Challenger Brands Are Leading Sector Transformation

September 19, 2019
Rachel Jackson
Senior Strategist

New beauty challengers have tapped into the popular zeitgeist, taking advantage of evolving technology, platforms and cultural values. From the rise of influencers to the adoption of ethical ranges, challenger brands are extremely adept at delivering on specific consumer trends.

In nearly every sector, heritage brands face an unprecedented level of competition from challengers—a breed of ambitious brands, driven by their conviction, who are leveraging structural changes in retail and media to punch above their weight. With lower barriers to entry and evolving consumer attitudes, challenger brands are winning not just market share but often the market argument too. Nowhere is this transfer of power more apparent than in the beauty sector.

In order to better understand the rise of challenger brands, Initials surveyed over 1,000 British consumers who had recently switched from an established brand to a new challenger brand. Alarmingly consumers aren’t merely flirting with change. Just one in five who had made the change intended to switch back.

As markets shift and consumer purchasing habits change, it’s unequivocally clear that challengers are capturing a new generation of shoppers. What challengers lack in capital, they make up for in conviction.

The Rise of the Influencers

Influencers have been important for some time now, but they didn’t find commercial success until brand partnerships kicked in. This shift is what allowed them to monetize their following. High levels of brand support increased the number of influencers, their followers and their credibility. But the power dynamic has shifted dramatically, so much so, many influencers have been able to launch their own brands, becoming challengers themselves.

Digital Beauty Brands

Many challenger brands have been born in, and subsequently dominate, the digital space. Heritage brands were products of the Industrial Age, but challengers are masters of the Information Age. Where one relies on brick-and-mortar stores, the other allows for rapid growth and exposure to consumers around the world, with the added benefit of lower costs and cheaper overheads.

Challengers can pursue the distribution strategy that best fits their model and proposition, because they’re not slaves to historic trading relationships, ways of working or other entrenched interests. Direct-to-customer challenger brands such as Glossier are truly customer-centric, with a democratic brand identity that uses the internet’s speed, efficiency and customer service to create an ideal environment for today’s shoppers.

A Niche Focus

Success in the digital age demands a specialist focus. There’s no longer room for a ‘one size fits all’ approach.

Fenty Beauty, a cosmetics brand launched in September 2017 by Rihanna, focuses on skin products for all skin tones, the mantle of which is now being galvanised by the likes of UOMA, who offer a ground-breaking 51 shades and six formulations for all skin types.

By focusing specifically on skin tone foundations and addressing historical issues within the category, these challengers are able to offer a better solution. What’s more, they are willing to break category codes and conventions in order to deliver it. This mindset permeates everything they do.

Behind this personalized, niche approach lies an ambition to radically redefine the status quo. It’s just part of the reason why challenger brands are changing the shape and discourse of the beauty category.

Makeup with a Message

Challenger brands are looking outside of ‘beauty’ and ‘products’ to tap into broader consumer trends, behaviors and passion points.

Attitudinal shifts mean people now place increased emphasis on equities beyond functional performance. There’s a growing interest in provenance, integrity of supply chain, ethics and the extent to which a brand demonstrates a relevant social purpose.

Revlon’s partnership with Gurls Talk is an example of an established brand getting social purpose right, in this instance via a collaboration that addresses mental health issues for young women. As part of the activity, Revlon launched makeup sets with specific messaging to promote self-worth, confidence and positivity—showing brands are elevating the role of their products to be about more than just superficial cosmetic beauty.

With this partnership Revlon have managed to filter a purpose-led strategy all the way down to shelf, and into everyday makeup bags—enabling the all-important shift from being a brand that ‘says’ to a brand that ‘does’. Brands that can align purpose and popular societal values in this way will win the competition for consumers’ hearts and minds.

The New Normal

In the beauty sector, challenger brands are fast becoming the norm. Heritage brands need to radically re-think their approach or risk becoming irrelevant, damaging brand equity. Adopting the challenger mindset is crucial.

Established beauty brands can fight back by instituting change at product level. This means new product development designed to resonate with a new kind of audience, one that is used to infinitesimal choice and who are driven by values beyond product benefits.

As seen in Global Cosmetic Industry