Home AdExchanger Talks Healthy Growth In The Age Of AI

Healthy Growth In The Age Of AI

SHARE:
March Beech, chief growth officer, Thorne

Roughly a year ago, not a single Thorne customer answered with “AI engine” when asked in a post‑purchase survey where they had first heard about the vitamin, supplement and wellness brand.

Today, roughly 5% of customers say an AI engine pointed them to Thorne, according to Chief Growth Officer Mary Beech on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks.

Beech’s job is to grow a 40‑year‑old brand in a category where, although most discovery still happens at the shelf level, an increasing share of consumers arrive through answer engines – which is a double challenge, because chatbots can be loose with the facts.

So Beech has been building a marketing org that behaves less like what she calls a “support function” and more like a growth laboratory. Beech runs brand and performance marketing, owns Thorne’s direct-to-consumer business and is directly responsible for revenue – as it should be, she says.

“After a very long career at amazing companies, I don’t think I’ll go back to being a traditional CMO,” says Beech, who spent time in top marketer roles at Scholastic, Kate Spade New York, Pixar Animation Studios and Ralph Lauren.

“Being accountable not just for awareness and acquisition metrics but for the business every morning – that makes me a better marketer,” she says.

This mindset really matters in wellness, a category Beech describes as both emotionally charged and deeply confusing. In a recent Thorne survey, 65% of people said they find it easier to do their taxes than pick a supplement.

Rather than chasing every viral ingredient trend or parroting whatever’s popular on social media, Thorne leans into education and proof by investing heavily in medically reviewed content, including detailed product pages that spell out testing protocols and a long‑running blog written and reviewed by Thorne’s in-house medical team.

That same body of structured, sourced content is becoming even more important, as AI dominates search and answer engines decide which brands and explanations to surface.

Throne’s strategy is to give both consumers and AI systems as much reliable, medically grounded information as possible to work with.

“We want to be there for consumers for education,” Beech says, “not just the transaction.”

Also in this episode: how Thorne built its AI wellness advisor, what it takes to earn the trust of skeptical Gen Z consumers and why marketers need the freedom to experiment and fail fast (although it really helps to have the CFO’s support).

Must Read

A man talking to a robot

How Red Roof Is Bringing In More Customers With Zeta’s Voice-Activated AI Agent

Hotel chain Red Roof is using Zeta’s new voice-activated AI agent to guide its campaign creation, deployment timing and audience development.

Jean-Paul Schmetz, Chief of Ads, Brave

Why Ad-Blocking Browser Brave Introduced Its Own Ads

Brave’s chief of ads Jean-Paul Schmetz on competition in the search and browser markets, the fallout from the Google Search antitrust ruling and whether AI search will help smaller upstarts compete with Big Tech.

Vizio Helps Walmart Cut A Bigger Slice Of The CTV Ad Pie

Walmart and Vizio announced at NewFronts that unified account logins are coming to smart TVs using Vizio’s operating system.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: CTV Tracking

Carl’s Jr. And Hardee’s Marketing Goes Regional With Amazon Ads’ Streaming Media

The age-old question for streaming TV advertisers is, how to target the viewers they want while reaching the scale their businesses need. The quick-serve restaurant operator CKE, which owns Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s, sought an answer in a case study with Attain and Amazon Ads.

Cartoon of a woman in an apron cooking vegetables on a stovetop, holding a ladle as if to taste her creation

America’s Test Kitchen Puts Direct And Programmatic Access On Its Menu

America’s Test Kitchen introduced direct and programmatic buying for its free ad-supported TV channels – marking the first time it’s selling ad inventory as a standalone package.

The Rise Of Principal Media And The End Of The Agencies As We Knew Them

Ad agency holding companies are among the most adaptable businesses out there. In recent years holdcos like Publicis, WPP and Omnicom-IPG have stretched our notions of what an agency business even is exactly.