Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Salon in a bottle

STYLE DEMOCRACY As more consumers seek “How to…” answers on their looks, brands are democratis­ing style across personal care and beauty products to create the salon finish at home

- Himani Chandna Gurtoo Himani.chandna@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Lakme's head of innovation­s, Purnima Lamba, made a key observatio­n about Indian consumers: “Most Google searches on beauty are on ‘ How to…’. Indian consumers are looking for more complete solutions today. This is giving rise to brands bringing stylists and styling solutions to the forefront. It is also enabling predicting of style trends.”

Major beauty, personal care and fashion brands, riding on the “how to…” opportunit­y, are coming up with easily accessible consumer solutions. Styling has now become an everyday affair. With more working women and more looks- particular men, retail shelves are flooded with do-it-yourself products including hairfall defense shampoos, conditione­rs, styling products such as serums, hair sprays, mousse, skin tan removal creams and facial kits.

In response to the consumer desire for a more salon-finished look, consumer product companies are betting big on affordable salonstyle products. With its latest shampoo brand TRESemmé, with different hair effect variants, Hindustan Unilever (HUL) is eyeing the consumer who visits parlours frequently.

“TRESemmé satisfies intrinsic consumer aspiration­s to have salon-like hair every day for women, in the comfort of their home,” said Srinandan Sundaram, general manager, haircare, HUL. To sell TRESemmé, HUL has targeted high-end beauty stores and modern trade outlets.

The brand’s advertisin­g brings the stylist to fore. In fact, a significan­t upshot of the consumer “how to…” trend is the emergence of stylist. And this is not just for premium products. HUL has also introduced internatio­nal stylist- developed hair solutions in Sunsilk shampoos. For Sunsilk Perfect Straight, it has teamed up with Yuko Yamashita, a straight hair expert from Japan, to co-create the range.

Style has gone democratic, making the exclusive more comprehens­ible and accessible. Lamba said that this is making trendsetti­ng easier on a larger scale. The recently concluded Lakme Fashion Week predicted “neon” as the current season’s trend. The last season was all about “monochrome­s”. For IMG, the organisers of Fashion Week, the consumer ‘style’ trend is encouragin­g it to scale up the event in India.

Salons are becoming brand stockists and pushing their stylists forward for customised advice, as more salon products go out of their exclusive clutches. Said Maryann Khullar, salon manager, Amatrra: "The salon-going consumer is unlikely to give up visiting the parlour. She is most likely to go with her stylist’s recommenda­tion on what to use."

Voonik, a start-up by Sujayath Ali, a former executive at Visa, is an e-commerce site which wants to become your personal stylist. It suggests products based on type of person the buyer is (you fill a 30-second style quiz) and the occasion the product is needed for. “Our stylists reject 34 items on average before recommendi­ng one to you!” the website says.

“In India, while people from metros such as Delhi and Mumbai know a bit about style, people in other cities are relatively new to many style aspects,” said Ali.

At haute designer apparel stores, stylists are more visible on the floor than ever before. Fashion stylists are innovating to create trends. Anita Dongre, creative director, Global Desi, has partnered with Birla Cellulose to introduce a fluid, new-age natural fabric range of apparel, “designed for the woman who steers away from the convention­al and is a trendsette­r.”

Dutch electronic­s major Philips overhauled its personal care appliances business, shifting its product appeal from convenienc­e to quick-styling.

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HT FILE PHOTO

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