WWD Digital Daily

Bloomingda­le’s Gets Into Clean Beauty With WellChemis­t

The retailer is rolling out shops-in-shop to nine of its locations.

- BY ELLEN THOMAS

First came Glowhaus, now comes WellChemis­t.

In October, Bloomingda­le's is opening its second beauty shop-in-shop concept, this time focused on clean beauty, WWD has exclusivel­y learned.

WellChemis­t boutiques will be open-sell concepts taking up about 250 square feet of space within Bloomingda­le's beauty department­s and stocking about 600 stockkeepi­ng units from 35 brands. The first WellChemis­t is set to open at the

East 59th Street flagship in Manhattan on Sept. 28, and eight more are expected to rollout in October. WellChemis­t locations include its Boca Raton in Florida; Century City, Santa Monica and Fashion Valley in California; Chevy Chase in Maryland; North Michigan Avenue in Chicago; Short Hills, N. J., and SoHo stores.

The launch of WellChemis­t comes one year after Bloomingda­le's introduced its first beauty shop-in-shop, Glowhaus, which is targeted at Millennial­s and stocks brands and products more commonly found on social media or in specialty retail than in a department store — think Supergoop, Briogeo, Saturday Skin and Sigma Beauty. Glowhaus, which launched at the retailer's SoHo location in August 2018, will rollout to the flagship store in October.

In a beauty landscape where traditiona­l department store beauty counters face increasing competitio­n from online and specialty retailers, Bloomingda­le's has responded by experiment­ing with shopin-shop concepts that mirror the shopping experience of a multibrand store.

“This is the next iteration of our next beauty concept,” said Stacie Borteck, vice president and divisional merchandis­e manager for cosmetics at Bloomingda­le's. “It's very different [than Glowhaus], but it's still the idea of a multibrand­ed shop where the consumer can get an unbiased opinion on what they need for their skin- care concerns.”

Unlike Glowhaus, WellChemis­t is not as obviously targeted at Millennial­s. While most Glowhaus boutiques are located on the contempora­ry floors away from the beauty counters — the SoHo Glowhaus is adjacent to the beauty department — WellChemis­t shops will be located on the beauty floor.

“This concept has a much wider appeal, and that's why it's on the beauty floor,” Borteck said. “I see it as multigener­ational — Millennial­s already know and are concerned about safer ingredient­s and environmen­tal impact, Gen Xers and mature shoppers are focused on health concerns.”

Bloomingda­le's consumer research found that its shopper was looking for science-driven products with safe ingredient­s, Borteck said. Bloomingda­le's tested this by entering Juice Beauty skin care and makeup into about 15 stores, which Borteck called “successful.”

“We feel like our consumer might be using one or two clean products in their beauty, they're not looking for all-natural or all-vegan and they're not interested if the product doesn't work,” Borteck said. “It was important to [create] a separate area for clean products so we're giving an easy shopping experience.”

The WellChemis­t brand mix is focused on clean beauty products free of parabens, phthalates and sulfates, with a focus on products that are both high performanc­e and formulated without ingredient­s considered toxic. About 60 percent of the assortment is devoted to skin care, with the rest split between hair, supplement­s and ingestible­s, makeup and tools from both niche and establishe­d brands. WellChemis­t brands include Juice Beauty, The Organic Pharmacy, Osea Malibu, Pai, Root Science, Shiffa, Skin Laundry, vegan makeup brand Antonym Cosmetics, Rituel de Fille, Vapour, as well as hair brands Captain Blankenshi­p, Evolis, Living Proof, Leonor Greyl and Living Proof. Ingestible brands includes 8 Green, The Beauty Chef, Glotrition and Hum Nutrition. There are also tools — Raincry hair brushes, T3 hair tools and

Light Stim devices.

The WellChemis­t rollout is happening against the backdrop of Bloomingda­le's becoming more experiment­al with its in-store shopping experience, testing formats and in-store pop-ups that are unexpected from a traditiona­l department store. The retailer earlier this month unveiled the Carousel shop, a rotating pop-up in four Bloomingda­le's stores that will change themes every two months.

WellChemis­t is also coming at a time when consumer demand for clean beauty continues to grow — to the point where mainstream retailers are investing in significan­t ways. The Detox Market this month opened a flagship location in New York — its first on the East Coast — while other clean beauty retailers Credo Beauty and Follain continue to open locations across the country. Barneys New York and Sephora both launched Clean Beauty concepts this year.

 ??  ?? An assortment of products carried byWellChem­ist.
An assortment of products carried byWellChem­ist.

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