4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 19 November 2024
⏱️ 26 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The beauty industry has witnessed a wave of disruptors rise and fall. Brands like Anastasia Beverly Hills, Glossier and Morphe leveraged social media and influencer marketing to achieve rapid success and unicorn valuations. But maintaining momentum has proven challenging, and some of these disruptor brands have seen sales fall and financial hurdles mount.
As Glossier proves, there is the possibility of a second chance, but it requires radical changes to the business to pull off. As beauty correspondent Daniela Morosini points out, “The barriers to entry have been removed. You can get a critical mass of fans and build an aesthetic for your brand quite quickly. Making it stick is more difficult.” In today’s crowded market, sustainable growth and a deliberate strategy are essential for standing out.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the Business of Fashion, where each week we dig into our most popular B.O.F. |
0:13.0 | professional stories with the journalists who bring them to life. I'm Senior Correspondent Sheena Butler Young. |
0:19.0 | And I'm Executive Editor Brian Baskin. |
0:21.7 | Today we're revisiting the billion-dollar beauty brands that took social media by storm and changed the way we shop for makeup, from Glossier to Heuter Beauty and Pat McGrath Labs. |
0:31.5 | Many of these brands seemed destined to take their place alongside Mac, Estee Lauder, and other giants. |
0:36.7 | But now, some are facing setbacks |
0:38.5 | that they didn't see coming. And to help us unpack this, we're joined by BOF's beauty correspondent |
0:43.7 | Daniela Morissini. Daniela has been following these brands closely, breaking the news recently |
0:49.4 | that Anastasia Beverly Hills' main investor wants out of a, it once valued at as much as $3 billion. |
0:57.7 | Hi, Daniela. Welcome to the debrief podcast. Thanks for having me back. |
1:02.0 | So, Danielle, can you walk us through the meteoric rise of brands like Anastasia Beverly Hills, Glossier, and Morp? |
1:08.3 | They were all such disruptors in the 2010s. What did the beauty landscape look |
1:12.6 | like at the time? And why were these brands so effective in snapping up market share and at times |
1:17.2 | even carving out new market share? So these were some of the first brands in the beauty industry |
1:22.1 | that really benefited from the kind of the director-conceiver boom that we saw across fashion |
1:26.3 | and we saw across lifestyle and other segments. |
1:28.8 | They were really quick on social media. |
1:30.9 | They were quick to use it as a marketing tool, as a recruitment tool, as a community-building |
1:34.7 | tool. |
1:35.1 | You know, these are the kinds of brands that are always talking about community. |
1:37.9 | And on top of that, really quick on building out a good e-commerce presence. |
1:41.6 | And I think prior to that, nobody really thought about indie |
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