Daily Signals 22.12.2025

Signals

LS:N Global’s 2025 beauty coverage reveals a shift towards intimacy and self-connection, as brands break traditional codes to foster reflection, honesty and community-led engagement, positioning beauty as a catalyst for deeper human connection.

The Trend: The Great Beauty Blur

ISAMAYA’s Hyalurolip delivers a plumped, glossy finish while nodding to the aesthetics of lip filler, UK

2025 marks a critical inflection point for beauty. The sector, once defined by diversity and creativity, has grown increasingly monotonous, as global norms are flattened by algorithms and homogenised ideals.

Where once beauty encompassed many aesthetic languages, it is now dominated by uniform standards shaped by social media, filters and digital expectations. Appearance has become a form of digital currency and identity is often defined through replication rather than individuality.

In response, a new wave of beauty is emerging, grounded in complexity, cultural depth, and nuance. From dirt as dissent to theatrical prosthetics and avant-garde storytelling in make-up and fragrance, disruptors are embracing provocation, distortion and interpretive aesthetics to challenge digital monotony. At the same time, heritage-rooted aesthetics, subcultural influences, regional identity and ‘stackable’ beauty – fuelled in part by increased migration – are championing diversity over conformity, creating a richer, more layered landscape of self-expression.

As these experimental and culturally grounded approaches gain traction, the industry is beginning to move away from promoting external perfection, instead guiding perception, encouraging self-reflection and fostering deeper self-connection.

Read The Great Beauty Blur report in full.

The Big Idea: Neo-community Market

Brands are redefining engagement by transforming followers into communities where belonging is the ultimate currency. As Gen Z and Gen Alpha face engagement fatigue from algorithm-driven feeds, they are seeking slower, more meaningful moments of human connection. In response, forward-thinking companies are shifting away from chasing reach and virality, instead creating spaces built on trust, dialogue and co-creation.

Innovators such as Fenty Beauty, Away and Refy are leading the change. By leveraging inner-circle channels, brands provide invitation-only access to product previews, behind-the-scenes content and curated experiences, turning passive audiences into active participants. Real-life community getaways, like Refy’s Mallorca villa trip and Citizens of Soil’s farm-to-table events, further deepen connection by spotlighting shared values, culture and purpose rather than follower counts.

Loyalty is also evolving into cultural membership. Brands such as Rapha and Selfridges are expanding fan clubs and membership programmes that reward participation, storytelling and insider access over transactions. Similarly, Soho House and Absolut are blending hospitality and interactive campaigns to create participatory, culturally rich experiences.

At the heart of this shift is dialogic branding: two-way communication that prioritises listening, authenticity and shared identity. Neo-communities are less about audience size and more about nurturing kinship. For brands, genuine connection is becoming the key performance indicator, signalling a new era where belonging, dialogue and co-creation define value in both digital and real-world spaces.

Read the full Neo-community Market report here.

Refy, UK

The Campaign: The Ordinary exposes beauty industry buzzwords in dystopian new video

The Ordinary's The Periodic Fable™ campaign replaces elements with 49 beauty buzzwords to expose the pseudoscience behind skincare marketing. Created by Uncommon, UK

In a provocative campaign in October 2025, skincare brand The Ordinary called out the beauty industry’s reliance on pseudo-scientific language.

Developed with Uncommon Creative Studio, The Periodic Fable swaps the chemical elements of the periodic table for familiar skincare buzzwords, including ‘age-defying’, ‘magic’ and ‘wrinkle-erasing’ – exposing the hollow promises that often drive people’s trust.

The dystopian hero film depicts skincare users performing repetitive rituals under the glowing light of the buzzword-filled table, illustrating the industry’s cycle of misinformation. On The Ordinary’s website, visitors can click on each ‘element’ to uncover why certain buzzwords are nothing but empty promises.

The campaign forms part of The Truth Should Be Ordinary, the brand’s broader myth-busting platform designed to encourage critical thinking around beauty claims.

For more on this, read our related macrotrend report The Great Beauty Blur.

The Viewpoint: Reframing Ageing

Ending The Age Of Invisibility by Ageism Is Never In Style and Centre For Ageing Better. Photography by Jenna Smith, UK Ending The Age Of Invisibility by Ageism Is Never In Style and Centre For Ageing Better. Photography by Jenna Smith, UK

Jacynth Bassett, founder and CEO of Ageism Is Never In Style, is reshaping the conversation around ageing, positioning it as a privilege rather than a limitation. In a culture obsessed with youth, ageing is often framed as something to resist or conceal. Bassett challenges these entrenched stereotypes, advocating for a world where ageing is celebrated in all its forms.

Her mission began with a personal observation. She identified that older women, including her mother, were frequently ignored or pigeonholed by fashion and retail, despite their style, confidence and spending power. This led Bassett to launch The Bias Cut in 2016, an online boutique offering age-inclusive fashion without reductive clichés, and later her consultancy and campaign, Ageism Is Never In Style, which pushes for systemic change across marketing, media and culture.

Bassett also highlights the role of language in reinforcing ageism. Terms such as ‘silver fox’ or ‘grandma style’ may appear flattering but often reduce individuality and perpetuate bias. She advocates normalising ageing at every stage of life – whether that’s in your 20s, 50s or 80s – challenging both superficial and commercial narratives that glorify only certain types of ageing.

For Bassett, age inclusivity isn’t just ethical, it’s strategic. Older consumers control substantial global spending power, and brands that fail to embrace this demographic risk irrelevance.

Read the full viewpoint here.

The Space: Koyia perfumery asks customers to pay with time rather than money

Koyia, Sweden

In September 2025, Swedish fragrance brand Koyia introduced a forest-based retail concept where the only currency is time.

Visitors enter the unstaffed, cash-free store and spend 599 seconds, just under 10 minutes, in silent contemplation of nature before receiving a bottle of Koyia’s signature scent. Research shows this is the amount of time it takes for nature’s positive health benefits to begin taking effect.

The concept reflects a more synchronised approach to wellbeing that considers emotional, mental, physical, spatial and environmental health. Koyia’s products support this philosophy as they are made from locally sourced ingredients such as young spruce shoots, which are rich in phytoncides, natural compounds linked to stress reduction and improved wellbeing.

By asking customers to pay with their time, Koyia shifts value away from money and towards human experience. As identified in our New Codes of Value report, these are the values that consumers increasingly look for, including brand relationships that feel less transactional and more meaningful.

For further insights into how beauty brands are rethinking retail, read our Scent Retail Futures report.

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