The Mercury News Weekend

Millennial­s don’t want to smell like celebs anymore

Mid-priced scents falling out of fashion with consumers

- By Andrea Felsted and Sarah Halzack

Buying a Britney Spears perfume gift set this Christmas? Didn’t think so.

That’s a problem for the mass fragrance market. Midpriced ranges, including those branded with pop stars and actresses, are falling out of fashion in many developed markets. In contrast, luxury and personaliz­ed products are growing quickly. If they are to reinvigora­te sluggish demand, mid-market produc- ers such as Revlon and Coty will also need to find ways for affordable scents to smell a little more expensive.

The $ 49.4 billion global perfume market has some ground to cover. Over the past few years, the need to get Instagram-ready drove a boom in color cosmetics, and more recently skincare.

The trouble is, you can’t smell a selfie. Consequent­ly, the 3 percent compound annual growth rate Euromonito­r Internatio­nal forecasts for fragrance between 2017 and 2022 lags its forecasts for both color cosmetics and skincare.

But in the affordable segment consumers are choosing cheaper options such as Primark’s scent, which starts at $2.53. Shoppers 35 and under want to smell like themselves, not everyone else, and that’s

bad news for the many celebrity products that occupy the midrange. At the luxe end of the spectrum, consumers in the U.S., Europe and Asia — including young Chinese shoppers — want aspiration­al and unusual options.

Coty has responded by slimming down its portfolio of lower-priced labels since its joint venture two years ago with P&G’s beauty unit. It is now focused on its luxury lines, which includes the millennial-friendly Gucci Bloom and Tiffany & Co. These helped drive a 6 percent increase in like-forlike sales in its high- end division in the latest fiscal year. Estee Lauder has purchased artisan perfume house By Kilian, adding to its store of cult names including Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle and Le Labo, which offers instore blending on demand to give customers the experience of buying something handcrafte­d.

Lauder is finding that customizat­ion is key to the strength of some of its luxury and artisanal brands. Anything that customers see as being “tailored to their needs, their taste, their sensitivit­y, is going to sell well,” said Fabrice Weber, Lauder’s head of highend fragrances. The company’s Jo Malone stores offer scent- combining consultati­ons so shoppers can develop a custom product, and a Tokyo location recently had an artist positioned near checkout to sketch cityscapes on boxes to create something one-ofa-kind.

Earlier this month, L’Oreal said the first investment by its new corporate venture capital fund is in Sillages Paris, a year- old company that lets customers select the ingredient­s for their blends online and choose the intensity. Algorithms suggest harmonious combinatio­ns recommende­d by perfumiers.

And there could be more deals to come - transactio­ns in this space are a fraction of what they’ve been over the past few years in makeup and skincare.

Deborah Aitken, analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, says companies that offer personaliz­ed fragrances and bottles, alongside those specializi­ng in natural and organic products, could now be a fertile hunting ground.

If mid-market producers are to kickstart demand, they will need to find ways to incorporat­e these trends. That’s trickier at lower price points, because a scent created by a top perfumier typically costs thousands of dollars.

The global firms should be able to manage. Producers and retailers have done a good job of taking premium trends — such as contouring and Korean face masks — into the mass market. There are already some early promising signs, such as the bottle engraving service now offered by The Perfume Shop.

If the industry does not adapt, fragrance risks being left further behind, and not just at Christmas.

 ?? DOUG DURAN — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? During the early part of the century, mid-priced fragrances from celebritie­s were all the rage but no more. Perfume makers are looking for ways to reinvigora­te sluggish demand for cheaper products and make affordable scents smell a little more expensive.
DOUG DURAN — STAFF ARCHIVES During the early part of the century, mid-priced fragrances from celebritie­s were all the rage but no more. Perfume makers are looking for ways to reinvigora­te sluggish demand for cheaper products and make affordable scents smell a little more expensive.
 ?? SARAH BLESENER — BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Demand for luxury and personaliz­ed perfumes is growing quickly, while mid-priced perfumes are falling behind.
SARAH BLESENER — BLOOMBERG NEWS Demand for luxury and personaliz­ed perfumes is growing quickly, while mid-priced perfumes are falling behind.

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