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Title: Diapositive 1


1
new markers for beauty
Semiotic watch EUROPE AMERICA ASIA January
2006
2
methodological principle
Observe
society and consumers through a comparative
study of themed press digests from the
Information Centre, and daily consultations with
a panel representing the French and international
press
Keep an eye open for new expressions, new
practices and new cultures, with the aim of
constructing a prospective vision of
sociocultural trends
3
methodological principle
Analyze
advertising and creativitydrawing on our
database, which indexes and describes
advertisements in all media in France and in
over 25 countries in Europe, America and Asia
Apply the idea that the effectiveness of
advertising is based on a genuine architecture of
linguistic, iconic and staged messages, whose
mechanisms and functioning we explore
4
methodological principle
Understand and anticipate
the communications strategies of a brand, a
market, a target or a medium via comparative
analysis of advertising messages and the
sociocultural context
Keep you informed about developments in your
market and about the strategic orientations of
competing brands strengths, weaknesses and local
or transnational adaptations
5
our analytical tools
Themed press digests
Observe
We keep a global and thematic watch on
developments in society, based on monitoring the
daily press and French magazines. In this way, we
glean editorial insights, drawn up by the
Information Centre of TNS Media Intelligence,
which we incorporate into our advertising
analyses.
TNS CREATIVE EXPLORER
Analyze
TNS Media Intelligence feeds into the unique TNS
CREATIVE EXPLORER database, which monitors
advertising in France in all media (press,
television, billboards, radio, and the Internet)
as well as international press and TV
communications in over 25 countries.
Semiology
Understand
Our techniques are drawn from the whole field of
human sciences semiotics, semantics, sociology,
and more. In this way, we explain the structure
of the pitch, its linguistic and visual
coherence, the expressive value of its
significant features (images and text), and the
sociocultural ideals it constructs, so as to
assemble an objective point of view for your
consideration.
6
notes on semiotic analysis
Semiotic analysis looks at signs, at the
relationships between them and at the conditions
in which messages are produced in this case,
examining comparisons between the various media
and advertising messages on beauty that appeared
in 2005. The principle is to understand and
conceptualize the communications situation and to
clarify the relationships between competing
brands so as to strengthen the relevance of the
messages conveyed. Semiotic analysis is a
comparative study of linguistic, iconic, and
staged messages conveyed at a given moment
(comparative study of senders).
7
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8
international beauty watch for 2005
Deciphering strategic developments in the beauty
sector hygiene, care, make-up (perfume) by
analyzing of advertising messages
The concepts, codes, tones, and values generated
by brands in the sector are analyzed as a range
of clues so as to gain a better understanding and
anticipation of forthcoming strategies
9
international beauty watch
Analysis of advertising messages from the
principal brands exclusive, pharmaceutical and
mass market (hygiene, make-up and care) in
2004-2005 in about a dozen countries.
What feminine identities are there, and how do
they relate to beauty? What ideals are associated
with the products? What developments have
occurred in messages from international brands?
10
from selecting an international and global corpus
in 2004-2005
ZONES EUROPE, AMERICA, ASIA France, the UK,
Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands,USA,
Mexico, Brazil, China, Taiwan, Korea and Japan
IDEALS FACE, BODY, HAIRvia systemic analyses of
representations
MARKETS HYGIENE, CARE, MAKE-UP via a broad
corpus covering the main campaigns in the press
and on television
2,500 press advertisements and over 500
television clips
11
to a global vision of the latest developments
in your markets
Trends giving structure to advertising messages
Systemic analysis of representations
Body
Face
Hair
- Report on niche strategies natural
beauty/designer brands- Recap of the strategies
of selected mass market brands
Specific communication territories by country
and brand
12
exploration in three stages
  • KEY TRENDS IN BEAUTY
  • exploration of communication trends
  • ANALYSIS OF REALMS OF BEAUTY semiotic analysis
    of representations of
  • faces, bodies, and hair
  • COUNTRIES AND KEY BRANDS exploration of
    countries and key brands

13
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14
? key trends in beauty
15
market context in 2005 three key points to
remember
  • The performance dimension of beauty products has
    become more radical because of direct competition
    with cosmetic surgery and medicine (injections,
    laser treatment, peeling, dermabrasion, etc.)
  • The global dimension of well-being and the
    development of the concept of healthy beauty,
    which also comes from diet, spas, beauticians,
    sports, etc.
  • The more radical dimension of the competition
    between distribution networks attrition of
    perfumeries and supermarkets versus the rise of
    direct sales, pharmacies and discount chemists

16
three points that influence ideals of beauty
  • Product concepts and approaches to
    communicationsinfluenced by cosmetic surgery and
    medicine (injections and dermatological
    treatments)
  • Product concepts and approaches to
    communicationsinfluenced by dietary trends, new
    fashions linked to well-being, and sports
  • The various distribution networks borrow
    strategies and differentiate their communication
    codes in line with solid values health, ecology,
    dermatology, value for money, etc.

17
in a sociological context of schizophrenic
identity
RESPECT, RECONNECTION, HUMILITY
EFFORT, STRUGGLE, SELF-IMPROVEMENT
18
in a sociological context of schizophrenic
identity
VALUE FOR MONEY
EXTREME LUXURY
LExpress 17/01/2005
19
three guiding structures for messages on beauty
synthaesthetic distrust self-affirmation
exploring all possibilities naturalistic
redemption self-discovery the quest for
authenticity and harmony consumerist
transparency redefining value new contracts
with brands
20
three main types of message staged by brands
TRANSPARENT MESSAGE make choice objective,
withtransparency and fair prices
DISTRUSTFUL MESSAGE the battle for beauty,
withbrand and consumer togetheragainst the
environment
EMPHATIC BRANDpower of the product
PHATIC BRANDcontract of confidence
REDEMPTIVE MESSAGE reinventing a
harmoniousbrand/consumer/environment
relationship
ACHIEVING OBJECTIVITY
OPTIMIZING
self-improvement
self-recognition
RECONCILING
self-discovery
EMPATHIC BRAND better way of life
21
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22
three ideals of beauty
2005
NATURALISTIC REDEMPTION
SYNTHAESTHETIC DISTRUST
Rediscovered beauty reconnection with nature
Invented beauty expressive hysteria
SCIENTIFIC DIMENSION
EXPRESSIVE DIMENSION
EXPRESSIVE DIMENSION
INTIMATE DIMENSION
SOCIAL DIMENSION
CONSUMERIST TRANSPARENCY
Beauty made objective new markers
23
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24
1 synthaesthetic distrust
25
anxiety-inducing context
  • Stress, pollution, unemployment and worries
    about staying healthy are all at the heart of the
    lifestyles of aging city-dwelling populations

26
the medias injunction to be yourself
  • A proliferation of broadcasts and books on
    self-discovery and the inner being is targeting a
    female audience

We all choose to reveal what we want about
ourselves, with a view to pointing up our
individual characteristics and surprising people.
In a world where we feel we have no control, at
least we can all decide how to project
ourselves. Serge Tisseron
27
Defying nature
28
the renewal of Promethean culture
  • The dominant message in beauty is that of the
    protective mask or armour, which may be more
    radically expressed in the image of a combative
    woman, who has a presence on all fronts
    seductress, mother, manager, earner, and more.
  • This Promethean culture is associated not only
    with performance ideals that are often
    medicalized, but also with working on oneself,
    to restrict or modify ones appearance a
    strategy focused on the beauty objective and in
    which the end justifies the means.

29
beauty is a battle
ADIDAS 2005
IBM 2005
PONY 2004
30
proliferation of urban combatants
JAPAN - REJUVENATION
JAPAN - VIDAL SASSO0N
INTER - UNILEVER
31
the challenge of wild women their gaze has power
CHANEL
USA - INDIVIDUALITY
32
the challenge of powerful women their gaze is
haughty
INTER - CLE DE PEAU
JAPAN - SUQQU
33
women who wage war openly on time
JAPAN ROC
USA PONDS
FRANCE - LIERAC
34
more radical claims from pharmaceutical brands
FRANCE - LIERAC
FRANCE - GATINEAU
35
challenge for women who lie and deny their
true age
ITALIE OLAY
USA OLAY
UK OLAY
36
the culture of everyday cosmetic surgery
VOGUE - 2005
37
substitutes for surgical and dermatological
weapons
USA LOREAL PARIS
These ideals are becoming ever more widespread
among leading cosmetic brands and moving into
face, body and hair care
USA ANEW AVON
UK FINESSE
USA DIOR
38
sloughing off the skin
ELLE Spring 2005
KOREA LOREAL
INTER LOREAL
ITALY LACOTE
39
a new set of masks for women run off their feet
Shift from an architectural concept of beauty to
an instant-results, ephemeral concept
KOREA - OHUI
KOREA - OLAY
From applying yourself to beauty to beauty
you can apply
40
synthetic faces manipulate them, throw them
away
JAPAN OBAGI
JAPAN CLINIQUE
GERMANY VICHY
UK T-ZONE
41
outdoing Nature
42
enter the new synthaesthetism
43
enter the new synthaesthetism
  • The idea of beauty recreated each day through
    a provisional, synthetic outfit.
  • Powerful visual codes and exquisitely detailed
    representations of feminine outfits are combined
    with a philosophy of the ephemeral.
  • A form of paradoxical hedonism, constructed to
    respond to a context of stress and anxiety
  • A Zeitgeist that Gilles Lipovetsky sums up as
  • A paradoxical blend of frivolity and anxiety

44
make-up made radical
Femininity affirmed and naturalness replaced by
cosmetic effect. Symbols of masquerade and of
masked faces.
45
reference to cross-dressing
An aesthetic inspired by the transgender
phenomenon, which explores the excessively
feminine impression made through ostentatious use
of cosmetics
Images courtesy of the escualita.com websote
46
flash transformations
A relationship with time that breaks with the
Promethean culture of effort and merit,
preferring instead make-up and treatments that
produce instantaneous, spectacular effects
FRANCE - BIACTOL
FRANCE - GEMEY
FRANCE - DIOR
Elle, 7 November 2005 How to have beautiful hair
in less than one minute!
47
the challenge of the intense gaze
The false look is in demand, showing the logic
behind extensions for eyelashes (the same logic
applies to hair and nail extensions)
UK LANCOME
CLINIQUE
48
the challenge of the seductive mouth
Lipstick with an overflowing look
INTER LOREAL PARIS
LANCÔME USA
INTER - CLINIQUE
49
the challenge of flaunted ears
The protruding ear look in Japan
SPAZIO
S CO - SHISEIDO
DIOR KISS
INOUI ID
GRARSEN
50
diversity of unexpected colours
Synthetism of shapes and colours a break with
standard colours and natural cuts Affirmation of
playful and even libertarian hair fashion
Dove Inter 2005 range of playful metamorphoses
of hair
51
abstraction of synthetic materials
Following the explosion of colours in the 1990s,
proliferation of messages and visual exploration
of textures in the 2000s
INTER - WELLAambiguous visual signature of hair
that is as artificial as any textile
Alien by JPG - the ideal of mutant beauty
52
abstraction of vintage ideals
Vintage design and look regressive retro
marketing and the desire to play with different
periods, with a kitsch, caricaturing aspect, in a
spirit of parody, having fun with masks from
various times
USA OPI
USA PHYSICIANS FORMULA
INTER - BENEFIT
SPAIN LOREAL Paris
INTER - NARS
53
wondrous ideals of fairies and witches
SPAIN - JESU DEL POZO
ITALY - GHD
UK ALEXANDER MCQUEEN
Modern queens and fairies
MATTHEW WILLIAMSON
54
the renewal of dreaminess witches, princesses
and rap
KANEBO care range. SALA feel your beautySnow
White and the White Lady against a background of
French rap
55
power of seduction magical and devastating
JAPAN ANGELHEART
JAPAN MAX FACTOR
JAPAN MAJOLICA MAJORCA
perfume in hair lethal glance magic dust
56
smoothed-down seduction by brand muses
A smoothed-down look that wipes away the traces
of time, and styles the characters of actresses
associated with luxury brands
DEMI MOORE
MADONNA
EMMANUELLE BEART
57
kitsch seduction
  • A key trend associated with the cult of youth
    an ambiguous attitude that combines the curves of
    seduction with those of innocence

Numéro January 2005
58
a key trend among teenagers
  • Every day, the female subject looks for her own
    identity through powerful visual codes that
    distinguish her from the rest but link her to a
    group or tribe, constantly looking for strong
    codes of recognition

59
teenagers
The female teenage target is highly receptive to
synthaesthetic representations, and rejects the
values of authenticity and realism. She shows
herself extremely sensitive to anglicisms and to
the techno-metallic aspects of the product.
The web-group of 15 to 20-year-olds surveyed are
into funny, light-hearted, off-beat ads. They
like the Nike and Puma campaigns, and Apples for
the iPod. but cant stand true-to-life images,
such as those of real women used by Dove.
60
teen tribes
Virtual inspiration from manga representations
that refer to a synthetic, idealized body image
Tribal, cyberpunk inspirations that have broken
with conventional beauty with clearly marked
recognition codes
SCHWARZKOPF UK 2005
ADELE
BEYONCE
CK one 2005
SCHWARZKOPF
61
SO A RETURN TO THE BASICS OF THE PRODUCT EFFECT
?
  • This trend contains renewed representations of
    the performance of care products and make-up.
  • The importance of the innovative design of
    textures and packaging, magic masks,
    extensions, etc.
  • Powerful influence and omnipresent references
    to cosmetic surgery and medicine.
  • Demands for new synthetic sensory experiences,
    breaking away from natural ideals.

62
SO A CHANGE FROM PROMETHEAN CULTURE TO A
FASTER TEMPO
  • Cosmetics no longer simply underline intrinsic
    beauty but feature as an extension of an
    ephemeral mood that needs to be made more
    radical
  • Products that are effective immediately make
    reference to the idea of throwaway or
    single-use beauty
  • - from one day to the next, theres a choice
    between tan or paleness, between red or pink
    hair, depending on the mood, with enormous
    freedom of expression
  • - and spots and wrinkles can be thrown away like
    so much rubbish with an abstract, synthetic
    vision of beauty

63
SO THE HYPERMODERN, HYPERCONSUMPTION CULTURE OF
THE SELF
A critique of a self-consuming society
nourished by advertising messages that invite us
to identify with a bundle of deniable
identities, orchestrated by the clinging and
eternally repositionable action of brands.
We have to banish the illusion that a real self
exists, an interior truth that is there from the
start. You are what you are allows belief in
the existence of this inalienable innate self, on
which everyone can rely as soon as it has been
identified, thus avoiding the need for constant
self-invention. In reality, the modern
individual comprises a multifaceted assembly a
building that is constantly under construction.
WITH THE RISK OF LOSING ONES IDENTITY
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65
2 naturalistic redemption
66
enter new natural responses
  • In 2005, we witnessed an explosion in the
    natural, for both product and communications
    concepts, as opposed to the Promethean culture of
    synthetic cosmetics.
  • More and more, beauty is being perceived as a
    balance to be regained, in harmony with
    nature,under the influence of oriental
    philosophy.
  • Nature is given new value as a guarantor, an
    inspiration and a response to the problems we
    face stress and pollution in particular.

67
scale of the organic fashion phenomenon a refuge
  • In reaction to the general climate of distrust,
    there is greater suspicion about how innocuous
    cosmetic products are, and an infatuation with
    organic cosmetics in the media

VOTRE BEAUTE - feature on ORGANIC, 2005
ELLE 18 April 2005
68
a botanical wave sweeping over all sectors
  • In fashion, distribution, cars, services, and
    more,the colour green and ecological problems
    are omnipresent

celebration of green themesin every medium
DANONE BIO 2005
EDF Green KW 2005
69
a botanical wave sweeping over all sectors
FREEDENT HERBAL - May 2005
  • The need to get back to nature

JALOUSE/eco-architects - JUNE 2005
LE MONDE MAY 2005 Universal Exposition in
Aichi, Japan in September 2005
70
a wave thats settling in
  • This botanical fashion is losing its seasonal
    character and becoming a basic theme all year
    round, and being linked more and more to the
    rediscovery of sensory values.

ELLE November 2005Green in Winter
71
enter new natural responses
  • Beyond the phenomenon of trendiness, various
    fields of communication are appearing and
    constructing new messages about natural
    efficacy - a militant dimension in favour of a
    naturalistic ethic, associated with a message
    about the effectiveness of the global approach
  • - a narcissistic dimension of sensory
    comfort,associated with the effectiveness of
    oral consumption of natural products
  • - a dimension of reconciliation between science
    and nature, which some brands are adopting as
    their own territory

72
space and time rediscovered
73
the naturalistic ethic and the body as an
ecosystem
  • The idea of reconciliation between beauty and
    nature follows a militant philosophy and affirms
    respect for life.
  • Skin appears as a major preoccupation in every
    country living skin, breathing skin, skin as an
    ecosystem to be respected.

USA DOVE Lets leave the oil in your hair
74
the body as ecosystem and living skin
  • The idea is to stimulate the natural functions of
    the skin and help it to regain its balance and
    regenerate itself from the skin as an object to
    the skin as a subject
  • An educational exploration of this function from
    Yves Rocher

FRANCE YVES ROCHER plant serum
Recreating a story a damaged acacia from Senegal
The focus is first on the acacia, then on the
skin, which recreates its own collagen
The humility of the brand,which only isolates
and decodes the plant polysaccharides
75
the body as ecosystem and living skin
  • The symbol of the tree is associated with a model
    of balance (transpiration sprouting of leaves
    anchoring of roots)

ITALY LERBOLARIO
The Japanese cypress, a tree of beauty. A skin
protected by nature.
JAPAN RIUP
76
the power of nature captured and domesticated
  • Militant naturalistic strategies from Brazilian
    brands such as Natura and Bioextratus, which
    demonstrate that nature is beneficial and
    all-powerful

BRAZIL BIOEXTRATUS
77
the power of nature captured and domesticated
  • Magical domestication of nature in Asia
    (especially in Korea and Taiwan)

KOREA BOOTS
78
the power of nature captured and domesticated
  • Provençal roots an international fashion
    phenomenon

TAIWAN INNIS with lavender
79
the power of nature rooted in folklore
  • Provençal roots cultivating the myth through the
    tale of our origins

TAIWAN LOCCITANE essence of immortelle
(strawflowers)
80
the power of nature rooted in folklore
  • Brazilian roots cultivating the myth through the
    tale of our origins

FRANCE NATURA advertisement for the first
shop in Paris
81
drawing on new resources quite simply
Reaffirming the basics of a healthy life for the
skin HYDRATION and SLEEP
USA VASELINE
USA OLAY
82
the need for new resources and the search for
isolation
The fantasy of isolation in editorial material
all the better to rediscover oneself
83
rediscovering the benefits of ceremony
Tea ceremony and wine tasting all the better to
rediscover oneself
JAPAN MISIA
NETHERLANDS SHISEIDO
JAPAN NIVEA
JAPAN ELIXIR SHISEIDO
84
rediscovering the benefits of ceremony
Visual codes conveying authenticity and
tradition all the better to rediscover oneself
JAPAN PELICAN
JAPAN DOVE
FRANCE THE ART OF KI BY KENZO
85
the need for new resources and search for
authenticity
The isolation of spas thermal treatments all
the better to rediscover oneself
UK EVIAN
JAPAN AVENE
86
rediscovering ceremonies and the body as
ecosystem
Softness and respect for life
87
recreating ceremonies and the body as ecosystem
Metaphors of nourishment and respect for life
ITALY - LACTACYD
ITALY - THE BODY SHOP
ITALY - AVEENO
88
respect and adapted ceremonies
Targeted rituals and respect for every part of
the body
TECHNIKART Mademoiselle Summer 2005
UK - OPI
89
sensory natureand balance
90
efficacy of cosmeto-foods
Strong presence in editorial matter of
anti-aging diets and cosmeto-foods magnesium,
calcium, omega-3
Jalouse, August 2005
Japanese food medicine
91
efficacy of the cure
The cure themecustom dietetic programmesto be
beautiful from the inside out
92
sensory character and simplicity of consuming
nature
Vitality and balance of a plant diet, associated
with fresh fruit and vegetables
93
balanced diet and beneficial ingredients
Vitality and balance soy, carrots, honey
94
nutritive and balancing dimension
Message on balance the need to nourish skin and
hair from inside as well as outside
JAPAN - RMK
95
foodie therapy
Sensory message idea of stimulating endorphins
(pleasure molecules),and the fashion phenomenon
of chocolate in Europe, Asia and America
UK
GERMANY
FRANCE
JAPAN Cocoa Therapy
USA - Lubriderm
Spain - CHOCOTHERAPY
96
foodie therapy
Sensory message idea of stimulating endorphins
(pleasure molecules),and the fashion phenomenon
of cherries in Europe, Asia and America
FRANCE TIMOTEI SENSATION CERISE
JAPAN NINA RICCI
RUSSIA TIMOTEI SENSATION CERISE
ITALY PERLIER
97
luxury and simplicity of a pure, rare
ingredient
Luxury cosmetic approach, precious, rare
naturalness creams based on roses, orchids, and
immortelles (strawflowers)
Echoed in editorial pieces Dr Hauschkas rose
cream,Doux me white rose, the Weleda rose
range, and so on
98
luxury and simplicity of Dr brands
A more mysterious approach, using an unusual
plant Dr Weils treatments based on mushrooms
USA Dr Weil
99
science and nature reconciled
100
alternative or new alliance? science and nature
  • Two types of cosmetics are often played off
    against one another in editorial pieces, while
    advertisements are roughing out messages of a new
    alliance along the lines of Yves Rocher, for
    example

USA ANEW from AVON
Elle November 2005
Votre Beauté May 2005
101
new alliance science and nature
battling against received wisdom
USA ANEW from AVON
102
new alliance science and nature
  • Double message from Aveeno naturalistic
    seduction and scientific efficacy

USA - AVEENO THE LEADER IN ACTIVE NATURALS
103
new alliance care make-up
  • Neutrogenas differentiation strategy between
    dirty, polluting cosmetics and clean, respectful
    ones the Rethink campaign

INTER NEUTROGENA
104
new alliance care make-up
  • Regular mentions of the care dimension from many
    brands

SPAIN HELENA RUBINSTEIN lipstick with royal
jelly
105
SO A TREND STIMULATED BY URBAN STRESS AND THE
SEARCH FOR ROOTS
?
  • Back to the basics of balance, powerfully
    influenced by Zen ideals respecting,
    nourishing, moisturizing, resting
  • Idealization of nature as fantasy plants,
    water, minerals
  • The power of trees, fruit, flowers
  • New roots in ingredients and/or areas that are
    benefiting from the fashion effect
  • Nevertheless, a risk of bourgeois-bohemian
    baggage, which may drag the phenomenon back
    to folklore

106
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107
3 consumerist transparency
108
enter new pragmatic responses
  • In opposition to the synthaesthetic spiral, and
    also with suspicion about naturalistic
    redemption, a third pragmatic trend developed in
    2005.
  • This is based on heightened consumerist vigilance
    in a climate of distrust of the consumer society
    and the beauty industry criticism of the system,
    of pronouncements on beauty, of parabens, of
    sunscreen, and so on.
  • This trend of denouncing myths and habits is
    exploited by some brands, which vaunt their
    functionalism, their service, or the value for
    money they give.

109
back to the product
110
performance made into an objective criterion
  • In 2005, the influence of low-cost models in
    marketing and communications also affected
    beauty, with the idea that a brand can also be
    misleading or booby-trapped and that a consumer
    can make an objective choice.
  • Dominique Quessada and Benoit Heilbrunn theorize
    about this new suspicion as a crisis in the
    semiotic contract, linked to the loss of
    credibility of advertising, which may be
    over-used and contain promises without real
    foundation.
  • This rising trend in many sectors (e.g. the
    Renault Logan ultra-cheap car, supermarket
    own-brand foods and hard discounting) has also
    proved to be a new field of expression for some
    beauty brands.

111
relative to futuristic and magical weapons
UK LANCOME
FRANCE SHISEIDO
JAPAN - REVITAL
JAPAN ON THE PEAK
112
and also relative to the Dr brand
medicalized weapons
The rise of small supermarket own-brands and of
Doctor brands
USA FREEZE
USA FRANCE - STRIVECTIN
ITALY, KOREA ANTI-WRINKLE CARE 2005
113
the emergence of new pragmatic approaches
UK BOOTS
114
back to the product service efficiency
  • One measure of the service provided a lasting
    product effect

UK CLAIROL
UK BOOTS
115
back to the product freshness of the ingredients
  • Performance demonstrated in a playful comparative
    way in Brazil

BRAZIL ROSE
116
back to the product minimalist illustrations
  • Product benefits illustrated along the lines of
    the minimalist communications used by Clinique

UK DOVE
USA INFUSIUM
117
back to the product and minimalist messages
  • Wisdom and complicity based on popular sayings

UK BIORE
USA OLAY
118
multi-purpose products and functional simplicity
  • Catching the eye with a combined vision of care
    from Lierac

France LIERAC
119
all-purpose products and functional simplicity
  • The idea of an action that makes life simpler

GERMANY FREI
120
multi-purpose products and functional simplicity
  • The idea of clearing out the bathroom
    cupboardand so making life simpler

USA OLAY
121
pro performance and functional simplicity
The promise of getting the same results at home
INTER DOVE
122
adapting pro tools to the general public
The promise of getting the same results at home
Elle 7 November 2005 Youre the pro! pro
anti-cellulite equipment tooth whitening streaks
and brushing home peeling, etc.
Botox
peeling
wrinkle treatment
123
performance of home-made beauty recipes
The promise of getting the same results at home
Elle 7 November 2005
124
performance of home-made products
Consumerist criticism a move back to the
simplicity of all things hand-made revival of
handicrafts and personal creativity the creative
nature of the object designed as a remaking of
the self and a mirror of the self.
Les échos 2005
The Happy Victims Exhibition by Kyoichi Tsusuki
in 2004 Critique of identity construction
focused on appropriating objects and the
requirement that they be reproducible, in the
vicious circle of I consume, therefore I am.
The revival of knittingElle 2005
125
reaction from the pros denouncing home-made
A new defence of professionalism, especially in
the hairdressing sector defensive messages about
professional expertise
UK, USA - TRESSEME
JAPAN MODS HAIR
126
reactions from pros
Exclusivity only in salons or from experts
127
relaxation and realism
128
simplifying beauty more realistic messages
  • A militant movement launched by Olay and Dove in
    the English-speaking world, with a less
    stereotypical vision of beauty, and more
    realistic representations of skin

USA DOVE
129
tolerance and realism
  • Age sublimated meaning, experience, blossoming
    a message which is also gaining currency in the
    up-market sector

FRANCE ROC
FRANCE AND UK - CLARINS
UK - CLINIQUE
JAPAN - ICHIMOKI
130
simplifying beauty tolerance and realism
  • Age proclaimed, and the expressiveness of
    laughter, marking a break with advertising
    stereotypes expressiveness of laughter with
    Natura Chronos

BRAZIL NATURA
131
coping with her diversity
Theme of multiple female roles
USA - SECRET
132
simplifying beauty coping with ethnocentric
beauty
  • Proliferation of campaigns that make fun of
    Western-style tans in Japan in summer 2005

JAPAN
133
simplifying beauty more realistic routines
JAPAN - MAC
JAPAN ENVIRON
More aggressive and less stereotyped routines
USA - OLAY
134
easy beauty that saves time
  • Idea of beauty made easier by the brand

USA AUSSIE
UK CLAIROL
135
complicity
136
complicity with sitcoms and muses from soaps
INTER characters from the series SEX AND THE
CITY
137
accessible beauty closeness to a familiar star
  • Development of co-branding and event-driven
    operations which foster closeness or build on a
    new closeness

FRANCE PANTENE with Christina Reali
138
accessible beauty gifts and promotions
  • Development of promotional offers especially in
    English-speaking countries

UK HERBAL ESSENCES
UK - BOOTS
UK NIVEA BOOTS
139
accessible beauty generating loyalty with humour
FRANCE - CLARINS
140
accessible beauty education and advice
  • Importance of illustrated advertorials that
    explain the product (especially in Germany and
    Japan) - and affirmation of the contract of
    confidence, especially in the USA

GERMANY LOREAL
USA VASELINE
141
complicity and humour
USA SECRET making fun of beauty secrets
142
complicity with product demonstrations
  • Renewed performance quality of the product effect

USA SECRET
143
self-mockery
  • Absolute need for the product Dove Calming
    Shower in Korea

KOREA DOVE
144
self-mockery
  • Absolute need for the product Dove Calming
    Shower in Korea

KOREA DOVE
145
SO
Three major ways of representing beauty in
2004-2005
2005
NATURALISTIC REDEMPTION
SYNTHAESTHETIC DISTRUST
Rediscovered beauty reconnecting with nature
Invented beauty expressive hysteria
2006
CONSUMERIST TRANSPARENCY
Beauty made objectivenew markers
146
SO
Three major types of message dominate this
international reviewfor 2004-2005
DISTRUSTFUL MESSAGE the battle for beauty,
withbrand and consumer togetheragainst the
environment
TRANSPARENT MESSAGE make choice objective,
withtransparency and fair prices
REDEMPTIVE MESSAGE reinventing a
harmoniousbrand/consumer/environment
relationship
and are combined in product strategiesand brand
strategies
147
to be continued
  • KEY TREND IN BEAUTY
  • exploration of trends in communication
  • ANALYSIS OF REALMS OF BEAUTY semiotic analysis
    of representations of faces, bodies and hair
  • COUNTRIES AND KEY BRANDSexploration of countries
    and key brands
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