How Target Is Bucking Industry Trends and Growing in Mass Market Beauty

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Beauty’s mass market might be in a state of flux, but Target Corp. is only heading upward.

Per the company’s last earnings call, beauty helped drive a 2.7 percent growth in the second quarter, alongside fashion, with net sales totaling $25.5 billion and beating Wall Street expectations. Within that, beauty rose 9 percent on a comparable basis, on top of double-digit growth a year ago.

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The secret sauce is the right brand mix, a bevvy of price points, an integrated digital strategy and a willingness to jump on trends early, said Rick Gomez, Target’s executive vice president and chief commercial officer, in a wide-ranging interview with WWD.

“Beauty at Target has been a booming business for us. We have had growth every year for the last five years, and that has made our beauty business actually double in size since 2019,” Gomez said.

That success stands in sharp contrast to the broader mass market. In the first half in the U.S. mass hair and skin care grew only 2 and 1 percent respectively, while fragrance dipped 1 percent and makeup fell 4 percent, per Circana.

Among a slew of other factors, Gomez attributed Target’s growth to the right assortment — at the right time.

“Beauty is all about newness and innovation. Consumers want to try new products and new brands, and we’ve made a big commitment to launching newness this year,” he said, adding that thousands of stock keeping units would launch in 2025.

Among the successful launches is Blake Brown, the hair care brand incubated by Give Back Beauty in tandem with founder Blake Lively, which on launch day alone had the five bestselling hair care items at Target. “That has been the largest hair care launch in the history of Target,” Gomez said. “It goes to show when you get the right product, on-trend, at an affordable price, it does really well for us.”

Gomez also pointed to L’Oréal’s Colorsonic, a Target exclusive, in addition to Tabitha Brown’s Donna’s Recipe and Jennifer Aniston’s LolaVie. The latter is available through Target’s partnership with Ulta Beauty, which will come to entail shops-in-shop in roughly 800 doors in coming years and has given Target’s assortment a wide breadth of price points.

“50 percent of our [beauty] assortment is under $10, but value is important in the sense that consumers are looking for high quality products — they’re also shopping prestige,” Gomez said. “It’s about providing the range of value across price points and also offering quality product at an affordable price.”