The New Email Unit — NeoMails
Email has always had two classes, and every brand uses both. The first is promotional — the sale, the new collection, the limited-time offer. People open these “Sell” emails when the offer is compelling, ignore them when it is not, and unsubscribe when the volume becomes unbearable. The second is transactional — the order confirmation, the shipping update, the password reset. Nobody chose to receive these “Notify” emails; they arrive because a transaction happened. People open them out of obligation.
Both classes share a fundamental assumption: the email exists to serve the brand’s agenda. The promotional email asks the customer to do something. The transactional email confirms that the brand has done something. The customer’s attention is a means to the brand’s end. This is why email’s attention quality has declined so sharply — when every message in your inbox is either confirming something or asking something, you stop opening by default. The Sell and Notify classes need an addition.
NeoMails introduce a third class — the Relate email — built on a different premise entirely. The email exists to serve the recipient’s agenda. It is not asking anything. It is not confirming anything. It arrives daily because it is worth the sixty seconds it takes to engage with. It earns its place in the inbox by delivering something the reader genuinely values.

The NeoMail has four components. The BrandBlock comes first — the brand’s message and content, delivered before anything else is asked of the reader. Then comes the Magnet: a daily quiz, a prediction market, a puzzle, a micro-challenge relevant to the brand’s world. Engaging with the Magnet earns Mu — a micro-reward currency visible in the subject line, building a streak, creating a daily reason to return independent of any offer. And the ActionAd is an in-email action unit that funds the entire send without costing the brand anything.

Critically, NeoMails are not restricted to dormant customers. A brand can — and should — send NeoMails to its entire known base: dormant customers being reactivated, newly acquired subscribers from the NeoNet network, and active customers receiving daily relationship value alongside the brand’s regular promotional programme. NeoMails are additive to the brand’s existing email stack, not a replacement for it. The format is strictly controlled — the BrandBlock cannot be used to push marketing messages, which prevents NeoMails from becoming promotional email in disguise and preserves the attention they earn.
To understand how NeoMails move customers, five states define the journey. A customer begins dormant — known to the brand, but unresponsive to email. They become NeoMail-active after opening at least one NeoMail, confirming the address is live and the person is reachable. They become engaged as daily habit forms. They are transferred when the brand decides to move them into its paid promotional stream. And they become marketing-active once full promotional sends begin. NeoMail-active status persists only while engagement continues — if a customer does not open a NeoMail for ten consecutive days, sends pause and the customer returns to dormant.
For customers reactivated through a brand’s own NeoMails, entry into the promotional stream happens without a paid transfer fee. For customers acquired or reactivated through NeoNet, the transfer fee is the step that moves a NeoMail-active ID into the brand’s regular marketing programme.

The crucial insight is that possessing an email ID is not the same as possessing attention. NeoMails are designed to close that gap — one state at a time.
