As major beauty conglomerates pursue reforms to improve diversity and inclusivity across their teams and product offerings, a new wave of Black-owned startups are stepping in to fill in the gaps with innovative new products filling unmet consumer needs.
After surging thanks to early aughts nostalgia and a turn away from the matte lip trend, lip gloss is pivoting to skin care to survive the lip-color slump.
While Clarisonic may be shutting down, its founder Dr. Robb Akridge is moving from the beauty device to the beauty appliance through a new startup.
From companies effectively going on rent strike to litigation, retail real estate is going through a time of massive upheaval.
Move over, YouTube. Thanks to the rise of superstar “skinfluencers,” TikTok has become a key source of skin-care information for Gen Z.
As brands have joined the Black Lives Matter movement and promised to make significant changes for greater inclusivity, Indigenous-owned brands have been part of the conversation.
Now that cosmetics giant Morphe has officially cut ties with beauty mega-influencer Jeffree Star, many are asking in hindsight why it took so long.
From finding aluminum-free deodorant to fragrance-free skin care, the growing ranks of clean beauty consumers have another app for ingredient research.
While last year’s VidCon was all about the ascent of TikTok, organizers are emphasizing this year that influencers and brands should take a multi-platform approach.