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25 Dec 2024 00:05

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Beauty giants double down on retail media and enhanced content as online sales accelerate

WARC Digital Commerce launches Category Insights series with new Beauty & Personal Care report

The global Beauty & Personal Care market generated $430bn in revenue in 2022 and is forecast to rise to $580bn by 2027

60% of top selling brands increase paid SOV

Amazon set to overtake Walmart as the top US beauty retailer by 2025

The $430bn global beauty market is at the vanguard of innovation in e-commerce. From experimenting with video content to addressing consumer concerns about wellness, sustainability and diversity, brands are becoming skilled at selling personalized products in a virtual world.

Debuting with a report on Beauty & Personal Care published today, Category Insights is a new series from WARC Digital Commerce exploring the current state of a category from the perspective of the retailer, the consumer and the brand.

Gregory Grudzinski, Report Editor, WARC Digital Commerce, says: “In the virtual world of digital commerce, the Beauty & Personal Care category is a hotbed of marketing innovation. Successful brands are going beyond helping consumers improve their appearances to helping them discover and reveal their authentic selves.

“In this report we shed light on trends in this space, such as premiumization and the outsized influence Gen Z shoppers have on the category. We also look at top performers and share gainers to help understand how the top brands plan to stay on top, and how challenger brands are looking to unseat them.”

Beauty & Personal Care category is recession resistant and growing

In 2022, the global beauty market, encompassing beauty, personal care and fragrance, generated $430bn in revenue, and is forecast to grow 6% annually to reach $580bn worldwide by 2027, according to McKinsey. Largely resistant to inflationary pressures, only 13% of US consumers have reduced spending on personal care items in the past 12 months.

Also in 2022, e-commerce became the beauty category’s leading channel, claiming nearly a quarter (21%) of sales.

Category leaders increase paid retail media investment to stay ahead of competition

Analysis of WARC’s dComm Index, in conjunction with Perpetua’s sales estimates, found that in the US, brands including Maybelline New York, Lume and Versace are among the top category performers on Amazon. Their success has been underpinned by investment in retail media to increase paid share of voice (SOV) to stay ahead of their competitors.

In makeup and fragrance, 60% of the top selling brands increased paid SOV, with an average increase of 1.7% and 0.9%. The paid investment fueled an increase in organic share-of-voice in both makeup and fragrance of 1.6% and 1.2%, respectively.

Enhanced product content is key

Content, a core constituent of the WARC dComm Index, is key to driving sales. In its ‘2023 Consumer Research’ report, Salsify found 55% of surveyed consumers won’t purchase items with bad product content. Top brands have responded with the use of “enhanced product content”, which provides a more immersive and informative experience for online shoppers.

Following improvements to its product display pages (PDP), Amazon is set to overtake Walmart as the top US beauty retailer by 2025, with a 14.5% share of a market that could hit $180bn in value by 2025, according to analysis by Morgan Stanley.

Premiumization, social selling and the rising importance of sustainability and diversity are key consumer trends in the Beauty & Personal Care category

One of the biggest trends in Beauty & Personal Care is the emergence of “premiumization” – promoting unique product attributes to enhance the perceived value of a brand. Products marketed as “premium” are projected to grow annually by 8% between 2022 and 2027, according to McKinsey. By comparison, mass market beauty products are growing at 5% annually.

TikTok has become instrumental in elevating the premiumization concept, particularly among younger consumers. According to Voyado 73% of Gen Z are prepared to spend more on premium products.

A surge of new beauty brands that cater specifically to communities of color have raised expectations for all brands to create inclusive shade ranges. Kate Palmer, Insights Manager at Edge by Ascential, comments: “In the e-commerce space, I think there is still room to grow in helping customers find the right shade match for their skin. This is notoriously difficult to do online.”

Gen Z’s heightened sustainability awareness, where overconsumption is avoided, means younger consumers may be looking more toward consolidated beauty routines composed of brands and products they feel ethically connected to.

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