What beauty players can teach the consumer sector about digital
disruption
As many
consumer businesses struggle to deal with the pace of change, the beauty sector
shows the way.
After many decades of stable
outperformance, the fast-moving consumer-goods (FMCG) sector is at a crossroads. Consumer preferences have upended
the long-standing FMCG marketing playbook, while digital technologies are
revolutionizing the way consumers engage with brands and shop. In this context,
many FMCG companies are getting serious about change.
As they look for
inspiration, they will find that one FMCG industry—beauty—is way out in front,
serving as a bellwether of changes to come elsewhere. The beauty-industry case
study reveals how profoundly consumer preferences and behavior are changing,
how “born digital” challenger brands use new marketing messages and outlets to
capitalize on these changes, and how some incumbents are adapting their
competitive advantages to win.
The beauty sector is
advanced because of the way beauty-loving consumers engage with the category.
For decades, they have sought out innovations, embraced the stories behind
brands, and enjoyed the shopping experience, solo and with others. For decades,
these characteristics have shaped how beauty brands marketed and sold their
products. But today, digital is dramatically expanding the beauty consumer’s
connection with brands and products. A strong case could be made that the
influence of digital marketing and social media has gone further, faster, in
beauty than in any other FMCG industry. The others can therefore benefit from
its experience.
The rise of born-digital challengers
The global beauty
market—including bath and shower, fragrances, hair care, makeup, and skin
care—is a $250 billion global business, according to Euromonitor. Historically,
large legacy brands have ruled the industry, both in market share and in
prestige. Recently, however, born-digital brands have become the big growth
story, particularly in color cosmetics, a category well suited to digital
marketing because of its visual nature. From 2008 to 2016, color-cosmetics challenger
brands grew by 16 percent a year, four times as fast as legacy companies. They
now account for 10 percent of the color-cosmetics market, up from 4 percent in
2008.
Dig a little deeper and
other themes emerge. One is that, according to McKinsey analysis, the upstarts
are almost all single-brand beauty companies, which account for almost 50
percent of the $2.7 billion in venture-capital (VC) investments the beauty
industry has received since 2008 and 80 percent of VC funding in 2017. Another
is that 31 percent of the beauty companies that get VC funding emphasize
“conscious consumerism”—they use natural or organic ingredients and commit
themselves to following certain social or environmental standards. Another 5
percent focus on minority groups. Finally, the growth of born-digital
challenger brands is accelerating: more than 70 percent of the $2.7 billion in
VC investments were made from 2014 to 2017.
There are five major
reasons for the recent success of challenger brands in the beauty industry.
The growth of consumer engagement on social
media
The consumer has
spoken. According to the WaR Agency, a London-based marketing firm, seven out
of ten people surveyed said they want to learn about products through content
rather than advertising. To a large degree, consumers seem to be acting on that
idea: beauty was the third-most-searched topic on Google in 2016, and the
number of views of beauty videos on YouTube rose by 67 percent from 2015 to
2016. YouTube is already the world’s leading beauty platform, with more than
1.5 million beauty videos (accounting for 4.6 billion views) uploaded each
month. Color-cosmetics products particularly appeal to the selfie generation
because of their visual nature. Online videos (or “vlogs”) not only teach
consumers how to apply makeup but also promote the rise of
“micro-influencers”—those with 10,000 to 100,000 followers.
Traditional brands
account for a relatively small share of YouTube views; born-digital brands are
at the top of most social leaderboards. Anastasia, founded in 1997 as an
eyebrow specialist (and now with annual net sales of $340 million), has 16.2
million followers on Instagram, more than any other beauty company. On its
social-media platforms, Anastasia averages more than 60 posts a week, led by
600 influencers. Its online sales in the United States increased by 150 percent
in 2016, faster than those of any other player in the industry, and retail
sales rose more than 100 times from 2012 through 2015. And four-year-old,
UK-based Charlotte Tilbury has ten times as many YouTube subscribers as the
average legacy brand.
The evolving product and shopping preferences
of the millennial generation
A devotion to social
media isn’t the only way millennials—people born from the early 1980s through
the late 1990s—differ from their elders. According to McKinsey research, they
are three times more likely than baby boomers to assume that newer brands are
better or more innovative and three times more likely to say they typically
learn about new products or brands from social media. Traditional FMCG
marketing vehicles, such as in-store displays, print advertising, and
television commercials, therefore influence millennials less. As beauty
consumers, they are quick to try new products, and they change their
preferences often. Asked “when was the last time you purchased a new cosmetics
brand?,” 48 percent of millennials active in the category replied, “in the last
month,” versus 19 percent of boomers. Millennials place a higher priority on
what they consider to be authentic and personal. They expect to be able to try
anything once—free of charge. They crave newness in beauty; they want the
experience to be fun and prefer informal interactions.
A new marketing formula made possible by
digital
By engaging with
consumers—mostly millennials—directly through social media rather than
traditional advertising, challenger brands have created a new way of marketing.
It is more than transactional; rather, it is about creating a relationship.
Encouraging the exchange of product experiences via Facebook, Instagram, and
YouTube is a powerful way of building a community around a brand and can help
to enhance its perceived quality. By encouraging these practices, brands
cultivate the sense that consumers are present at the creation. Importantly, this
new approach to marketing allows born-digital players to charge relatively high
prices.
By contrast, some
younger consumers view older brands as lacking an authentic story. That makes
it more difficult for brands to connect with them through social media, despite
their increased efforts.
The growth of omnichannel and online-only
beauty retailers
A major part of the
value proposition of omnichannel beauty retailers and online-only beauty sites
is access to different brands, including new ones, and the ability to interact
with a community larger than a friend or two in front of a mirror. Sephora,
Ulta Beauty, and other omnichannel retailers that let consumers sample their
products are growing rapidly. So are some online-only beauty retailers. This
growth is expected to continue. In the United States, Sephora’s same-store
sales are rising by 7 percent a year, and the company plans to open 20 new stores
a year through 2020. Ulta Beauty, whose same-store sales are growing by 14
percent annually, has a goal of opening 100 new stores a year through 2019.
These companies
encourage people to try products in a fun, unintimidating environment that
allows them to experiment across a wide range of different brands, from mass to
prestige, eliminating yesterday’s compartmentalization. According to the
research firm L2, 60 percent of Sephora.com’s users and 47 percent of
Ulta.com’s users shop by product category. That practice encourages
exploration—a significant change from the past, when people tended to shop by
brand. New technologies, such as augmented-reality apps, allow consumers to
upload selfies and then to experiment digitally with different products. The truly
daring can upload pictures and ask others to “like” (or not) the result. In
addition, subscription services, such as Ipsy ($103.5 million in
VC funding in 2015) and Birchbox ($86.9 million in 2016), offer a regular
stream of new products, often from smaller brands.
These trends have
supported the rise of direct-to-consumer brands, such as ColourPop and Glossier.
ColourPop began in 2014 as an online-only cosmetics brand that offered
high-value “wallet friendly” products and a fast innovation cycle. This proved
to be a winning formula. ColourPop, one of the fastest-growing beauty brands
ever, now offers an exclusive collection for Sephora.
Glossier, which evolved
from the popular beauty blog Into the Gloss (founded in 2010 by Emily Weiss),
has become an influential cosmetics brand beloved by social-media influencers.
It offers a relatively small collection of products—albeit sometimes with
waiting lists 10,000-people long—so it can’t afford to miss the mark. Glossier
turns for ideas to its customers and works with 100 of its top ones to get
real-time feedback.
The sophisticated use of contracting
Challenger brands tend
to concentrate on marketing and to outsource most other aspects of the
business, including product innovation. This strategy of concentrating on the
brand’s development keeps fixed costs low and provides for rapid innovation
cycles. It also means, however, that new formulations are often the
intellectual property of the manufacturers, rather than the brands themselves,
and can therefore also be used by competitors.
The majors respond
The major beauty
companies still lead the market: annual sales of the biggest are several times
those of all the upstarts combined. Of course, the changing dynamics are well
known to them. While some were slow to react, others have capitalized on
digital opportunities, often with excellent results. The big players have adopted
three major strategies.
·
Acquisitions. In 2016 alone, Bloomberg
estimates, traditional companies made 52 acquisitions of beauty-related
companies, many of them small ones with digital expertise.
Consider Estée Lauder’s 2017
purchase of a minority stake in Toronto-based skin-care company Deciem. Founded
in 2013, it has a cult following among millennials and a reputation for
innovation and marketing savvy. Estée Lauder has also bought digitally oriented
make-up companies such as BECCA (2016) and Too Faced (2016). L’Oréal has made
three major acquisitions of challenger brands in the past five years—Urban
Decay (2012), NYX (2014), and IT Cosmetics (2016).
While the fate of some of these
acquisitions is still unclear, especially given their high multiples, the
purchase of Urban Decay looks like a winner, with sales tripling from 2012 to
2015. So does the purchase of NYX, where sales, driven by international
expansion and healthy growth in the United States, quadrupled from 2014 to
2016.
·
Adaptation. Traditional beauty-industry
leaders are investing substantial resources in digital media and influencer
marketing, and they are working to foster engaging user-generated online
content. They are also far ahead of companies in other FMCG industries in
building digital organizational capabilities: since 2010, for instance, L’Oréal
has hired 1,600 digital experts and added a digital officer to the C-suite.
This investment seems to be paying off: L’Oréal’s Maybelline brand clinched the
number-one spot in L2’s 2017 Digital IQ Index for beauty—the first mass brand
to do so.
“All of our brands are spending
increasing amounts in digital and social,” noted Estée Lauder’s group
president, Jane Hertzmark Hudis, in an online interview with the fashion site
Glossy. “It’s not about how a brand defines itself today; it’s how an audience
defines you in their mind.… Consumers tell our stories now.” When Estée Lauder
launched its new Double Wear Foundation, it therefore did so on Facebook. It has
also begun using augmented reality to help consumers with their questions. On
the whole, traditional beauty companies are making strides in using
social-media influencers and digital channels. Artificial intelligence,
augmented reality, and digital technologies will continue to be important tools
for both old and new beauty brands.
·
Incubation. One characteristic of
beauty’s 21st-century challengers is the speed and verve of their innovation;
then they tell those stories to the world through social media. An internal
incubator within a larger business can support and participate in the growth of
smaller brands. In 2010, the French luxury brand LVMH created Kendo, a beauty
incubator with a mandate to build brands (either from scratch or through
acquisition) that could then be sold by LVMH’s retailer, Sephora. Kendo and its
brands have extensive autonomy, and the managers, many with backgrounds in
start-ups, have a distinctively risk-oriented outlook.
LVMH has accepted this higher
degree of risk as the price of doing business in the current environment. Kendo
has delivered some big hits, such as Marc Jacobs Beauty, an award-winning brand
launched in 2013, and Kat Von D, which is expanding internationally. More
recently, Fenty Beauty, started by Rihanna in September 2017, has been hitting
a popular nerve, particularly for nonwhite women. An incubator allows larger
players to innovate more rapidly and to nurture smaller brands rather than wait
to make expensive acquisitions.
Next steps for FMCG companies
From 2012 to 2015, the
top 25 US food-and-beverage players accounted for 45 percent of sales but for
only 3 percent of sales growth, according to Nielsen. Over the same period,
most of the top 25 global FMCG players have experienced declining earnings and
below-average shareholder returns.
To do better, and to
get ahead of the competition from a rising generation of niche and local
players, FMCG companies need to understand how their consumers are
changing and should then adapt their marketing and channel strategies to suit.
Whether the product is lipstick or diapers, it is essential to engage consumers. That means deploying expertise in
digital marketing, social media, and the increasingly important influencer
ecosystem, while building the advanced-analytics and channel-management
capabilities needed to understand consumer behavior.
The first step for FMCG
companies is to examine their portfolios to understand where they are most at
risk of disruption. In view of the beauty sector’s experience, the most
vulnerable areas have several of the following attributes: significant
emotional engagement among consumers, high profit margins, low shipping costs
as a percentage of average ticket, low regulatory barriers, and the ability to
outsource parts of the value chain. In segments that tick at least three of
these boxes—including bathroom fragrances, eyewear, mattresses, and men’s
razors—serious born-digital challengers have already appeared.
Second, like the beauty
powers, major FCMG players need to embrace a very different retail environment.
The clout of mass retail is diminishing as the e-commerce giants continue to
grow—by a robust 26 percent a year since 2011—and as discounters and club
stores build market share, particularly in the grocery sector. FMCG companies
must learn how to use these new channels and to strengthen their operations and
procurement practices to offset pressure on prices.
One approach is to
create new organizational structures, such as incubators or corporate VC funds,
which can help companies to improve innovation outcomes, develop new brands,
and compete with challengers. Many major FMCG companies have built
command-and-control structures focused on execution. The operating model of the
future, however, is likely to be agile. Inspired by the software industry, it
will have a dynamic front end that is close to the consumer and supported by a
stable backbone of support functions. This new model will be implemented by
networks of multifunctional teams that pursue specific goals and then go on to
something else. The culture is not so much about hierarchy as about attracting,
engaging, and flexibly deploying talent.
To build this model,
top FMCG companies can draw on their historically strong business
infrastructure, such as back-office functions, cost-management systems, and
supply-chain management. But they also need to build excellence in new areas,
such as digital marketing, advanced analytics, and e-commerce.
As the influence of
digital technologies works its way through category after category, their
importance in the beauty industry isn’t expected to diminish. Over the next few
years, industry incumbents will probably continue their efforts to get better
at managing and scaling small brands; more incubators will emerge; social
marketing techniques will evolve; and consumer engagement will continue to
rise. Beauty will therefore continue to serve as the bellwether of change
within the consumer-goods sector—and will go on showing how companies can adapt
to win.
By Sara Hudson, Aimee
Kim, and Jessica Moulton
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/consumer-packaged-goods/our-insights/what-beauty-players-can-teach-the-consumer-sector-about-digital-disruption?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1804&hlkid=0b7064b76b3d4684af71553c0f789801&hctky=10339950&hdpid=ef8821a1-3828-416e-b65b-fe34a1aa6ee6
No comments:
Post a Comment