Episode 139

The Folio Society: Building a Heritage Brand in an AI World

Lauren Juster
Lauren Juster
Marketing Director of The Folio Society

In this episode we talked about:

  • The reason Folio Society focuses on creating a market rather than beating competitors.
  • Why a premium publisher chooses to opt out of AI generated illustrations and page layouts.
  • How to measure the impact of brand awareness campaigns in specific regional markets.
  • The way traditional attribution models are failing to capture traffic from AI agents.
  • Methods for bringing commercial rigor to a team focused on editorial excellence.
  • The strategy for evolving a legacy brand without alienating long term collectors.

🎧 Listen now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube

Episode highlights:

02:15: The history and mission of The Folio Society

05:40: Creating a market for products without competitors

07:15: Balancing performance marketing with long term brand building

09:00: Changing brand perception in the UK vs the US

13:45: Ethical considerations for AI in creative production

18:30: Automating data analysis and demand planning

Lauren's Bottom Line: For a heritage brand, the hardest marketing job isn't beating competitors — it's creating the market by explaining what you do to the fans who don't yet know you exist. Growth comes from evolution, not revolution: fix the commercials first, prove performance works, then earn the right to invest in the slow, unattributable work of brand.

FAQ

Founded in 1947 and approaching its 80th anniversary, The Folio Society takes the world's best-loved stories and turns them into immersive, collectible editions — worth reading and rereading — through commissioned illustrations and premium materials. It publishes across the board, from modern fiction, science fiction, and fantasy to the classics. Every title is something the business feels genuinely passionate about, and someone internally has to vouch for a book before it's published. Started as a subscription-based book club, it has since moved away from that membership model.
Folio saw a strong COVID sales bump, but the halo faded and the business began sliding backwards, so marketing was identified as an area needing more support. Lauren's key shift was reframing the core marketing problem: because no competitors do what Folio does, the job isn't beating rivals — it's finding and creating a market by explaining what Folio is to the people who would love it. Refocusing marketing through that lens is what the business needed to move forward again.
Coming from a performance-marketing background, Lauren sequenced the work: year one was about fixing the commercials, getting the right tech stack in place for CRM, and building robust commercial reporting. Everything in D2C has to be commercially rigorous — not just impressions, but add-to-baskets, checkouts, and repeat purchases. Only once the commercials were working and the business was in strong growth mode did she feel confident investing in brand. Brand-building is a long game that can't be attributed the way paid media can, but she sees it as where Folio's focus needs to be now — laying foundations for how people perceive the brand years down the line.
Folio started small, isolating YouTube as an upper-funnel brand-awareness channel in specific US states. A brand-lift test gave an immediate signal — how many more people saw and recognized the brand. But the deeper measurement came afterward: for an initial test in New York City, the team tracked new customers from that area, what they spent, AOV, and repeat rate over the 30, 60, and 180 days following the campaign, benchmarked against the wider business. That approach has built confidence that "fluffy" brand work pays off later — as long as you have patience.
Folio refuses to use AI for creative because it would contradict the ethical practices behind its books — it never uses AI to lay out pages or generate illustrations, and always commissions real illustrators. Using AI to generate creative assets would undermine its ability to stand behind the author-illustrators it works with. As a premium, luxury heritage brand, Lauren believes customers deserve creative that reflects the beauty of the books; AI might do a "good enough" job, but not the best one, and a touch of humanity is essential. Where AI does add value for the team is the "donkey work" — reporting, demand planning, and data analysis.
Organic search from AI assistants is still a small share of traffic (under 10%, month to month), but it's moving fast. Lauren argues traditional attribution is becoming broken, because people use tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini as chat agents without necessarily clicking through — showing up instead as upticks in direct or non-organic traffic. Her bigger concern is how those agents perceive the brand: they lean on third-party signals like reviews, PR, testimonials, Wikipedia, and Reddit, and still surface hints of the "old Folio" collector's-club image the business has worked to move beyond. Fixing that isn't a technical website change — it's the long game of big brand PR and shifting customer perceptions.

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