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Shiseido’s Beauty App Promises Perfect Skin — at $92 a Month

Optune’s cylindrical device mixes and dispenses a personalised formula twice a day,

Shiseido’s Beauty App Promises Perfect Skin — at $92 a Month
A model looks in a mirror during the make up competition at the Shiseido Global Beauty Consultant Contest 2012 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Shiseido Co. is making it easier for customers to benefit from — and pay for — perfect skin.

For 10,000 yen ($92) a month, customers will be able to access the Japanese cosmetics maker’s skincare subscription service, called Optune. Using a smartphone app that analyzes skin and a dispenser with five serum cartridges, Shiseido says it can deliver the most appropriate skincare formula for women.

Shiseido’s Beauty App Promises Perfect Skin — at $92 a Month

Shiseido is the latest beauty products provider to embrace technology in the $440 billion global industry. Last year, France’s L’Oreal SA bought a company called ModiFace, which develops software that lets consumers use augmented reality to see how they would look with different types of blushes and eye shadows.

“We see scope for benefits that will exceed expectations,” Shima Yamanaka, an analyst at SMBC Nikko Securities, wrote in a research note, adding that annual sales of Optune could reach 67.9 billion yen. “Shiseido sees advantages in the lack of marketing costs and better attachment with customers.”

Shiseido is targeting women facing “the dilemma of valuing skincare but struggling to find the time to find the perfect formula,” Shigekazu Sugiyama, president of Shiseido Japan, said at a news conference in Tokyo. Research by the company shows that the more hectic the lifestyle, the greater the fluctuation seen in complexion, he said.

Optune’s cylindrical device mixes and dispenses a personalized formula twice a day, with as many as 80,000 different combinations. The product’s software, available as an iPhone app, takes photos of the user’s face in order to detect skin conditions. The data is analyzed together with sleep rhythms and menstrual cycles, as well as external factors such as weather and air pollution, in order to deliver the right mix of serums.

That will help to take the guesswork out of choosing the right skincare formula everyday, Shiseido said. Sales for the monthly subscription started Monday, the Tokyo-based company said.

The Optune service is available in Japan, and depending on its success, may be expanded abroad, Sugiyama said, adding that it will be more challenging to serve the needs of a greater variety of complexions.

--With assistance from Lisa Du.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mei Futonaka in Tokyo at mfutonaka@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Kana Nishizawa at knishizawa5@bloomberg.net, ;Rachel Chang at wchang98@bloomberg.net, Reed Stevenson, Jeff Sutherland

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