Some beauty brands are growing faster than their peers. Thereâs data to help us understand why. One analysis showed that brands that lean into inclusion grew more than twice as fast from 2023 to 2024 than less inclusive brands within the industry.
Itâs just one additional proof source that highlights that inclusive marketing drives business results.
Even with all the data highlighting how beneficial it is to build an inclusive brand, there are still plenty of brands who are retreating on the progress theyâve made. This yearâs Pride month has shown that even more clearly.
Fewer brands have engaged in celebrations, campaigns, and support for the LGBTQ+ community. The current political climate and fear of public backlash has made more brands cautious about proclaiming their public support of this marginalized community.
With so much news about how many brands have turned their backs on the LGBTQ+ community, it is easy to overlook there are still plenty of brands who are unwavering in their support. Within the beauty industry specifically, that support is not surprisingly coming from the brands that are growing more rapidly than their peers.
The SeeMe Index is a AI-based company that measures, benchmarks, and celebrates inclusion for brands across different industries. For the second year in a row, SeeMe Index did an assessment of beauty brands, and named fourteen brands out of 100 as âcertified inclusive,â the highest ranking possible in their analysis.
Brands that achieved certified inclusive status excelled in infusing inclusion throughout their ads, their brand purpose, and in their actual product. Certified inclusive brands grew 5% year on year from 2023 to 2024, while less inclusive brands analyzed grew at just 2% over the same time period.
Of the fourteen certified inclusive beauty brands for 2025, several of them have programming in place designed to help them support the LGBTQ+ community all year round, rather than just showing up during Pride Month.
How Growing Beauty Brands Support the LGBTQ+ Community
Amika Hair invests in increasing equity in salons and salon chairs by investing in the next generation of hairstylists. The brand does this with its âFriend to Hairâ scholarship for BIPOC and LGBTQ+ hair stylists for a cosmetology school program. The brand also helped curate a list of queer safe salons for people to go to.
Makeup brand MAC says that it has been a proud supporter of the LGBTQ+ community since 1984. Since 1994, with its Viva Glam Fund (which gives 100% of proceeds from Viva Glam lipstick), the brand has raised more than $535 million that has been used to partner and support many LGBTQ+ organizations 365 days a year.
Rare Beauty prioritizes mental health as part of its overall mission. In doing so, the brand formed the Rare Impact Fund, which is committed to mental health equity. The Rare Impact Fund in particular prioritizes organizations serving BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and underserved youth, including The Trevor Project.
In addition to the programming designed to support the LGBTQ+ community through philanthropic means, each of the brands mentioned also does a good job of infusing the community into their marketing and campaigns.
Thus, because of their commitment to inclusion, and uplifting underrepresented and underserved communities all year long â in both their marketing and impact efforts, marginalized communities, including the LGBTQ+ community.
How To Build An Inclusive Brand That Outperforms Your Competition
Building an inclusive brand goes beyond just making your photography representative of different communities.
It requires real commitment to including, representing, and supporting the communities you want to serve throughout all areas of your organization. Building an inclusive brand goes beyond campaigns, with a focus on real impact.
Inclusive brands stay true to the mission as best they can, despite political and societal pressure.
If you want to your brand to achieve outsized growth over and over again, focus your energy on planting roots and establishing a real commitment to the causes and the communities you want to serve. Then pull through that commitment and focus throughout your marketing mix, so the people you want to serve feel seen, supported, and like they belong with you.