Diversification, Innovation and TikTok Virality: All the Juice From Beauty Suppliers at Cosmoprof Worldwide Bologna

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BOLOGNA, Italy — Global political and economic woes were distant echoes that didn’t impact the upbeat mood of beauty companies exhibiting at Cosmoprof Worldwide Bologna, which mirrored the positive momentum the sector is experiencing. The four-day trade show that closed on March 24 saw a 4 percent increase in the number of exhibitors to 3,012 companies from 69 countries and drew 248,500 visitors from 150 countries, with the international attendance up 9 percent compared to last year.

According to market analysis by Euromonitor International and shared by the fair’s organizers, on a global scale the beauty industry will reach a value of $670 billion by the end of the year, with an average annual growth of 9 percent expected for the next four years.

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The projections were confirmed by beauty and packaging manufacturers, that despite confronted with disparate challenges — from shipment delays and logistic issues to increasing prices of raw materials and cyberattacks — shared optimistic outlooks for the year.

Renato Semerari, chief executive officer of cosmetic manufacturing powerhouse Intercos Group, said the company expects 2024 sales to increase between 6 and 8 percent at constant exchange rates versus 2023, when it posted net sales of 988.2 million euros. And this despite some hurdles experienced in the first quarter of the year, including a cyberattack causing a temporary suspension of its IT services last month and eventually resulting in slowdowns in production and billing processes.

Among the drivers for the year, Semerari expects China to continue to grow thanks to local brands’ performances and the inventory realignment phase embraced by the group’s prestige customers to finally wind down. To be sure, the company noted that after two years of strong post-pandemic beauty market growth, which led to a general rise in inventory levels to deal with the challenging supply chain situation, last year saw a number of prestige brands entering into a destocking phase, which impacted reorders.

Yet Intercos’ sales in 2023 were up 20 percent at constant exchange versus 2022 and it was all thanks to what Semerari and executives from fellow suppliers repeated as a mantra here: diversification.

Diversification and New Challenges

If the pandemic proved that having local outposts to cover different geographies is key to secure business continuity for any company, product diversification is increasingly seen as strategic to offset slowdowns in a specific category or fully grasp the many opportunities the sector is offering.