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Cosmeceutical and Anti-Aging Products in the U.S.
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May 1, 2006
212 Pages - Pub ID: LA1194585
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Chapter 1 Executive Summary
- Report Parameters
- Methodology
- Terms Clarified
- Three Cosmeceutical Categories: Skincare, Makeup, Haircare
- The Skincare Category
- The Makeup Category
- The Haircare Category
- Cosmeceuticals Market Leaps Past $13 Billion in 2005
- Cosmeceuticals Market to Surpass $17.2 Billion in 2010
- Skincare, at $7 Billion, Is the Power-Category
- Skincare Category Projected to Soar to $9.2 Billion in 2010
- Makeup Category Thrives, Breaks $3.3 Billion Mark
- Makeup to Push to $4.4 Billion in 2010
- Haircare Category Brushes $3 Billion
- Haircare to Nudge $3.6 Billion in 2010
- Table 1-1 U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceuticals, by Category, 2001-2010 (In Millions)
- Table 1-1a U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceuticals, by Total Combined Mass/Prestige Categories, 2001-2010 (In Millions)
- Still More Plastic Surgery, Yet More Health-Consciousness, Too
- Boomers Still Make Best Targets
- Table 1-2 Projected U.S. Population, by Age Bracket, 2005-2020 (In Thousands)
- Surprise! Twentysomethings and Teens Fret About Wrinkles
- Home “Medical” Procedures Reorganize Mass Skincare Shelves
- Men, Ethnics, Youth Lured by Conditions/Concerns Positioning
- The Changing Distribution Picture
- Possibly 700 Cosmeceuticals Marketers, Maybe More
- But Only About 111 Have Significant Brand Share in Mass
- Table 1-3 Numbers of Cosmeceuticals Marketers Achieving Significant Share* of Retail Dollar Sales in Mass Channels (Supermarkets, Chain Drugstores, Mass Merchandisers), by Category and Selected Product Segments, 2004 versus 2005
- Marketing and Product Trends
- Blurring Prestige With Mass: Now Get High Prices Everywhere!
- Anti-Aging Skincare Assortment Mushrooming
- Skin Peel and Micro-Dermabrasion Kits
- Doctor-Endorsed Brands Still Proliferating
- A Race for Fastest Wrinkle-Reduction
- Cosmeceuticals Marketers 2005 Ad Spend: $1.7 Billion
- Margins Still Rich
- Table 1-4 Supermarket Retailers' Average Gross Profit Margins on Health and Beauty Care (HBC) Products, by Category and Product
- Psychographics: The Old Want Health, the Young Want Youth!
- Big Spenders Not Necessarily Brand-Conscious
Chapter 2 The Products
- Report Parameters
- Three Cosmeceutical Categories: Skincare, Makeup,
- Haircare
- The Skincare Category
Anti-Aging
- Facial Cleansers and Other Preparations
- Hand & Body Lotion
- At-Home Skin-Peel and Microdermabrasion Kits
- Moisturizers
- Suncare
- The Makeup Category
- Eye
- Face
- Lip
- The Haircare Category
- Conditioner/Treatments
- Hair Growth
- Shampoo
- Assortments for Ethnic Consumers Broadening - and Narrowing
- Regulation by FDA, FTC
- Industry Representation
Chapter 3 The Numbers
- Market Size and Growth
- Cosmeceuticals Market Leaps Past $13 Billion in 2005
- Table 3-1 U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceuticals, by Category, 2001-2005 (In Millions)
- Skincare, at $7 Billion, Is the Power-Category
Table 3-2 U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceutical Skincare Products, by Sales Channel, 2001-2005 (In Millions)
- Table 3-2a U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceutical Skincare Products, by Mass Segment, 2001-2005 (In Millions)*
- Makeup Category Thrives, Breaks $3.3 Billion Mark
- Table 3-3 U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceutical Makeup, by Sales Channel, 2001-2005 (In Millions)
- Haircare Category Brushes $3 Billion
- Table 3-4 U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceutical Haircare Products, by Sales Channel 2001-2005 (In Millions)
- Table 3-4a U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceutical Haircare Products, by Mass Segment, 2001-2005 (In Millions)*
- Mass Maintains 61% Share of Sales
- Outlet Share: Mass Dominates Skincare
- Outlet Share: Prestige Edges Out Mass in Makeup
- Outlet Share: Mass Commands Haircare Segment
- Skincare Still Accounts for Half of Retail
- Table 3-5 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceuticals, by Category, Segment, and Sales Channel, 2004-2005
Chapter 4 What Lies Ahead
- Factors in Future Growth
- More Plastic Surgery, Yet More Health-Consciousness, Too
- Table 4-1 A Selection of Statistics on U.S. Plastic Surgery Procedures, 2004 (In Thousands)
- Boomers Still Make Best Targets
- Gen-Xers Getting Long in the Tooth
- Surprise! Twentysomethings and Teens Fret About Wrinkles
- Table 4-2 Projected U.S. Population, by Age Bracket, 2005-2020 (In Thousands)
- Home “Medical” Procedures Reorganize Mass Skincare Shelves
- Men, Ethnics, Youth Lured by Conditions/Concerns Positioning
- The Changing Distribution Picture
- Ingestibles Not Seen As a Threat
- Projected Sales
- Cosmeceuticals Market to Surpass $17.2 Billion in 2010
- Skincare Category Projected to Soar to $9.2 Billion
- Makeup to Push to $4.4 Billion
- Haircare to Nudge $3.6 Billion
- Table 4-3 Projected U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Cosmeceuticals, by Category, 2005-2010 (In Millions)
Chapter 5 The Competitive Situation
- The Marketers
- Estimated 700 Cosmeceuticals Marketers
- But Only About 111 Have Significant Brand Share in Mass
- Table 5-1 Numbers of Cosmeceuticals Marketers Achieving Significant Share* of Retail Dollar Sales in Mass Channels (Supermarkets, Chain Drugstores, Mass Merchandisers), by Category and Selected Product Segments, 2004
- Types of Companies Involved
- Table of Marketers and Brands
- Table 5-2 Leading Marketers of Cosmeceuticals and Their Representative Brands
- Marketer and Brand Share
- Special Note on IRI Data
- L’Oreal, P&G, J&J Command Anti-Aging Facial Preparations
- Table 5-3 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Anti-Aging Facial Preparations in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2005
- Anti-Aging Body Preparations: P&G, J&J, Lansinoh on Top
- Table 5-4 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Anti-Aging Body Preparations in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2005
- Facial Cleansers: J&J, P&G, Unilever
- Table 5-5 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Facial Cleansers in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Five Marketers Hold Double-Digit Shares in Fade
- Creams/Lighteners
- Table 5-6 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Fade/Lightening Creams in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2005
- Table 5-6 [cont.] Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Fade/Lightening Creams in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2005
- Hand & Body Lotions: Four Leaders With Double-Digit Share
- Table 5-7 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Hand & Body Lotions in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Moisturizers Dominated by P&G, J&J, Unilever
- Table 5-8 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Facial Moisturizers in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Table 5-8 [Cont.] Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Facial Moisturizers in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Suncare Double-Digit Leaders: Schering-Plough, Playtex, J&J
- Table 5-9 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Suncare Products in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Hair Conditioner: P&G, L’Oreal, Unilever Still Lead
- Table 5-10 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Hair Conditioners in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- In Hair Growth Preparations, Pfizer Gives Up Share to Private Label
- Table 5-11 Share of U.S. Retail Dollar Sales of Hair Growth Preparations in Mass Channels,* by Marketer and Brand, 2003-2005
- Competitive Profile: The Estee Lauder Companies, Inc.
- Net Sales of $6.3 Billion in Fiscal 2005
- Estee Lauder a Practicing “Brand-ist”
- Estee Lauder Extends Cosmeceutical Depth and Breadth
- Other Estee Lauder Brands
- Competitive Profile: Johnson & Johnson
- Sales of $50.5 Billion in 2005
- Table 5-12 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Segment Sales, by Subsegment, 2005 (In Millions)
- J&J the Queen of OTC Medical Cachet
- Aveeno and Neutrogena: Acquired and Inspired
- Other J&J Brands
- Competitive Profile: L’Oreal Group
- Sales Exceed 14.5 Billion in 2005
- HBC Giant L’Oreal in Cosmeceutical Vanguard
- An Expanding Research Capability
- L’Oreal Acquires The Body Shop
- Competitive Profile: The Procter & Gamble Company
- Net Sales of Close to $57 Billion in Fiscal 2005
- Acquisitions of Gillette and Wella
- P&G Fields Up-to-Date Cosmeceuticals in Wide Range of Price-Tiers
- Other of P&G’s Famous Brands
- Competitive Profile: Unilever PLC/Unilever N.V.
- Turnover of 40 Billion in 2005
- Unilever Sells Value-Priced Cosmeceuticals to the Masses
- The “Real Beauty” Campaign for Dove
- Unilever Controls a Legion of Household Names
- Marketing and Product Trends
- Blurring Prestige With Mass: Now Get High Prices Everywhere!
- Anti-Aging Skincare Assortment Mushrooming
- Skin Peel and Micro-Dermabrasion Kits
- Doctor-Endorsed Brands Still Proliferating
- A Race for Fastest Wrinkle-Reduction
- Table 5-13 Selected New Introductions of Cosmeceuticals, by Marketer and Brand, 2005-2006
- Consumer Advertising Expenditures
- Cosmeceuticals Marketers Spent $1.7 Billion to Advertise in 2005
- P&G Dominant Among Four $100 Million-Plus Advertisers
- Beiersdorf Leads Among Four Marketers Spending $60 Million-$90 Million
- Pfizer and Revlon Lead Among Five Spending $16 Million-$32 Million
- Other Marketers Spend Over $96 Million...
- Consumer Advertising Positioning
- Beautiful People and/or Beautiful Products
- Highlighting Technology
- Specific Age Groups
- Doctor, Doctor
- For Men Only
- Stress Relief
- Protection From The Environment
- Hair Strength
Chapter 6 Distribution and Retail
- More Distribution Opportunities for Cosmeceuticals Marketers
- Margins Still Rich
- Table 6-1 Supermarket Retailers' Average Gross Profit Margins on Health and Beauty Care (HBC) Products, by Category and Product
- Retail Focus: Ulta Salon, Cosmetics & Fragrance, Inc./Ulta.com
- Sales of $362 Million, At Least
- The Open-Sell Format, American-Style
Chapter 7 The Consumer
- About Simmons Survey Data
- What They Are
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And How to Use Them
- The Survey’s Overall Gauge
- Marketing Regions Defined
- Northeast
- East Central
- West Central
- Southeast
- Southwest
- Pacific
- Table 7-1 Projections of Numbers of U.S. Adults, by Demographic Factor, 2005 (In Thousands)
- The Consumer of Moisturizers
- Almost 132 Million Adults Use Moisturizers
- Need, Not Affluence, Regulates Moisturizer Use
- Table 7-2 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Use of Moisturizers, Creams, and Lotions, 2005 (Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
- Lotion the Most Popular Form
- Table 7-3 Numbers of Users of Moisturizers, by Product Form, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Regular the Most Popular Type
- Table 7-4 Numbers of Users of Moisturizers, by Product Type, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Daily Moisturizer Use Is Prevalent
- Table 7-5 Frequency of Use of Moisturizers, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 7 Days)
- Olay, Vaseline, Avon, Jergens the Most Popular Moisturizers
- Table 7-6 Numbers of Users of Moisturizers/Creams/Lotions, by Brand, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- The Consumer of Facial Cleansers/Medicated Products
- Over 87 Million Users
- Youth, Health-Knowledge, Urban Settings Are Prominent
- Table 7-7 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Use of Facial Cleansing/Medicated Products, 2005(Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
- Foaming Washes the Most Popular Cleanser Form
- Table 7-8 Numbers of Users of Facial Cleansing/Medicated Products, by Product Form, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Simple Cleansing Is the Most Common Motivation to Use
- Table 7-9 Reasons for Use of Facial Cleansing/Medicated Products, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Daily Use Predominates
- Table 7-10 Frequency of Use of Facial Cleansing/Medicated Products, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 7 Days)
- Olay, Neutrogena Are Most Popular Cleansing/Medicated Products Brands
- Table 7-11 Numbers of Users of Facial Cleansers/Medicated Products, by Brand, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- The Consumer of Suncare Products
- Almost 82 Million Adults Use Suncare Products
- Affluence, White Skin Encourage Use of Suncare Products
- Table 7-12 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Purchase of Suncare Products,* 2005 (Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
- Sunblock the Dominant Suncare Product Type
- Table 7-13 Numbers of Users of Suncare Products, by Form, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- A Tendency to Consumption of Only One or Two Units Annually
- Table 7-14 Frequency of Use of Suncare Products, by Bottles/Tubes Used, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Consumers Prefer Tanning with Coppertone, Banana Boat
- Table 7-15 Numbers of Users of Suncare Products, by Brand, 2005 (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- The Consumer of Hair Conditioner/Treatments
- About 105 Million Adult Users
- Youth, Presence of Kids, Minorities Influence Conditioner Use
- Table 7-16 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Use of Hair Conditioner/Treatments, 2005 (Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
- Pantene and Suave Vastly More Popular Than Other Brands
- Table 7-17 Use of Hair Conditioner/Treatments, by Brand, 2005 (Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
- The Consumer of Cosmeceutical Makeup
- Numbers of Cosmeceutical Makeup Users, By Brand
- Table 7-18 Numbers of Users of Cosmeceutical Makeup Types, by Brand (Thousands of Adults, in Recent 12 Months)
- Psychographics of the Cosmeceutical Consumer
- The Old Want Health, the Young Want Youth!
- Table 7-19 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Agreement with Two Statements of Attitude, 2005 (Adults in Thousands)
- Big Spenders Not Necessarily Brand-Consciousness...
- Table 7-20 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Agreement with Two Statements of Attitude, 2005 (Adults in Thousands)
- The Teen Consumer of Cosmeceuticals
- Girls, Girls, Girls!
- Table 7-21 Projections of Numbers of U.S. Teenagers, by Demographic Factor, 2005 (In Thousands)
- Blacks and Hispanics Most Apt to Moisturize
- Older Teens Notable Facial Cleanser/Medicated Products Users
- Younger Teens, Whites Gravitate to Suncare
- Older Teens, Blacks and Hispanics Are Standout Hair Conditioner Users
- Table 7-22 Demographic Characteristics Most Favoring Teenagers' Use of Cosmeceuticals, by Product, 2006 (Adults in Thousands, in Recent 12 Months)
Chapter 8 Trends and Opportunities
- Cosmeceuticals Strategy Not Broke? Don’t Fix It!
- The Next Wave(s) in Marketing/Product Trends
- A Return to Low-End Activity
- Cosmeceutical Makeup SKUs
- Natural/Organic/Botanical Positioning
- Stress Relief
- Cross-Branding
- Private Labels Becoming Real Brands
- The Dove Experiment
- Look for the Demographic Quirks
- Ingestibles Are a Sideline
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