Ingredient-infused success
Consumers are more educated to about the ingredients in their skin and bath products than ever. They understand the difference between ceramides and niacinamide. They learn about skin cycling and slugging from TikTok and the importance of protecting the skin barrier from professionals.
The constant churn of hot ingredients makes it difficult for retailers to manage skin and bath assortments. Exacerbating the challenges of keeping up with trends is the demand a social media post can make on an item that retailers cannot predict. One GRWM (get ready with me) post featuring skin care ingredient tips from Alix Earle and drug store shelves can be wiped out. Examples of viral ingredient hits include hydrocolloid pimple patches like The Mighty Patch sold at CVS, Squalene in E.l.f.’s Putty Primer and hyaluronic acid found in products such as Eucerin’s Hydrating Cleansing Gel. In the bath category, social media ignited sales of bath bombs, shower steamers, Dr. Teal’s and Alaffia bubble bath.
To keep shelves stocked with hot items, retailers said they keep an ear to social media and shift inventories in stores with an excess to those where shelves are bare to keep in stock.
[Read more: Beauty shoppers turn to e-commerce for purchasing needs]
Evergreen Ingredients are Still Safe Bets
Keeping an eye on future ingredients, brand marketers said they also see consumers
returning to the tried and true. “The buzziest ingredients in skin care right now happen to be the same ingredients we’ve been famous for over 10 years—pure shea butter, raw cocoa butter, natural coconut oil and cold-pressed castor oil,” said Chris Lopez, marketing director for Okay Pure Naturals.
The brand has incorporated these desired ingredients in products for the entire body. Although emerging ingredients lure shoppers, Lopez called salicylic acids and niacinamides “timeless” favorites. “The mechanism behind how they work is so effective they simply cannot be beat at the moment... and they’re ingredients backed by clinical studies,” he said. “That’s why we see these ingredients at the forefront of most innovative skin care products—even now in 2023.”
Okay Pure Naturals offers a variety of skin care products with both salicylic acid and
niacinamides, he said.
New Products:
No7 Future Renew
After a successful rollout in the U.K., No7 & Future Renew debuted in Walgreens in late May. No7 Future Renew has a “super peptide” blend that is designed to bio-hack the skin’s natural repair process, signaling renewal of more than 50 key proteins in skin cells.
Pura D’Or Awakening Body Wash
Pura D’Or’s Awakening Body Wash features a mixture of aloe vera, tea tree, chamomile oil and lavender oil.
Pipette Baby Lotion, Shampoo + Body Wash and SPF 50 Mineral Sunscreen
CVS just added the Pipette baby and sun collection. The range is clinically shown to moisturize skin. The shampoo + body wash is made with sugarcane-derived squalane.
Okay Naturals Miami Beach Skin Care Collection
A sunscreen and body lotion are part of Okay’s newly released Miami Beach Collection. Featuring evergreen ingredients such as coconut, vitamin E and jojoba oil, the products also use salicylic acid and niacinamides—two highly desirable ingredients based on Spate consumer research.