Social media giving beauty brands the facelift treatment

The beauty industry has gone through a significant revolution over the past 10 years, with rise of the visual social platforms such as YouTube, Pinterest, and Instagram, we are quickly learning that beauty brands need more than just a pretty face for social media.

Consumers have become more and more empowered to seek unbiased online product reviews, through social, from real people. Beauty vlogging is also turning into quite the lucrative industry – YouTube makeup tutorials are a big hit, and are amongst the most-viewed videos on YouTube. Makeup lovers are using this platform to trial the hottest makeup looks, whilst showcasing products used to achieve the look, and they are being watched by millions of beauty shoppers wanting to stay on trend. According to a Google study conducted in 2014, 70% of beauty purchasers said that YouTube videos, especially how-tos and product visualisations, influence what they decide to buy.

By observing what makeup looks are trending on social, patterns can be discovered to understand what products consumers like best and are in demand… take for example the contouring craze taking social media by storm, with Kim Kardashian famously championing the look with ‘that’ sefie, and Twitter and Instagram users flooding their feeds with contouring camouflage selfies. There has no doubt been an impact on the market with sales of contouring products, mostly used by professional makeup artists, now flying off the retail shelves.

Visual social platforms have quickly become the consumer’s must-have beauty tool. Buyers want to get to know the product, how they can use the product themselves, and whether the product lives up to the claim before investing. That’s precisely why the beauty industry needs to take heed of this type of buying behaviour, or risk losing customer loyalty from a fickle market of consumers, chopping and changing between brands.

Latest Posts

Design and disability are so often discussed in terms of basic “accommodation” and “access,” yet my visit to the V&A’s Design and Disability exhibition completely shifted that perspective. Rather than framing disability as an issue to be fixed, the exhibition presents it as a culture, a rich set of identities, and a radical design force shaping practice from the 1940s right up to today.
Read More
Lurkers are your biggest audience and they’re deciding in silence. They watch in feeds, sanity-check you in comments, communities and reviews, then repeat whatever proof is easiest to quote internally. That’s why social feels harder, it’s no longer a click machine, it’s an answer surface. Ofcom shows AI summaries are now common in search results, and YouTube remains the UK’s biggest social utility by reach and time spent. If your story is inconsistent, your evidence is scattered, or your customer proof is buried, lurkers can’t do the job of trusting you for you.
Read More
Pinterest has rolled out a brand-new Media Planner inside its advertising tools, and it’s designed to make planning and managing Pin campaigns a whole lot simpler. In short? It gives you a clearer view of what you’re running, who you’re targeting, and what results you can expect…
Read More