WWD Digital Daily

Instagram’s 10 Top- trending Fragrance Brands

Data from Mintoiro indicates niche fragrance brands are evolving the category's marketing — and taking over Instagram in the process.

- BY NOOR LOBAD

Let the (fragrance) notes be heard — and seen.

In stark contrast to fragrance marketing's long-standing, sex-centric M.O., many of the category's buzziest brands today are leaning into perfume notes as the champions of their storytelli­ng efforts.

Case in point: Kayali's smoky

Instagram rollout of its recent Oudgasm collection; the bright-orange feed takeover inaugurati­ng Parfums de Marly's new bergamot-infused Perseus fragrance, and a fusion of AI-generated, plus real in-store pumpkin installati­ons indicating the launch of a new pumpkin candle by South Korea's Tamburins, the toptrendin­g fragrance brand on Instagram in March (and February), per Mintoiro.

"You don't see a lot of [social media's] top-performing brands engaging in that, 'oh — if you wear this fragrance you'll attract the opposite sex' kind of messaging anymore,' said founder Jennifer Carlsson, noting that storytelli­ng remains core to fragrance marketing, but in the case of niche fragrance brands it more often takes the form of "playing up the fragrance notes, and framing the fragrance as for yourself and making you feel good."

Ffern, the 2017-founded "slow" fragrance brand which sells via seasonal drops, exemplifie­s this approach.

More than they depict people or even perfume flacons, the brand's most recent Instagram posts feature rhubarb stalk and white hyacinth flower portraitur­e — main notes in the brand's new Spring 24 Organic Eau de Parfum drop.

Though much is said about TikTok's burgeoning fragrance community — otherwise known as PerfumeTok — Instagram still takes the cake in terms of where fragrance companies are focusing their brand-building and creative efforts. Mintoiro data indicates far fewer fragrance brands have actually establishe­d an owned presence on TikTok in comparison to their makeup and skin care counterpar­ts.

This is in part due to time — "It's just been a standard that brands should be on Instagram for longer" — as well as the cadence of fragrance launches versus that of other beauty categories: "fragrance moves more slowly; it's also more expensive, and there are more Millennial­s than Gen Z on Instagram, while TikTok has a younger demographi­c on average," Carlsson said.

The top-trending fragrance brands on Instagram in March, based on engagement, follower growth and reach, per Mintoiro.

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