewer customers sliding B → B– → R1.

The CMO’s job is no longer to run more campaigns. The CMO’s job is to move customers and transactions.

What the plays do not yet produce is the dashboard that proves they are working. That is the work of the closing part.

Thinks 1986

WSJ: “In the beginning, chatbots spewed answers in a stream of not-quite-consciousness. Now, unless we ask a very simple question, the AI chatbot performs a “chain of thought”: The AI has a conversation with itself to arrive at a suitable answer. Some bots go further, by asking a different AI model—usually, variants of themselves—to gut-check an answer.”

FT: “Maybe official statistics have little value? That was the radical view of Sir John Cowperthwaite, who was the financial secretary of Hong Kong throughout the 1960s, when it was a rapidly growing, laissez-faire British colony. Cowperthwaite thought the value of official statistics wasn’t merely minimal, but negative: he told the economist Milton Friedman that he didn’t collect economic data, because it would only encourage the Whitehall variety of mandarin to interfere. In context, Cowperthwaite’s position was understandable: few economies were more at risk of clumsy meddling than Hong Kong, a colonial possession pursuing a libertarian path on the opposite side of the world from soft-left imperial rulers. Still, there are at least two weaknesses in his argument. The first is the hope that ignorance might restrain the interventionist impulses of governments. It might simply make those interventionist impulses clumsier. The second is the unexamined premise that only a government might find official statistics useful.”

Bloomberg: “[Andy] Jassy understands the importance of starting experiments that are more visible than abstract AI algorithms, chips in data centers or satellites way up in space. The company is building a 225,000-square-foot facility outside Chicago, a combination superstore and warehouse, where it will blend robotics and AI to sell general merchandise, groceries and prepared food, according to permitting documents and people familiar with the plans. It’s classic Amazon: The company has failed repeatedly at developing new store formats and is way behind rivals like Walmart in the business of selling fresh food. None of that matters. Jassy says the company will simply keep trying new things until something sticks. “We’re doing an ungodly amount of invention right now,” he says. “And I think that will be true for as long as I can foresee in the future. It’s just part of our DNA.””

Ben Thompson: “Cerebras makes something completely different. While a silicon wafer has a diameter of 300mm, the “reticle limit” — the maximum area that a lithography tool can expose on that wafer — is around 26mm x 33mm. This is the effective size limit for chips; going beyond that entails linking two separate chips together over a chip-to-chip interposer, which is exactly what Nvidia has done with the B200. Cerebras, on the other hand, has invented a way to lay down wiring across the so-called “scribe lines” that are the boundary between reticle exposures, making the entire wafer into a single chip with no need for relatively slow chip-to-chip linkages. The net result is a chip with a lot of compute and a lot of SRAM that is blisteringly fast to access. To put it in numbers, the WSE-3 (Cerebras’ latest chip) has 44GB of on-chip SRAM at 21 PB/s of bandwidth; an H100 has 80GB of HBM at 3.35 TB/s. In other words, the WSE-3 has just over half the memory of an H100, but 6,000 times the memory bandwidth. The reason to compare the WSE-3 to an H100 is that the H100 is the chip most used for inference — and inference is clearly what Cerebras is most well-suited for.”

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 8)

The Seven Alpha Plays – 3

Play 6 — Shift Repeat Adtech to Owned Repeat. From Repeat Direct Adtech to Repeat Direct CRM or Organic. Primary lever: Tax. NEVER served: Never Pay Twice.

This is the most visible pay-twice play and the one a CFO actually understands. Repeat Direct Adtech is the red-flag bucket from Part 3. The brand already knows the customer. The customer has bought before. Yet the transaction was generated through paid media. The dashboard celebrates ROAS; Revenue Tax accounting sees leakage. The goal is not to eliminate all repeat paid media overnight — some retargeting may remain useful for genuinely lapsed customers the owned channels cannot reach. The goal is to identify how much of Repeat Direct Adtech could have been prevented by better owned-channel attention, better timing, and earlier intervention — and then to actually prevent it.

The “actually prevent it” is where the play lives. Knowing the leakage size is diagnosis; closing the leakage is execution. Two mechanisms make the shift possible, and neither is the standard CRM playbook of the last decade.

The first mechanism is CRM 2.0 — Agentic Marketing. Standard CRM runs on rules and segments: if customer falls in cohort X, send template Y on day Z. It is calendar-driven, batch-and-blast at best, and segmented-flow at its most sophisticated. CRM 2.0 replaces the rule engine with multiple agents working with a decisioning agent. Functional agents handle the specialised work — content generation, audience analysis, deliverability monitoring, channel selection, outcome attribution. The decisioning agent orchestrates their outputs into the per-customer call: what the next-best-action is, given that customer’s TAT cell, attention trajectory, transaction history, and current need-state. The decisioning agent does in software what a brilliant relationship manager would do across a customer base of millions: hold a B– customer in utility content rather than push them another offer; suppress a B customer who is currently transacting from the next promotional wave; trigger a recovery sequence on an R1 customer the moment a re-engagement signal appears. The agent is the difference between batch campaigns and per-customer marketing operations. It is what makes the shift from Adtech to CRM operationally feasible at scale, because the agent does in software what manual segmentation cannot: it makes the right decision on the right customer at the right moment, every day, without human triage. In doing so, CRM 2.0 reduces Route Tax (less Adtech) and Offer Tax (less discount dependency) simultaneously. Repeat Direct Adtech is the bill the brand pays for the decisions CRM 2.0 makes for free.

The second mechanism is Channels 2.0. Adtech wins repeat transactions partly because owned channels deteriorate faster than brands realise. Email deliverability decays. WhatsApp opt-in degrades. Push notifications get muted. App engagement drops. By the time the CRM team notices, the channel has lost reach, and the only way to reach the customer is paid media. Channels 2.0 is the discipline of treating owned channels as living infrastructure, not static configuration. It means actively maintaining deliverability across mailbox providers, rotating sending domains before reputation degrades, segmenting WhatsApp opt-in flows to preserve quality, deploying NeoMails as a primary attention surface that earns daily engagement, and instrumenting Real Reach as a first-class metric — the 90-day engaged base as a percentage of total list size. A brand with healthy Channels 2.0 has owned reach. A brand without it has a list it cannot use, which is the same thing as not having a list at all. CRM 2.0 makes the decisions; Channels 2.0 ensures the decisions actually land.

Together they close the loop. A large Repeat Direct Adtech bucket is almost always the downstream consequence of a large B–, T–, R1, or R2 pool the brand missed three months earlier — which itself is almost always the downstream consequence of CRM 1.0 making the wrong decisions through Channels 1.0 that no longer reach the customer. Play 6 is the play that converts that two-stage failure into a two-stage fix. The Alpha is measurable in two ways: the immediate margin improvement from shifting paid repeat revenue to owned (10–20% of Repeat Direct Adtech is the typical recoverable share in a first pilot), and the compounding decay-prevention that comes from healthier owned channels (Weakening Pool stops growing, R1 stops being created at the same rate, the future cost of Adtech reacquisition falls).

The CFO sees the immediate gain; the CMO sees the compounding one. Play 6 is the play where they agree on what they are watching.

Thinks 1985

Mint on India’s mutual fund Rs 74 trillion crore industry: “Monthly SIP inflows, which stood at ₹8,055 crore in 2019, have swelled to ₹32,087 crore as of March 2026. The number of folios has expanded from 82 million to 270 million during the same period, underscoring the depth and breadth of this retail wave. The investor boom has naturally been mirrored on the supply side. The number of asset management companies (AMCs) has crossed the 50 mark, up from 42 in 2019 with 11 more licences in the pipeline, intensifying competition in an already crowded field.”

WSJ: “Rhodium reports that once Chinese firms reach technological parity with their competitors, they take market share at breathtaking speed. The result: In 2016, Rhodium estimates, China controlled more than 50% of export volumes in 163 industries (using an international classification system). By 2024, that had risen to 315. China’s massive trade surpluses are often attributed to chronically weak domestic demand. Yet China can create demand when it wants. To nurture its drone industry, Beijing encourages numerous sectors, including agriculture, local government and tourism, to integrate drones, “complemented by public investment in enabling infrastructure, including the use of local government special bonds,” Rhodium writes.”

Deirdre McCloskey: “An equality of outcome, the brain surgeon paid at the finish line, or the tenth mile, the same as the street sweeper, certainly comports with an equality of souls…. But unfortunately in large groups the ignoring of a person’s marginal work product, and making payments according to the noble belief in the equality of human worth – in which all us monotheists and modern liberals do, I affirm yet again, fervently believe – does not work. Through gross misallocation in the short run, and the collapse of spurs to innovation in the long, such an enforced equality of outcome leads in a large group to a dismal equality of poverty, and then to tyranny. Such attempts fail every time at large scale, even when they are kindly and sincere and gentle.” [via CafeHayek]

NYTimes on Ukraine’s 35-year-old defense minister: “The future of warfare is being written in Ukraine, and Mr. [Mykhailo] Fedorov, a technology evangelist who is four months into his job, is one of its authors. In the same way that apps remade taxi services and food delivery, Mr. Fedorov believes that warfare is ripe for disruption. That, he says, means offloading the fighting as much as possible onto machines — including, someday, those that can make lethal decisions on their own. “The world needs security, and only autonomous weapons can ensure it,” Mr. Fedorov said in an interview in his office at the Ministry of Defense. “Autonomous weapons are the new nuclear weapons. Countries that possess them will be protected.””

A Tax-onomy of Transactions and the Road to Alpha (Part 7)

The Seven Alpha Plays – 2

Play 3 — Accelerate Test to Best. From T or T– to B. Primary lever: Time. NEVER served: Never Lose Customers.

The first purchase is not the victory. The second purchase is the proof. A one-time buyer is still only a hypothesis — evidence of interest, not yet of habit. The most important early-lifecycle task is to move One to Two, and then Two to habit. This is where many D2C brands leak LTV: they celebrate the first transaction and hand the customer to generic promotional flows. T customers can be guided through replenishment, onboarding, product education, category expansion, and reminders. T– customers need relationship repair before a transaction push. A faster second transaction changes LTV, CAC payback, and future channel mix. The Alpha is not just the next order — it is shortening the time it takes for the customer to become a repeat customer.

Play 4 — Protect Best from Becoming Rest. From B– to B. Primary lever: Time and Tax. NEVER served: Never Lose Customers.

This is the highest-ROI play in the entire system. A B– customer is still valuable. They may still appear healthy in a transaction dashboard, still sit in a “loyal” or “VIP” segment. But attention has begun to weaken. The cost of holding a B– is a fraction of the cost of recovering an R1 once they have already drifted. The wrong move is more pressure. Best customers often do not need another discount — they need recognition, memory, service, access, relevance, and sometimes restraint. Sometimes the right action is not to send. Sometimes it is a personal note. Sometimes it is a NeoMail that restores attention without making a transaction demand. This is Meridian territory: the economics justify deeper intelligence because losing a Best customer creates the largest future reacquisition bill. Holding them before they become R1 is Alpha at its cleanest.

Play 5 — Recover Rest Before Adtech. From R1 / R2 to B– / T– via Atrium, then to B / T via Meridian. Primary lever: Tax. NEVER served: Never Pay Twice.

R1 and R2 are both Rest, but they are not equal. R1 customers were once Best — they have transaction depth, proven value, and their recovery deserves priority. R2 customers bought once or twice and then lost attention — they may be worth recovering, but the economics must be more disciplined. Most brands treat dormancy as one bucket. That is expensive. R1 deserves richer recovery; R2 may need low-cost attention rebuilding or selective suppression; Lost Leads deserve even less investment.

One mechanical point matters for the dashboard. Recovery is a two-step move, not a one-step move. The first step is Atrium’s work: restore attention. A recovered R1 returns to B–, not to B — attention has been rebuilt, but the transaction has not. Likewise, R2 returns to T–. The customer is reachable again on owned channels, but the relationship has not yet re-proven itself economically. The second step is Meridian’s work: convert that restored attention into a transaction on an owned route. When that transaction lands, B– graduates to B; T– graduates to T. Atrium recovers attention. Meridian recovers the transaction. The two engines do different jobs and the dashboard should count them separately — otherwise the brand books Alpha on attention alone, which is potential Alpha, not realised Alpha. The transaction count is durable. The column is what moves under recovery — first under Atrium, then under Meridian.

NeoMails create soft re-entry. NeoNet recovers through cooperative attention. ActionAds monetise attention when an immediate purchase is not the right ask. The Alpha is the tax avoided: every R1 recovered through NeoMarketing instead of paid media saves the 5–10 point spread between the recovery rung and the adtech rung — multiplied by the customer’s future LTV.