Positive
Beauty
sets out several progressive commitments and actions for the consumer goods
giant’s beauty and personal care brands (its largest division) — including
Dove,
Lifebuoy,
Axe and Sunsilk — and aims to foster a new era of beauty that is
equitable and inclusive, as well as environmentally sustainable.
“With one billion people using our beauty and personal care products every day,
and even more seeing our advertising, our brands have the power to make a real
difference to people’s lives,” said Sunny Jain, President of Beauty &
Personal Care at Unilever. “As part of this, we are committed to tackling
harmful norms and stereotypes and shaping a broader, far more inclusive
definition of beauty.
“With more consumers than ever rewarding brands which take action on the social
and environmental
issues
they care about, we believe that Positive Beauty will make us a stronger and
more successful business.”
The Dove brand has been celebrating ‘real
beauty’ for years; but
overall, the beauty industry has been slow to broaden its definition and
depictions of what is considered “beautiful.” In 2018,
CVS made good on its promise
to stop altering imagery for beauty
products
with its “Beauty in Real Life”
campaign,
which featured diverse women in unaltered images and video depicting “real-life”
beauty moments. And bright spots such as Rihanna’s Fenty
Beauty
and smaller brands such as Cheekbone
Beauty were built around
inclusivity; but the cosmetics and personal care industry at large remains sadly
devoid of color and broader representations of beauty.
The decision to remove the word “normal” was born out of a global, 10,000-person
study, conducted in January and February 2021, which revealed that more than
half of people worldwide think the beauty and personal care industry can make
people feel excluded. The study also showed that:
-
Seven-in-ten people agreed that using the word ‘normal’ on product packaging
and advertising has a negative impact. For those aged 18-35, this increased
to eight in ten.
-
74 percent of respondents stated that the industry must advocate for a
broader definition of beauty.
-
More specifically, six in ten people agreed that the beauty industry creates
a singular notion of who or what is “normal”; and two-thirds (63 percent)
agreed that removing the word “normal” would inspire them to feel more
positive about the way they look.
-
74 percent also want to see the beauty and personal care industry focusing
more on making people feel better, rather than just looking better.
Unilever says that Positive Beauty will aim to go beyond harm reduction and
challenging narrow beauty ideals — and also help to drive a transformation in
how its products are designed and formulated so that they do more good for both
people and planet, deliver a superior product experience, and tap into consumer
trends.
In addition to removing the word “normal,” Unilever says it will no longer
digitally alter a person’s body shape, size, proportion or skin color in its
brand advertising; and will increase the number of advertisements portraying
people from diverse, underrepresented groups.
“Every day, we see and hear messages about how to ‘fit in’, how to be included
in very narrow definitions of what is ‘normal,’” says Sarah Degnan Kambou,
President of the International Center for Research on Women. “In order to
champion equity, we need to challenge these restrictive ‘norms’ and create
societies and communities that celebrate diversity — and the unique qualities
and ideas that each person brings. Beauty is no exception. We look forward to
seeing Unilever advance these commitments and hold themselves to the high
standards they have set out before them.”
Positive Beauty follows the launch of Clean Future, the sustainable business
strategy of Unilever’s Home Care Division in September 2020; and Future
Foods,
the sustainable business strategy of Unilever’s Foods & Refreshment Division in
November 2020; and the company’s work with the longstanding Unstereotype
Alliance, which seeks to eradicate
stereotypes from the advertising industry.
Learn more about Positive Beauty
…
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Mar 9, 2021 1pm EST / 10am PST / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET