WWD Digital Daily

2024’s Most-mentioned Beauty Products on Social

Data from Buttermilk indicates long-standing heroes by brands like E.l.f. and Milk Makeup are holding strong amidst a swath of buzzy new launches.

- BeautyTok is in its OG appreciati­on BY NOOR LOBAD

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While new launches — like Milk Makeup‘s Cooling Water Jelly Tints and Summer Fridays' Dream Lip Oil — are generating significan­t post-rollout buzz, data from influencer agency Buttermilk indicates hero products, including those introduced as far back as 1999 in the case of MAC Cosmetics' “Ruby Woo” lipstick shade, are dominating beauty discourse on social media.

This is true in the case of Sol de Janeiro, which saw a blockbuste­r sales year in 2023 and, amidst a slew of recent additions to its Cheirosa 59 franchise, is still seeing even greater chatter for its hallmark Bum Bum Cream, launched in 2016. Fenty Beauty's Pro Filt'r Soft Matte Longwear Foundation, introduced when the brand debuted in 2017, similarly reigns as one of social media's mostmentio­ned beauty products nearly seven years later. See also: Milk's Hydro Grip Primer (2019), Summer Fridays Jet Lag Mask (2018) and Tresemmé Keratin Smooth Shampoo (2013).

Meanwhile MAC, routinely a top performer on social media, is generating even more buzz thanks to its myriad 40th anniversar­y campaigns, which have included updating its classic bullet lipstick range with an extra-matte “Macximal” finish.

“These are brands that are very aggressive about community-building — in the best way,” said Aubrey

Brooks, head of data and analytics at Buttermilk. A key driver of mentions for each of these brands has been increased investment in nano and microinflu­encers, who can be more widely harnessed at a lower cost, and see an average 61.91 percent greater number of engagement­s per post than their macro counterpar­ts. “You see the micros really holding the weight, or being the strongest part of those [mentions].”

Though week-to-week comparison­s of social media's most-mentioned beauty products are dynamic (“it's similar to the stock market in that way,” said Brooks), quarterly or yearly analyses paint a more stable picture from a brand point of view.

“There are the brands that have found a real consistenc­y and always remain in the thick of it — in hair care, Tresemmé and Kérastese might not always be number one and number two, but they're always in that top-20 range,” Brooks said.

Additional­ly, new launches that prompt early sellouts — i.e. Milk's February Water Jelly Tints, which went viral in part due to their poke- and prod-worthy gummy texture — often fuel an uptick in mentions for existing products in the same brand's portfolio.

“You see that organicall­y — if everyone is searching for Milk because of the Jelly Tints, even creators who weren't able to get their hands on that launch want to find a way to be a part of that craze for the brand as well,” said Brooks, adding that a brand like Milk — which has three new launches in 2024 including the jelly tints, a lip oil range and a priming foam — is also simply “always on,” allocating promotiona­l budget to heroes like its Hydro Grip Primer.

While long-term creator partnershi­ps are paying off among the top brands, Brooks expects to see a trend toward increased investment in new creator recruitmen­t across tiers, the payoff of which can be seen by Mona Kattan's fragrance brand Kayali, which saw more engagement in 2023 from creators who hadn't mentioned the brand before than the brand's total engagement garnered in any previous year.

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