X Close

The Body Shop goes bust: Gen Z sours on beauty giant

The Body Shop has been squeezed out of the market.

February 14, 2024 - 1:10pm

Much has been made of the catchphrase “go woke go broke”, but what happens when companies go broke because they are not actually woke enough? This seems to be the case with The Body Shop, a high street skincare and beauty retailer, which has now gone into administration.

Founded in 1976, The Body Shop was once a trailblazing pioneer of ethical, cruelty-free business, built on values of environmental conscience and social justice. Its founder Anita Roddick championed “inclusive beauty” with an ad campaign centred on a full-figured doll called Ruby; she put photos of missing people on the sides of her delivery trucks; and in 1991 she led a petition with over four million signatures to stop animal testing. 

Yet now The Body Shop is another victim of the TikTokification of the beauty industry. Beauty trends are now just a swipe rather than a shopping trip away, and The Body Shop failed to connect with new customers or position itself to a new generation who discover their favourite products on social media. The modern-day ubiquity of “Body Shop values” also means that the business lost its unique selling point; “sustainable”, “eco-friendly” and “green” are no longer just buzzwords but industry standards. As more and more businesses joined the clean, natural and ethical brigade, The Body Shop simply could not compete against more online-facing brands such as Aesop, Glossier, Sephora, e.l.f. and The Ordinary.

But what is really more important to younger audiences: being vegan, or being viral? Members of Generation Z are often hailed as more sustainable, eco-conscious consumers, but the reality is a lot more complicated. Research by McKinsey suggests that the cost-of-living crisis has eroded Gen Z’s willingness to purchase sustainable products, and that all age groups prioritise price, quality and convenience instead. Another survey found that the group is more likely than any other generation to place value in low costs over an environmentally-friendly product. 

Much is made of Gen Z members’ strong moral values, but their concerns about climate change and social justice don’t always translate into purchasing behaviours. They are voracious consumers of fast-fashion brands with deeply unethical practices (there is a whole TikTok sub-genre of “clothing hauls”, where content creators show off their recent purchases, many of which are never worn or thrown away after one use). Zoomers are travelling (and flying) more than previous generations; they are the least likely generation to recycle; and while 60% say a brand’s sustainability is important to them, only 20% actively seek out that information. 

This cognitive dissonance is a problem for brands like The Body Shop, which can’t compete with online retailers on price points but are not quite valued enough that consumers can justify the premium. For example, from 2021 The Body Shop launched refill stations in hundreds of its stores, which may have appealed to people’s social sensibilities, but not their price-sensitive pockets. The company tried other initiatives: discontinuing face wipes, expanding its refill programme to make-up, creating a Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill. Yet nothing beats the cult of convenience, or the lure of a celebrity influencer gushing about a beauty product whilst simultaneously using filters, ring lights and other editing tools. High-street brands don’t stand a chance.


Kristina Murkett is a freelance writer and English teacher.

kristinamurkett

Join the discussion


Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber


To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.

Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.

Subscribe
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

21 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Martin Bollis
Martin Bollis
9 months ago

Seems social justice obsessions are only skin deep.

George Locke
George Locke
9 months ago
Reply to  Martin Bollis

Skin deep

Quite a good choice of words for an article about a cosmetics brand. I like what you did there!

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
9 months ago

Oh, Body Shop…happy memories of splashing on way too much White Musk/Vanilla eau de toilette before getting the school bus. the last thing I bought from there was a body butter thing about 20 years ago. It was greasy and expensive and I don’t think I’ve ever been back in one of their shops since.
If I want a body care treat, it’s Rituals for me. I just love their entire concept.

Sally Owen
Sally Owen
9 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

It has always had the very best eye make up remover! Gentle non harming and effective. The only thing I have consistently bought for the last 35 yrs.

Lennon Ó Náraigh
Lennon Ó Náraigh
9 months ago

From my own small observations, the 15-20s are not into woke at all. Like Covid, the woke mind-virus has hit older people hard. It has inflicted maximum damage on those in their 40s-50s. I mean, those are the ones with institutional power right now; and they are also the ones hell-bent on fatally undermining those very same institutions.

Julian Farrows
Julian Farrows
9 months ago

That’s been my experience too. I was teaching 15 and 16 year olds last year and they just rolled their eyes when the school announced it would be holding Inclusivity Day. One of my students actually asked me why the school gives so much attention to ‘those people’ meaning LGBQT. It’s my experience that Woke ideology is considered a boring old people thing among the young.

Karen Arnold
Karen Arnold
9 months ago
Reply to  Julian Farrows

This could indicate a more balanced outlook is on its way back with just a few more years.

Peadar Laighléis
Peadar Laighléis
9 months ago
Reply to  Karen Arnold

I wish this was the case. But what I think is happening here is reacting against finger wagging. It comes in all sorts of shapes and forms. Not to say that there aren’t thinking kids out there, there are. But if you shove too much stuff down a young person’s throat, they will simply vomit it back.

Cathy Carron
Cathy Carron
9 months ago
Reply to  Karen Arnold

God willing : )

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
9 months ago

Much is made of Gen Z members’ strong moral values, but their concerns about climate change and social justice don’t always translate into purchasing behaviours. — It’s okay; you can say it out loud. People within this group are quick to engage in moral preening, at best, and rank hypocrisy at worst. Which makes them very much like any other group of individuals who talk a big game but do not necessarily walk their talk.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
9 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

yes or alternatively we might see this as a cause to reflect that the image presented on social media and in the right-wing press is actually an unfaithful parody designed to appeal to our prejudices.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
9 months ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

“the right-wing press.” Sure, that’s the problem. It’s never the virtue crowd, just the people noticing how often the crowd’s actions fail to keep up with the rhetoric.

2 plus 2 equals 4
2 plus 2 equals 4
9 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Every generation has an ultra-progressive vanguard, but one of the key differences for Gen Z is that their ultra-progressive vanguard has access to social media.

So their positions are disproportionately amplified, shifting the Overton Window on what it is acceptable for Gen Z to say and appearing to define the whole of Gen Z to those of us outside thhis cohort. With instant online – and sometimes IRL – punishment for those who dissent.

Thus we end up in a place of cognitive dissonance where it has never been more important to performative express the right opinions, even if the majority of the cohort don’t actually act in accordance with those opinions.

Gregory Toews
Gregory Toews
9 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Nice to see the idiom being done correctly. “Walk the walk” is irritating.

Robbie K
Robbie K
9 months ago

what happens when companies go broke because they are not actually woke enough? This seems to be the case with The Body Shop

Cringe.
Having ethical products and ideology should not be conflated with being ‘woke’, these are entirely different concepts.
Some interesting observations on consumer behaviour just about saves the article however.

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
9 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Fair comment for sure. Enviro conscious companies have been around a lot longer than woke.

Adrian Smith
Adrian Smith
9 months ago
Reply to  Robbie K

Yes a very strange line because the rest of the article did not then support the not woke enough conclusion. It is clear from the article that Body Shop has gone bust because it had become noncompetitive. Nothing new there and it would seem a lot of the article is simply there to make a totally unremarkable event seem more remarkable.

Paul T
Paul T
9 months ago

The EU, sorry but it’s true, stopped people being able to bring back their bottles for a cheap refill. That almost single-handedly killed their model and image stone-dead and they have been attempting corporate CPR ever since.

Jules Anjim
Jules Anjim
9 months ago

“They are voracious consumers of … brands with deeply unethical practices”
So, just like their parents then ? And what of it ? Is this the kind of try hard froth that UnHerd is reduced to publishing now ?

Patricia Hardman
Patricia Hardman
9 months ago

No mention of the Body Shop alienating its core customer base – middle aged women who know that sex is real.
https://twitter.com/TheBodyShop/status/1270773993109434373?s=19

Cathy Carron
Cathy Carron
9 months ago

Proselytizing to sell products and services is annoying.