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A 146-Year-Old Cosmetics Firm Gets Makeover to Woo Gen Y Buyers

A 146-Year-Old Cosmetics Firm Gets Makeover to Woo Gen Y Buyers

(Bloomberg) -- Shiseido Co., the Japanese beauty company that’s 146 years old, is giving itself one big makeover.

To attract more coveted consumers in their 20s and 30s, the company is overhauling its entire Shiseido makeup line and discontinuing almost 100 products. It’s being replaced with a new collection in September that marries popular Western trends such as bolder colors and matte cosmetics with Japanese flair for minimalist design and packaging that appeals to a younger crowd drawn to Asian beauty brands.

A 146-Year-Old Cosmetics Firm Gets Makeover to Woo Gen Y Buyers

“What’s important is we can recruit new users to the Shiseido brand,” said Chief Executive Officer Masahiko Uotani in an interview Wednesday. "We can now get into this new segment of younger consumers who are going to become long-term users for us."

Shiseido shares slipped as much as 3.4 percent in early trading in Tokyo on Thursday. The stock has climbed more than 50 percent so far this year.

The company, which operates the millennial-friendly brands Laura Mercier and NARS, is betting huge on young consumers in a bid to keep up with the $440 billion global beauty industry that’s seen smaller brands gain followers while technology disrupts shopping habits. Shiseido is targeting sales to grow 20 percent to almost $11 billion by 2020.

A 146-Year-Old Cosmetics Firm Gets Makeover to Woo Gen Y Buyers

It’s also enlisting 16-year-old Russian figure skater and Olympic champion Alina Zagitova to help the company sell high-end beauty products. The skater will be the new face of Shiseido in marketing campaigns later this year.

Key to the company’s push among younger consumers is using the newly-launched cosmetics line as a way to hook them into using Shiseido-branded items. Makeup constitutes about 10 percent of sales for the Shiseido brand, with the remaining revenue coming from skincare. Uotani said he wants to grow makeup sales to 30 percent.

“We still have room to grow with younger, millennial consumers,” said Uotani, speaking in Tokyo. “They will use this, and we will introduce skincare products to them as well.”

A 146-Year-Old Cosmetics Firm Gets Makeover to Woo Gen Y Buyers

The company will spend a record amount to market the new makeup collection in the second half of the year, said Uotani, declining to give exact numbers. It will roll out the products in 88 markets and expects them to sell best in the U.S., Europe and Japan. That will be followed by a roll out in China, where sales of NARS-brand products targeting millennials is “skyrocketing,” he said.

Cosmetics sales are projected to grow faster than skincare in Shiseido’s key markets around the world such as China and the U.S., according to Euromonitor International. Consumers aren’t as brand-conscious when it comes to makeup, making it more effective for capturing new customers, said Jefferies Group LLC analyst Mitsuko Miyasako.

“Shiseido’s always appealed to the mass market in the past, but now people’s preferences are fragmenting,” said Miyasako. “Now the company has to figure out what kind of segment it wants to target and the image it wants to project.”

--With assistance from Daniela Wei.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lisa Du in Tokyo at ldu31@bloomberg.net;Maiko Takahashi in Tokyo at mtakahashi61@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: K. Oanh Ha at oha3@bloomberg.net, Jeff Sutherland

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.