KEY POINTS
- As retailers like Ulta Beauty and Sephora have won over shoppers, the former anchor of the cosmetics industry — the department store — has faltered.
- Global cosmetics industry sales are projected to hit $430 billion by 2022, according to Allied Market Research.
- Influencers can make or break a brand, prompting companies to spend anywhere from $100 to thousands of dollars for a single product post on an influencer's page.
- Sixty-three percent of 18- to 34-year-olds trust influencer's opinions of brands more than advertising done by the brand itself, according to an Edelman survey.

Pedestrians pass in front of an Ulta Beauty store in New York.
Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images
In the beauty business, there's been a changing of the guard over the past decade.
Social
media has bolstered the success of specialty stores and cultivated a
number of billion-dollar upstart beauty brands that are going
head-to-head with well-established players like Estee Lauder.
As retailers like Ulta Beauty and Sephora have won over shoppers, the
former anchor of the cosmetics industry — the department store — has
faltered.
"Beauty seems to be following the
same general trend from retail a few years ago," said Vic Drabicky,
founder of January Digital, a marketing consultancy that works with
popular cosmetic lines like NARS and Rihanna's Fenty Beauty.
"When you can show people, it's more than just a transaction, and add-in experience and expertise, you end up in a good spot."
Since
2009, U.S. beauty and personal care sales have risen 52%, according to
market research company Euromonitor. The global cosmetics industry is
projected to hit $430 billion by 2022, according to a report by Allied
Market Research.
Specialty stores shine
Ulta Beauty
has been a clear standout over the past decade with its stock up more
than 1,250% since 2009, nearly seven times the gains of the broader
market. The retailer now has a market cap of $14.4 billion as of the
market's close on Dec. 26.
Over its 30 years
in business, Ulta's strength has been its focus on being an all-in-one
destination. It offers in-store salon services as well as products
ranging from drugstore lines like Maybelline and L'Oreal to pricier prestige brands like Urban Decay and Benefit.
Ulta
has also bucked a broader slowdown among retailers with its in-store
sales up more than 413% since 2009. And, while other retailers are
closing stores, it opened 67 locations in the first 10 months of the
year, according to FactSet. The company, which wasn't immediately
available to comment, had previously announced plans to open 80 stores
by year-end.
"Beauty specialists have gained
share at the expense of department stores over the last decade," Fatima
Linares, senior research manager at Euromonitor, said in an interview.
"While specialist retail sales grew by almost 6 percentage points from
2009 to 2018, department stores saw their shares stagnate in the same
period."

The entrance to Sephora at The Shoppes at Marina Bay Sands.
Jeff Greenberg | Getty Images
Ulta's appeal has been helped by its celebrity brands, such as an exclusive in-store distribution deal for the Kylie Cosmetics line last November and its relationship with YouTube star James Charles. These
relationships help drive traffic to the store. However, a pullback in
the key color cosmetics category, which includes lipsticks and eye
shadows, has weighed on the stock recently. Ulta's shares are up around
3% this year, despite seeing a 42% surge in the first quarter of 2019.
"This
has happened before, and therefore it is expected that color cosmetics
will recover at some point, but it looks like this time, the recovery
will take longer," said Linares.
"The trend this time is driven by consumers looking for a more natural
and healthier options and, in consequence, opting for a more natural
look."
However, rival beauty specialist Sephora, owned by french luxury brand LVMH, has already made efforts to cater to the shift in trends.
"The
past decade has been a time of significant growth and change for the
beauty industry," Artemis Patrick, Sephora's chief merchandising
officer, said. "For example, growing demand for ingredient transparency
inspired us to launch Clean at Sephora, which helps clients to better
navigate the growing category of clean beauty."
For the educated consumer, health and wellness have now become a top priority. Within
the beauty industry, this has been most evident in the growing
popularity of self-care products like face masks and moisturizers, which
has helped drive sales of skin-care products up 48% over the past
decade, according to Euromonitor.
"The
number of consumers who are making purchase decisions primarily based on
the price of a product is decreasing," Larissa Jensen, executive
director, and beauty industry analyst at NPD, said in an August report.
"The significance of knowing exactly what they are putting on their skin
becomes more important."
For some
consumers, this means steering clear of items that contain microplastics
and favoring items that include natural and organic ingredients.
The specialty retailers also have been quick to take advantage of emerging technology to help drive customers to their stories.
According
to a survey by WSL Strategic Retail that was presented at the Connected
Consumer Conference in November, 57% of female shoppers use mobile
devices to help them shop in-store. However, 43% are often choosing
between two to three stores when making cosmetic purchases.
To lure these customers in, Sephora has adopted an ad technology by Google that reveals local store promotions and inventory on
shoppers' phones as they walk near a store. While LVMH does not break
out Sephora's individual numbers, Google said the retailer saw a
noticeable increase in in-store sales and a higher return on advertising
spending from these promotions.
Department stores makeover
It's
been an uphill battle for department stores. Not only have the
specialty stores wooed their customers, but the rise of e-commerce has
weakened foot traffic through their stores. Consumers are looking for
the quickest and most efficient way to shop, and increasingly online
options win out.
Since 2013 beauty and
personal-care sales at department stores have increased by around 6%,
while online sales in the same category are up more than 150%, according
to Euromonitor.
Amazon
is seeing a benefit from this shift. In June, it launched its first
professional beauty store, offering products reserved for licensed
stylists and makeup artists through its Amazon business accounts.
The
following month, Amazon teamed up with pop star Lady Gaga as the sole
retail distributor of her first cosmetics line, Haus Laboratories. The
partnership appears to be paying off: Haus' Glam Room Palette No. 1 was
one of the bestselling beauty products on the website this holiday
season.
Meanwhile,
departments stores are feeling the pinch. Macy's destination business,
which includes beauty categories such as fragrances and cosmetics, makes
up 40% of the company's sales.
"We're
gaining market share in fragrances but we're not in overall beauty,"
said Macy's CEO Jeffrey Gennette on an earnings conference call this
summer. "We're really holding our own in skin care, but we're not
maintaining our share and we're ceding market share in color
[cosmetics]."
The retailer declined to
comment on recent sales trends, however, it said it is doubling down on
its effort to reengage beauty customers. One example is a partnership
with Modiface, an augmented reality business that was acquired by
L'Oreal in March 2018, that allows shoppers to virtually try on a
variety of cosmetics both on an app and in-store.
"Technology
and experiential components will continue to be paramount to successful
beauty campaigns, launches and displays," Nata Dvir, Macy's general
business manager for beauty, said. "Improving the customer experience
and creating newness in the category is showing no signs of slowing
down."
Nordstrom has also revamped its strategy by dedicating two floors to beauty in its new Manhattan flagship store, including millennial favorites such as hair-styling service DryBar and an Anastasia Beverly Hills Brow Studio.
The
redesign also features digital experiences such as an interactive
fragrance finder that allows customers to use a touch screen to try out
new fragrances. A personality quiz directs you to a scent you might
like, then you can opt to have the machine spray a sample.

Kylie
Jenner visits Houston Ulta Beauty to promote the exclusive launch of
Kylie Cosmetics with the beauty retailer, on November 18, 2018 in
Houston, Texas.
Rick Kern | Getty Images
"We
don't think of our business in separate channels but give a holistic
experience both online and in store, connecting the digital and
physical," said Gemma Lionello, executive vice president and general
merchandise manager for accessories and beauty at Nordstrom.
Their
launch of new initiatives to draw in customers has yet to turn the tide
on stock performance. As of Thursday's market close, Nordstrom shares,
which have a market value of $6.4 billion, have fallen about 12% this
year. Kohl's has a market value of about $8 billion and is down about 23% this year, while Macy's
has seen its stock tumble a whopping 44% in 2019. Macy's loss, which
has cut its market value to $5.1 billion, has also pushed it to the
bottom of the S&P 500 this year.
The rise of the influencer
Social
media has also brought its own massive change to the industry. It
created a digital subgroup of celebrity with enormous reach, millions of
fans and — most importantly — the power to make or break a brand.
One platform that's been critical to the rise of the influencer is Facebook's
Instagram. Of the social network's more than a billion user accounts,
some 500,000 are made up of active influencer accounts. Companies spend
anywhere from $100 to thousands of dollars for beauty gurus to make a
single product post on their page.
"The rise
of Instagram has really propelled the effect that social media has had
and just, in general, the space has grown rapidly," said Tribe Dynamics
co-founder Conor Begley. Tribe, an influencer software data company,
calculates the monetary revenue of influencer-sponsored content.

Bonita Hein | Getty Images
Tribe
uses a metric called "earned media value" to calculate how much
individual and combined influencer engagement with followers, and other
users, is worth when promoting products and services across social media
platforms such as Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.
For
example, before its $845 million buyout by Shiseido, prestige skin-care
line Drunk Elephant garnered nearly $35 million in total EMV from the
start of the 2019 — a more than 100% increase for the brand from the
year prior.
"Close to a dozen [beauty]
brands have achieved billion-dollar valuation and have done it using
really effective marketing that is social-media focused," Begley said.
This
coupled with the e-commerce explosion has bred a mega-industry, with
online beauty retailing projected to be worth $38 billion by 2023,
suggesting a 13% increase from its current value, according to
Euromonitor.
Some of the beauty unicorns include cult cosmetic lines such as Glossier
and influencer-turned-mogul Huda Kattan's Huda Beauty line. Eighty
percent of teens say they now get their beauty tips from influencers,
according to a survey of teen spending conducted by Piper Jaffray this
fall.
One reason is trust. According to a survey in Edelman's 2019 trust barometer report,
63% of 18- to 34-year-olds trust influencers' opinions of brands more
than advertising done by the brand itself. Additionally, the survey
revealed that within a six-month time period 58% of those polled
admitted to purchasing a new product because of an influencer.
"All
of the power went from manufacturers and retailers to the consumers
themselves," said Drabicky. "Now we have social media where makeup
artists are going on there and showing people exactly what to do." oa here