Tag Archives: Australia

How beauty giants are battling it out for Australian shoppers

Stroll down any major shopping thoroughfare in Australia and you’ll come across dozens of beauty retailers jostling for your attention. Mecca, Wesfarmers’ Priceline and smaller retailers such as W Cosmetics have all carved out a cosmetic counter of their own in the market.

Among them is Sephora, the American brand owned by luxury conglomerate LVMH.

Since entering Australia in 2014, Sephora has expanded to 32 stores (with 3000 stores globally), including a new store in Bankstown in Sydney’s south-west. The company plans to open two more stores by year’s end.

Sephora generated $315.8 million in revenue between 2019 and 2023 with net loss profit after tax of minus $13.7 million, according to data from IBISWorld, although Sephora reports the average spend in 2025 has seen double-digit growth compared to pre-COVID 2019 levels.

Despite recent gains, IBISWorld data shows it commands 6.1 per cent of the market while Mecca maintains a 21.4 per cent stake hold.

Jenny Cheah, Sephora’s Singapore-based managing director in South-East Asia, Oceania and India, says Australia remains a key focus for the brand.

“Australian consumers are extremely sophisticated. They understand beauty trends very well, are educated, and we want to be here with them for their journey in beauty,” she says.

It’s a competitive sector. Market share concentration in the beauty sector remains low, with a high number of smaller retailers, leaving room for other players to lay claim to a slice of the pie.

To this end, Wesfarmers has been expanding its beauty offerings in Priceline and a new dedicated beauty store atomica, while Adore Beauty launched its first bricks-and-mortar store in Melbourne last year after 25 years in business.

Dr Marian Makkar, a senior marketing lecturer at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, says differentiation is a key challenge for multi-brand retailers. Exclusive brand partnerships and a warm, bespoke customer service experience with an emphasis on bricks-and-mortar retail are central.

“When you go into the retail space itself, you want to feel like an exclusive customer,” she says.

For Mecca, staff training is an essential part of the offering, with the brand investing four per cent of turnover in education.

“Our team members are true beauty experts – deeply knowledgeable about our brands, products, and application techniques – and skilled at sharing that expertise in a warm, engaging, and high-touch way,” the company told this masthead.

While Sephora’s two main competitors in Australia – Mecca and Priceline – are Australian-owned, Cheah thinks its international positioning gives the brand an edge.

“We go back to the profile of our consumers, and they’re more well travelled. The fact they come to Sephora, they can shop anywhere in the region and they will still be able to earn points,” she says.

“We bring global brand equity and exclusive brand partnerships.”

Makkar attributes Mecca’s success in part to its high concentration of exclusive brands (around 80 per cent). It appears to be working, with revenue growing from $971.5 million in 2022 to an estimated $1.3 billion for the 2025 financial year.

Sephora was unable to say what percentage of its more than 500 brands were exclusive, but it’s clear that it’s a strategy pivotal to retailers’ success, at a time when consumers can order online or buy in store.

This month, Sephora will add Lady Gaga’s Haus Labs to its stable of Sephora-only brands in the Asia-Pacific region, which also includes Selena Gomez’s Rare Beauty and Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty. First launched in 2019 on Amazon, Haus Labs relaunched in 2022 with Sephora. Cheah thinks this has been key to it becoming one of the highest-earning celebrity beauty brands today.

“With all due respect to Amazon, I think Haus Lab’s story is better communicated [at Sephora], and I think the brand appreciates that out of us as well,” says Cheah.

In today’s oversaturated market of celebrity beauty brands, it takes more than a famous face to move product.

“Consumers today are so savvy. They won’t spend money on products that don’t work, no matter how inexpensive they are,” says Cheah.

She thinks Haus Lab’s focus on “clean beauty” (defined by Sephora as products free from ingredients such as phthalates, sulphates and parabens), skincare-based make-up and focus on social issues (a portion of every sale goes to support Gaga’s charity, Born this Way Foundation) have all contributed to its success.

In June, Sephora and Haus Labs will create 31 activations across Australia in line with Global Pride Month.

Cheah says Haus Lab’s foundation is the top-selling foundation in US Sephora, with similar hopes for the Australian market.

Sephora has made a concerted effort to support Australian beauty brands too – most notably Ultra Violette, a sun care brand that’s seen rapid success since launching in 2019.

Ultra Violette is sold exclusively in store at Sephora Australia, and has recently entered into the US and Asian markets, again with the help of Sephora.

But securing that coveted “exclusivity” can be tough – Ultra Violette is also available direct from its website and on The Iconic. Cheah is pragmatic.

“A brand deserves to have the brand available to consumers in the way they would like to be. We cannot put a frame around that,” she says.

“In some cases, like Ultra Violette, we would love for them to just be in Sephora and only in Sephora because that gives them a greater marketing edge as well with us.”

Indeed, when brands have the ability to go direct to consumer, why enter an exclusive partnership with a retailer like Sephora?

Cheah says a partnership offers a brand access to their global supply chain, consumer data, merchandising and advice on product development. And she thinks having multiple fronts in different retailers can confuse shoppers about a brand’s messaging.

From a consumer standpoint, Makkar says multi-retailers offer convenience for busy shoppers.

“People are looking for a one-stop shop … you have options all the way from Australian brands, all the way to international brands.”

Author Credits: Lauren Ironmonger
The Sydney Morning Herald

Temu now welcoming Australian sellers in major marketplace expansion

Temu will allow Australian businesses to sell directly to consumers through its platform, following the rollout of its local-to-local model.

Temu’s arrival on Australian shores in late 2023 might have seemed, at first glance, like just another marketplace entering an already crowded space. But beneath the surface, something bigger has been brewing.

In less than a year, Temu has rocketed up the download charts, ranking the most downloaded iPhone app for 2024 – in Australia AND globally – and the only shopping app to make the top 10 free apps list in Apple’s rankings, according to Power Retail.

Temu came top both in Australia and globally of app downloads in 2024
Temu came top both in Australia and globally in app downloads in 2024

With its trademark cocktail of ultra-affordable pricing, an endless catalogue of products, and a relentless focus on deals, Temu rapidly gained traction amongst Australian consumers, helped by a cost of living crisis.

According to NAB’s Consumer Sentiment Survey (April 2024), over 70% of Australians report being more price-conscious compared to the previous year. Timing, as they say, is everything, and Temu’s was spot on.

Now, the marketplace has announced it will allow Australian businesses to sell directly to local consumers through its platform, following the rollout of the same local-to-local model in more than a dozen markets, including the US, UK, Germany, France, Japan, and South Korea.

For leaders in retail, e-commerce, and brand marketing, this isn’t just another channel expansion — it’s a significant reshaping of the competitive landscape.

This new offer is set to change the platform’s local relevance. Previously perceived primarily as a marketplace for cheap overseas goods (predominantly from China), the decision to onboard Australian sellers brings a new dimension to its model, blending local delivery speed and familiarity with the competitive prices Temu is known for.

Source: Temu

The power of Temu’s model and why it matters for brands

Temu’s success is anchored in two things: affordability and range. Its platform is designed to delight cost-conscious shoppers who are willing to forgo brand familiarity if the price is right.

Brand loyalty in Australia is already under pressure, with research from Roy Morgan (March 2024) finding that 62% of Australian consumers are actively looking for cheaper alternatives across most shopping categories. It is particularly prevalent among younger demographics, with 64% of gen Z saying they’d switch brands for better value or mission alignment (Morning Consult, 2024).

Affordability is driving decision-making at an unprecedented scale, but it’s not just about price. It’s about the perception of value: what you get, how fast you get it, and how seamless the experience is. Temu’s slick, gamified app experience, combined with prices often 30–70% lower than traditional retailers, makes it an irresistible proposition for a growing demographic of Australians.

But what does this mean for Australian brands and retailers? 

Source: Temu

Temu’s move to allow Australian sellers onto the platform presents an opportunity: an immediate, low-barrier-to-entry channel to reach a massive, price-sensitive audience. For small to medium-sized brands, especially those struggling with rising customer acquisition costs on Meta, TikTok, and Google, Temu could offer a ready-made alternative for scaling visibility.

Early movers might enjoy first-mover advantages, gaining a disproportionate share in a platform still establishing its Australian credibility.

Speed is another win.

According to Australia Post’s 2025 Inside Australian Online Shopping report, most online shoppers expect parcel delivery within 2 to 5 days, with 66% saying slow delivery negatively affects their likelihood to re-purchase.

By investing heavily in logistics, Temu is setting itself up to overcome one of the few barriers it previously faced: long delivery times. While initial Temu orders often took 10–15 days to arrive from overseas warehouses, the onboarding of local sellers means that same-week or even next-day deliveries are becoming more achievable. Temu now has Australian fulfilment partnerships in Sydney and Melbourne, cutting average delivery times down to 4–6 days for many local orders. This puts it closer to Amazon’s standard delivery proposition, without needing Prime subscription fees.

 From Australia Post’s 2025 Inside Australian Online Shopping Report  
 Source: Australia Post’s 2025 Inside Australian Online Shopping Report  

However, while the upside for quick-moving brands is significant, the risks are equally clear.

By joining Temu, businesses are entering a hyper-competitive environment where price wars are fierce, and differentiation is hard to sustain. Brands risk commoditising their products, becoming trapped in a race to the bottom on price and margin erosion.

Unlike other marketplaces like Amazon, Temu sets the price of goods, which creates a set of new challenges for brands who are looking to take advantage of the platform, with price erosion and maintaining RRP a challenge in the Temu environment.

For brands, the question is not just about whether to sell on Temu — it’s about weighing up whether participation aligns with their brand positioning. Is Temu an opportunity to offload volume lines? A channel for price-sensitive SKUs? Or does it risk undermining premium positioning cultivated elsewhere? There are no easy answers, but opting out entirely may not be the answer either.

Competing in a Temu world

For mid-market brands, especially those in commoditised categories like fashion basics, homewares, and beauty accessories, the strategic challenge is pressing. If Temu’s offering feels “good enough” for everyday needs, consumers may increasingly reserve their brand loyalty only for purchases tied to stronger emotional or status-driven value propositions (think Nike trainers, Temu outfit).

There’s also a marketing and media strategy implication. Temu itself is a masterclass in performance marketing, flooding social feeds with shoppable ads, referral bonuses, and gamified incentives. It teaches consumers to expect promotions, coupons, discounts. Local brands will need to evolve how they engage consumers in an environment that is increasingly ‘deal-saturated’, and lean harder into first-party data strategies, loyalty innovation, and omnichannel journeys that create real stickiness.

Beyond consumer marketing, operational agility will also be a differentiator. Brands with fast-moving supply chains, dynamic pricing capabilities, and localised fulfilment models will be best positioned to thrive. We’re already seeing some players adapt: Cotton On, for example, recently announced enhancements to its click-and-collect infrastructure and free returns model, explicitly citing the need to compete more aggressively with global platforms.

Further investment in private labels, exclusive collaborations, and loyalty ecosystems may also be part of the defensive playbook as traditional retailers seek to hold ground against Temu’s growing share of wallet. Large players like Kmart and Target Australia are already doubling down, trying to defend their low-price leadership by expanding range breadth and direct sourcing to maintain margin protection.

Meanwhile, Amazon is unlikely to sit still. Amazon Australia, which only recently reached profitability after years of investment, will likely accelerate its Prime loyalty benefits and local seller recruitment efforts in response.

Watch for Amazon to double down on local fulfilment centres and possibly offer more attractive seller incentives to counter Temu’s momentum.

Number of app downloads in the US  (appfigures.com) 
Number of app downloads in the US. Source: App Figures

Off the back of Temu’s local expansion and the growth of Amazon, we anticipate some of the following outcomes from retailers and brands alike:

Brands

Increased focus on DTC

We could see a shift, or a greater focus towards building owned direct-to-consumer channels as brands seek to regain control of margin, pricing, experience, and data.

Rise of hybrid models

More brands will adopt a nuanced and hybrid approach to operating in the e-commerce space. This will be less about ‘do we operate within a channel or not’, and more about ‘what is the role of that channel within our broader e-commerce channel strategy?’.

Product portfolio evolution

As channels grow, like marketplaces, it gives rise to the evolution of product portfolios where we see the introduction of new products, bundles and solutions that meet different user needs.

Retailers 

Supply chain and fulfilment innovation 

To keep up with customer expectations around fast and free delivery, deeper investment in local fulfilment networks and supply chain tech could be on the cards. However, retailers need to think carefully about when rapid delivery makes sense, as competing head-on with global marketplaces may lead to significant margin erosion over time.

Marketplace expansion  

Some retailers will continue to double down on their marketplace offerings to deliver more range and eyeballs to their site, which will not only deliver sales but bolster inventory for retail media.

Whilst other retailers will actively consider the role these third-party marketplaces play within their broader e-commerce strategy, retailers who have built strong, widely recognised private label brands may see marketplaces as a growth channel to power further adoption and share of their private label portfolios in the market.

Source: Temu

The last word on Temu Down Under

Temu’s ambition is clear: it wants to be the first port of call for the value-first Australian shopper. If it continues its trajectory, it could reach five million active users by the end of 2025, a scale that would position it as a serious challenger to established players like Kogan and Amazon’s local operations, and fill the gap left by the decline of platforms like Catch.

Though still in relatively early days in Australia, it’s a disruptive force that is shifting consumer expectations and market dynamics at speed. Its unique model, turbocharged by affordability, convenience, and now local seller onboarding, will continue to find fertile ground amongst Australian consumers. The brands and retailers that adapt first will be best positioned to navigate the shifting landscape.

Author Credits- TERESA SPERTI, SMART COMPANY