The Brandologist
Industry Guides

What Actually Makes a Beauty Brand Work

Everyone has an opinion on what makes a great beauty brand. Most of those opinions start and end with how it looks. That's not wrong — but it's incomplete, and the gap between a brand that looks good and a brand that actually works is where most beauty businesses get stuck.

Kate Edwards
Kate Edwards
April 3, 2026

1. Positioning before everything

Positioning is the decision that every other brand element depends on. It's not your target audience, your aesthetic direction, or your mission statement — though all of those flow from it.

Positioning is the answer to one question: why would someone choose you over everything else available to them?

Most beauty brands can't answer that cleanly. They describe what they make, who it's for, and maybe a value or two. That's a product description, not a position. A real position is specific enough to exclude people — and that's what makes it work.

Without it, every other brand decision becomes guesswork. You're designing for nobody in particular, writing for nobody in particular, and wondering why nothing is landing.

2. Visual identity is how brand strategy shows itself

Visual identity is not the brand. It's the brand made visible.

The distinction matters because it changes the brief. If you start with aesthetics — a mood board, a colour palette, a logo style you like — you get something that looks nice and means nothing. If you start with positioning, your visual identity has a job to do. Every design decision becomes intentional rather than preferential.

In beauty specifically, visual identity works harder than in almost any other category. Consumers make snap judgements about quality, price point, values, and audience fit before they read a word. Your design is communicating all of that whether you've thought about it or not.

Strong visual identity is also a consistency tool. Not consistency for its own sake — but because every time a customer encounters your brand and it looks, feels, and behaves the same way, trust compounds. That's a commercial outcome, not a creative one.

3. Personality and tone of voice - the most underestimated asset in branding

Most beauty brands have a visual identity. Very few have a voice.

Tone of voice is how your brand communicates — the words it uses, the ones it avoids, the personality that comes through in a product description, a caption, an email, a response to a comment. It's the difference between a brand that feels like a real point of view and one that feels like a press release.

In beauty, where product claims are heavily regulated and everyone is saying roughly the same things about efficacy and ingredients, voice is one of the few places genuine differentiation lives. It's also one of the hardest things for a competitor to copy.

The brands that do it well — Glossier, Rationale, Frank Body — don't sound like the category. They sound like themselves. That's not an accident and it's not just good copywriting. It's a brand decision made early and held consistently.

4. Packaging over logo

If you had to choose one brand asset to get right, it's not your logo — it's your packaging.

Your logo appears on your packaging. Your packaging is what a customer picks up, turns over, puts on their bathroom shelf, and sees every day. It's the most repeated brand touchpoint in beauty, and the one with the most direct influence on perceived quality and purchase decisions.

Packaging is also where brand strategy, compliance, and commercial reality collide. Container selection, material choices, label hierarchy, claims placement — these are not just design decisions. They have regulatory, sustainability, and supply chain implications that affect cost, timelines, and what you can legally say on shelf. Getting the design right matters. Getting the brief right before the design starts matters more.

For established brands especially, packaging is often where a disconnect between brand strategy and brand reality becomes most obvious. A brand that has evolved its positioning but never updated its packaging is sending mixed signals — and consumers notice, even if they can't articulate why.

5. Values that hold

Consistency gets talked about constantly in branding. What actually builds trust isn't aesthetic consistency — it's values consistency.

A brand can refresh its visual identity, update its packaging, and shift its tone as it matures. What it can't do without consequence is contradict the values it built its audience around.

In beauty, this plays out most visibly around sustainability, inclusivity, and ingredient ethics. Consumers in this category are paying close attention — and they have long memories. A brand that claimed to be clean and then quietly reformulated, or positioned around inclusivity and then failed to deliver on it, doesn't just lose credibility on that issue. It loses the trust that everything else was built on.

Values aren't a marketing position. They're an operating commitment. The brands that hold them build audiences that are genuinely hard to poach. The ones that treat values as a campaign theme eventually find out the difference.

My Approach

A focus on quality and attention to detail ensures that your brand is not only visually stunning but also strategically positioned for success.