Signals by jagacomms – Issue #17
Comms isn’t what you say. It’s what everyone else overlooks.
Decoded #1
Walmart’s Rural Strategy
In 1962, Sam Walton skipped the cities and built discount stores in overlooked towns. By controlling supply chains and focusing on forgotten customers, Walmart scaled into a $600 billion giant.
Lesson: Growth doesn’t always mean chasing trends. Sometimes it’s serving the markets everyone else ignores.
Decoded #2
Dropbox’s Case Study Engine
Dropbox turned a single client win into a dozen marketing assets: testimonials, tutorials, referral stories. Instead of one-off proof, they built a case study system that multiplied reach.
Lesson: Case studies aren’t decoration — they’re multipliers. One success, told well, can fuel growth for months.
On Our Radar
Athlos Energy: Fusion From Greece
Most fusion stories come from the U.S. or U.K. Athlos Energy is different: a startup in Athens developing compact fusion reactors with a regional focus. Their bet is that nuclear innovation shouldn’t just be a Silicon Valley project — it can also grow in underrepresented geographies.
Lesson: In deep tech, location is positioning. Being the “first mover” in a new geography can be as powerful as being first in a new market.
Signals of Progress
Nuclear’s Design Problem
Public opinion is warming to nuclear — but its visuals haven’t moved an inch. Search “nuclear energy” and you’ll still see cooling towers, hazard signs, and radioactive waste barrels. The tech has evolved, the narrative has shifted, but the imagery is stuck in the past.
Lesson: Progress is as much about symbols as systems. Until the design language changes, nuclear will keep dragging yesterday’s baggage into today’s debates.
Closer
From Walmart’s rural towns to nuclear’s outdated visuals, the signal is the same: real opportunities hide in blind spots. Walton saw customers where others saw nothing. Dropbox stretched one win into a dozen. Athlos is betting on a region overlooked in the fusion race. Nuclear’s imagery remains a blind spot still waiting to be fixed.
Comms isn’t just about what’s said — it’s about what’s ignored. Spot the gap, and you find the leverage.
