Sephora opens first shop in Korea
The Paris-based chain brought in some 110 beauty brands to Parnas Mall in southern Seoul. Sephora said it will open 14 stores in Korea by 2022, where it will offer foreign brands Koreans who once had to travel abroad to buy or buy online and wait.
The first store offers around 40 foreign brands, including Tarte, Huda Beauty and Smashbox. Sephora also sells Sephora Collection products.
“Sephora offers a fun space for visitors to freely experience and enjoy beauty,” said Kim Dong-ju, Sephora Korea general manager, at a press event at the store Wednesday.
Kim said Sephora Korea offers exclusive brands and an attractive consumer experience and is able to export Korean cosmetics brands abroad.
Sephora provides a makeup trial service and beauty advice from its beauty advisers, who come from a diverse range of countries, including the United States and Australia. Kim hopes Sephora will function as a platform for local indie cosmetics brands to enter the global market.
Sephora said it will boost its online channel by making an app available next year. It currently only offers an online store.
Korea is Sephora’s 10th Asian market. It entered China in 2005 and Singapore in 2008. Sephora said it waited to enter the Korean market until local consumers became more accustomed to shopping in multi-brand spaces. As Korean consumers have sophisticated tastes, Sephora spent around three years developing the lineup for the Korean store, according to Kim.
Sephora suggested it had been more careful with the Korean market and made sure to adopt a localized strategy to avoid a replay of its embarrassing retreat from Japan in 2001.
The localization strategy in Korea includes boosting the point system based on consumer purchases and expanding the color cosmetics and perfume markets, which are relatively small in Korea, according to Kim.
Sephora plans to open a second store in December, in Myeongdong in central Seoul. A third store will open in Sinchon, western Seoul.
Sephora Korea faces an uphill battle, with the industry dominated by companies like Olive Young and Shinsegae Group’s Chicor.
“Sephora will be able to have competitiveness over local health and beauty stores by introducing different product lineups,” said Jade Lee of Euromonitor International Korea.
BY JIN MIN-JI [jin.minji@joongang.co.kr]
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
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