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Dans le Monde - Page 42

  • The Body Shop is turning to new product launches in the #MiddleEast [@TheBodyShopUK #beauty]

    The Body Shop looks to gain momentum in the Middle East with new launches

    By Andrew McDougall+, 25-Mar-2016

    The Body Shop is turning to new product launches in the Middle East as it looks drive sales in the region off the back of a good year in 2015.

    According to parent company L’Oréal’s annual results, the UK-based brand recorded 10.7% growth based on reported figures for the year, and this was thanks to good momentum in the Middle East, as well as in Africa and Europe, only offset by challenges in Asia and North America.

    [READ THE FULL ARTICLE]

  • Changes in #UK skin care routines spell premium-level opportunities [#beauty #UK #skincare @BenefitUK]

    Changes in UK skin care routines spell premium-level opportunities

    By Simon Pitman+, 22-Jun-2016

    Changes to skin care routines that incorporate busy and fast-paced lifestyles are providing opportunities in the UK premium market, according to the latest Premium Market Report. 

    Besides the fact that consumers like to chop and change the products they use according to their needs, the report also highlights that it is new concepts and technology that consumers really embrace when the consider what products they buy.

    [READ THE FULL ARTICLE]

  • Scientists believe ‘systematic review’ will ease concerns around cosmetics chemical safety [#triclosan, #systematicreview, #safety]

     

    Scientists believe ‘systematic review’ will ease concerns around cosmetics chemical safety

    By Michelle Yeomans+, 24-Jun-2016

    According to researchers at the University of Lancaster, lessons from the field of medicine could help provide clearer answers to concerns around chemical safety, particularly in the case of the cosmetics industry.

    Can cosmetics cause cancer? Which pesticides are safe? The aim of scientific research is to answer questions like these, but what happens when two or more studies produce conflicting results?

    Since the 1990s, medical science has relied on ‘systematic review’ as a means of weighing up the available evidence and coming up with a reliable answer. It saves time, resources and avoids unnecessary research.

    Approach will be fundamental in resolving chemical controversies like triclosan

    [READ THE FULL ARTICLE]

  • [@davidfayon] Faites connaissance avec un des Membres du Jury du 1er Prix de la Recherche #RFM / @ADETEM [#nuitdumarketing #adetem]

    Aujourd'hui, David FAYON nous présente sa motivation à rejoindre le Jury qui décernera lors de la Nuit de l'Adetem, le 05 Juillet 2016 à Paris, le Prix de la Recherche RFM / ADETEM.

    david fayon, marketing, adetem, rfm, nuit du marketing

    David, pourquoi avoir accepté de rejoindre le 1er Jury de la Recherche RFM / ADETEM

    Un intérêt pour la recherche et un parcours qui m'amène à considérer que le rapprochement souhaité entre la recherche universitaire et les pratiques managériales sont une nécessité ont natuellement motivé mon intérêt pour rejoindre le premier Jury du Prix de la Recherche RFM. J'entends porter un regard extérieur, constructif et objectif par rapport à des travaux en recherche marketing. Mon apport consistera en une vision transverse avec une expérience en marketing, système d'information, digital et stratégie d'entreprise.

    David, en quelques mots....

    David FAYON, expert technologies numériques, a été successivement directeur marketing de ColiPoste, responsable de l’outil des contrôleurs de gestion de La Poste puis directeurs de projets et responsable Prospective et Veille SI à La Poste Courrier.

    Par ailleurs diplômé de Télécom ParisTech, de l’université Paris VI et de l’IAE de Paris, il assure ponctuellement des cours dans des grandes écoles et universités, et intervient pour des conférences et des missions de conseil en numérique, notamment le Web 2.0, les réseaux sociaux, la stratégie à déployer pour la transformation numérique.

    David Fayon est auteur de plusieurs ouvrages dont "Web 2.0 et au-delà" et "Géopolitique d’Internet" chez Economica et "Facebook, Twitter et les autres…" avec Christine Balagué et "Transformation digitale" avec Michaël Tartar chez Pearson. Co-fondateur de la start-up PuzlIn, il est à présent consultant Web dans la Silicon Valley et doctorant à Télécom ParisTech. Ses travaux portent sur la transformation digitale des banques pour laquelle les aspects marketing et technologies sont clés et liés aux considérations stratégiques et de gouvernance .

    La RFM, Revue Française du Marketing en quelques mots...

    La Revue Française du Marketing a pour vocation de contribuer à faire connaître les techniques et les pratiques marketing les plus innovantes aux communautés académiques, étudiantes et professionnelles dans le monde francophone. Elle poursuit donc une double ambition : une qualité scientifique dans le choix des articles publiés et une sélection basée sur la pertinence, l'intérêt, la portée pour l'ensemble des professionnels du marketing (enseignants et praticiens)des meilleurs articles.

    Première revue française dans le domaine des études et de la stratégie marketing, la Revue Française du Marketing diffuse, en France et dans 38 pays, 4 numéros par an.

    [Découvrir la revue]

    [En savoir plus sur la Nuit du Marketing]

  • #SKII: A Sucess Key (SK) issued from a traditional drink in Japan, #Saké and its craftman's fabrication [#storytelling @SKII @ProcterGamble]

    A NICE AND UNBELIEVABLE STORY

    During a visit of a factory Saké in Kobe (Japan), Japanese scientists find that the hands of sake brewers, constantly immersed in sake yeast ferments during the manufacturing process, are incredibly soft and young, and contrast with their faces marked by old age.

    Discover in this eye-catching movie the story of Sucess Key of SKII, a Japanese skincare brand born in 1970.

    Click to watch the short video about the Saké brewers


    1970- Discover of the Pitera, the ingredient component of th SKII anti-ageing cream

    1990- SKII is bought by Procter & Gamble. This is the beginning of an incredible story with a sales development all over the World: Asia, Australia, Spain, UK, USA and South America. 

     

  • #Luxury #Retail #online: Sales here have escaped the luxury goods slowdown [#promiseconsulting]

    CNBC-  Krystina Gustafson | @KrystinaGustafs 

    Luxury retailers are having another rough year, as value-conscious consumers balk at the idea of shelling out big bucks for the latest designer goods. Yet as the high-end market struggles to eke out revenue growth, there's one area where sales are flourishing: The web.

    Following years of arguments that shoppers would not be willing to purchase a $4,000 handbag online, research published by Walker Sands Thursday has found that 27 percent of consumers purchased a luxury item on the web in the past year. That's up 17 percentage points from just last year, and represents a 21-point gain over 2014.

    The trend is skewed toward millennial shoppers between the ages of 18 and 25, though older shoppers are also adopting the habit. According to Walker Sands, one-third of millennials bought a luxury item online over the past year, compared with 6 percent for those ages 61 and older.

    The digital marketing agency said its findings, which were based on an online survey of more than 1,400 U.S. consumers, line up with industry predictions that digital luxury goods sales will triple to around $80 billion by 2025.

    The report also comes as several recent studies have disagreed over whether online sales are positioned for a second wave of growth or are about to plateau.

    "While luxury commerce has had a slow start in the online space, more than four times as many consumers made luxury purchases online in the past year compared to two years ago," Walker Sands' report said. "With estimates that online sales could make up to 40 percent of luxury sales by 2020, the luxury industry is seeing much larger growth than many other areas of e-commerce."

    Much of luxury retail's online growth can be pegged to an increase in spending at Amazon or other third-party retail sites. According to Walker Sands, 22 percent of shoppers said they purchased a luxury good on one of those players over the past year, up from 5 percent in 2015. That compares to 10 percent of shoppers making a purchase on a brand's website, up just 3 points from last year.

    Some of this discrepancy can be explained by the fact that many luxury retailers were late to the game — for example, shoppers still can't make purchases through Chanel's official website. Yet Amazon has also zeroed in on fashion as an opportunity for growth.

    "One of the biggest drivers of online luxury sales for third-party websites likely has to do with the general rise of Amazon and the comfort of consumers spending large amounts of money online — which also increases with free shipping," Walker Sands' Erin Jordan, who worked on the report, told CNBC.

    According to the firm's research, 98 percent of people reported having made a purchase on Amazon in the past year. Yet Jordan said there are opportunities for brands to catch up, as more shoppers said they are open to making a luxury purchase on a label's own website than through Amazon or another third party.

    Luxury retailers also stand to gain by adopting virtual reality, as more luxury buyers said they're more interested in using the technology for online shopping than the average consumer, Walker Sands said.

    Even as more shoppers head to the web for luxury goods, the majority of sales still take place in stores. According to Walker Sands, the majority of shoppers prefer to make purchases at physical stores in every category except books, consumer electronics and office supplies and grocery.

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