The ugly truth about young beauty brands’ business model
They have a thing or two to learn from their mature rivals
People like to feel pretty. Over the past ten years Americans have spent more than $500bn on beauty products. By 2024 the Chinese are expected to splurge more than $100bn a year. In the past most of that would have gone to cosmetics conglomerates, such as L’Oréal and Estée Lauder, or to consumer-products giants like Unilever, selling every imaginable tincture to make everything from toenails to tresses more fetching. But in recent years fresh-faced newcomers, often more specialised and more digital, have entered the fray.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Wrinkle treatment”
Business September 10th 2022
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