Mark Constantine: The Willy Wonka of the Beauty Industry

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Case Details:
Case Code : LDEN046
Case Length : 24 Pages
Period : 2002-2006
Pub Date : 2007
Teaching Note : Available
Organization : Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics
Industry : Beauty care / Cosmetics
Countries : UK, Europe, USA
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Please note:
This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
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Constantine and the Cosmetic Factory Contd...
The colors, shapes and aromas of the products made them seem almost edible.
Minimal or no packaging was used.
When the products were moved into stores, the
stores were designed to look like old-fashioned. delicatessens.9 In 1995, the
first Lush store was formally launched in Poole, Dorset, UK.
With Lush, Constantine brought in a unique approach to the marketing of beauty
products. Lush did not have a traditional marketing department, and relied on
innovative products, in-store advertising, word-of-mouth advocacy, and public
relations to promote the products.
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With the increasing popularity, Lush grew to over 400 stores worldwide.
Constantine had even unsuccessfully tried to acquire Body Shop in 2001.
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The success of Lush prompted Constantine to launch another chain of beauty
stores for expensive perfumes and makeup. This sister concern of Lush was
named B Never Too Busy To Be Beautiful (B Never). As of 2006, there were
three B Never stores in the UK.
Some analysts felt that the there was a strange similarity between
Constantine and the fictitious character Willy Wonka (Wonka) in British
author Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.10 They felt that
Constantine's unconventional product development philosophy coupled with his
eccentric management style was very much similar to that of Wonka. |
His snazzy shirts and cheerful disposition were also
reminiscent of Wonka. Even Constantine's early childhood years were similar - if
the fictional character had a traumatized childhood as he wasn't allowed to eat
chocolates by his father, Constantine spent his childhood pining for his absent
father. If the Freudian backdrop of Wonka led him to create impossible
delicacies in his chocolate factory, Constantine had created a perfume to
conjure up his absent father...
Excerpts >>
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