Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

BoF LIVE: What’s Next for Glossier?

BoF’s Lauren Sherman and Cheryl Wischhover break down how the direct-to-consumer pioneer lost its footing in a quickly-evolving beauty industry as well as what the future holds for the brand.
What's Next for Glossier?

The Daily Digest Newsletter

The essential daily round-up of fashion news, analysis, and breaking news alerts.
Plus, access one complimentary BoF Professional article of your choice, each month.

The author has shared a YouTube video.You will need to accept and consent to the use of cookies and similar technologies by our third-party partners (including: YouTube, Instagram or Twitter), in order to view embedded content in this article and others you may visit in future.

This #BoFLIVE event was based on the ‘How Glossier Lost Its Grip’ article. Click here to read our full analysis.

The beauty industry transformed in the last decade, with the rise of social media and acceleration of e-commerce fundamentally changing the way consumers buy cosmetics and skin care. Glossier, the direct-to-consumer pioneer that popularised dewey, natural skin and Millennial pink, led the way with community-based and social-heavy marketing strategies, innovative products with witty names, and fun store concepts.

But the company has lost its grip. In 2021, Glossier’s US sales decreased by 20 percent year-over-year, according to Bloomberg Measure, and in January, it laid off about a third of its workforce. At the time, chief executive Emily Weiss wrote in a letter to employees that Glossier “got ahead of ourselves on hiring,” and “that strategic projects that distracted us from the laser-focus we needed to have on our core business: scaling our beauty brand.”

On the latest BoF LIVE, following BoF beauty contributor Rachel Strugatz’s article “How Glossier Lost Its Grip,” BoF chief correspondent Lauren Sherman and contributor Cheryl Wischhover breakdown what went wrong at Glossier and chart a potential path for the brand’s recovery.

ADVERTISEMENT

“This was not the company I thought we would be having this conversation about … Glossier was one [start-up] that it really felt like they were so ahead of the curve and that they would be able to see the challenges ahead and pivot when they needed to” said Sherman.

To participate in #BoFLive, BoF’s digital events series offering insight, advice and inspiration, visit our calendar where you can find details of upcoming digital events.

© 2025 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Beauty
Analysis and advice on the fast-evolving beauty business.

How to Rebrand Without Losing Your Fans

When growth plateaus, beauty companies may remix their logos, colour schemes and even products in the hopes of appealing to a wider audience or re-engaging their core. But finding a new brand identity can sometimes mean upsetting fans of the old one.


The Debrief | Beauty Is in Its Flop Era

Once thought to be resistant to economic downturns, the beauty industry is facing a significant slowdown. This week on The Debrief, BoF’s Daniela Morosini explains why consumers are pulling back and what brands can do next.


The Business of Ballerina Farm

Hannah Neeleman is the farmfluencer who broke the internet thanks to the public’s obsession with her picturesque life, career choices and family dynamics. Now, she is taking her burgeoning lifestyle empire global.


view more

The Daily Digest Newsletter

The essential daily round-up of fashion news, analysis, and breaking news alerts.
Plus, access one complimentary BoF Professional article of your choice, each month.

The Business of Fashion

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON