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The skinny on the US nutricosmetics market.
June 29, 2012
By: Christine Esposito
Editor-in-Chief
Americans, it seems, are inundated with messages to eat right, exercise regularly and maintain healthy habits, like avoiding tobacco. While obesity rates continue to soar, more consumers say that they are latching on to trends such as eating organic fruits and vegetables, being a “locavore” and some are even exploring the raw food movement. And where their diets may be lacking, US consumers seem to make up for it with pills and capsules. According to a survey commissioned by the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN), 69% of US adults take dietary supplements, up from 66% in 2010, 65% in 2009 and 64% in 2008. Now mix in the strong demand for anti-aging skin care, and that’s surely a recipe for success in the inner beauty products market. But when it comes to ingestible products boasting beauty benefits for hair and skin, the American appetite appears to be lacking. In fact, the US nutricosmetics market has been on the decline since 2006, according to Euromonitor International analyst Claire Moulin. Don’t blame the housing bubble; economics alone aren’t responsible for this steady slide, according to Moulin. “It is the general suspicions of the consumer too,” she told Happi about the sector, which was valued at about $60 million last year in the US, with the bulk of revenue stemming from supplements, rather than food and beverage-type products. Consumers are suspicious because they often believe in instant results, and nutricosmetics, Moulin said, “seem too ‘abstract.’ It takes longer to show results, which are then harder to truly evaluate.” Clean Up in Aisle 12 Some high-profile brands, such as Borba, have media buzz, but a quick check up of the beauty-related food and beverage launches covered in past issues of Happi tells a less successful tale: Dove Beautiful, a chocolate bar boasting skin care benefits, has been pulled from store shelves. Frutels, an acne treatment in the form of chocolate candy, looks to be out of business. Nestlé’s Glowelle, a beauty drink that was sold in both ready-made and powder form, is not on the market. Crystal Light no longer sports“Skin Essentials” SKUs (although it does offer one of the flavor profiles from the range, only without skin-related language on the pack, according to a Kraft spokesperson). Clif Bar no longer offers its skin-health slanted tea cake in the Luna bar range. (But interestingly enough, a mini-sample size Luna bar was packed in the June Birchbox). But that’s not to say the cupboard is entirely bare. For example, The Balance Bar Company, a maker of nutrition and energy bars that’s been in business since 1992, has introduced Nimble, billed as a bar for women that takes “healthy snacking a beautiful step forward,” according to Erin Lifeso, director of marketing. Fortified with antioxidants, beta-carotene, Nimble contains FloraGLO Lutein, which in a recent clinical study was shown to significantly increase skin hydration by 38% over time in addition to improvement in skin elasticity, according to the Valhalla, NY-based company. Nimble bar also provides vital nutrients for healthy skin and seven critical ingredients for women’s bodies like protein, fiber, calcium, iron folate, and vitamins D and B6. “We know that skin health is affected both externally and internally—with what you put in your body being just as important, if not more important, than what you put on your skin—so a nutrition bar with a beauty bonus seemed like the next big step for the category,” said Lifeso. While Lifeso talked up Nimble’s great flavor profile (peanut butter and yogurt orange swirl are the choices), she acknowledged that there’s work to be done to get consumers to bite. “There are still believability barriers though, as we are just beginning to scratch the surface on providing added benefits within products like nutrition/energy bars and beverages, so education is key to convert consumers to being more open,” she said. The Rising Beverage Company is another firm banking on the growing acceptance of nutricosmetics. This Newport Beach, CA-based firm recently refreshed its line of Activate beverages with a packaging overhaul. The new look is designed to call out the brand’s point of difference and determine which Activate SKU meets a customer’s lifestyle as the line includes a number of “concepts” from Activate Defend to Activate Beauty. In addition, there are now enhanced instructions on how to operate the cap, which stores the vitamins separately from the water. When the cap is twisted counterclockwise, vitamins—like tea polyphenols, bilberry extract, acai extract, EGCG and aloe vera extract in the beauty SKU—are released into the water. Collagen Chasers
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