From Hailey Bieber to Kim Kardashian, makeup brand Kosas has been associated with virtually every celebrity with the clout to drive beauty trends. But when asked to picture her ideal âKosas girl,â founder Sheena Zadeh-Daly has one person in mind: âmyself.â
At the brandâs bright pastel- and neon-hued offices in Los Angelesâ El Segundo â a burgeoning beauty hub with LâOréal Groupâs new West Coast headquarters down the road â Zadeh-Daly explained that the brand intentionally avoids associating itself with one specific influencer look. First elevated by the minimalism-minded Goop mom set, Kosas has recently caught the attention of Gen-Z with a savvy TikTok marketing strategy and hit viral products. In 2023, it made $120 million retail sales, up from $80 million in 2022. Sales are forecasted to reach $150 million this year.
âItâs important to me to be able to expand my thinking and expand the universe of how makeup is formulated. And to always be looking for, âWhatâs at the forefront? What are the newest ways to do things?ââ said Zadeh-Daly.
Backed by heavy-hitter investors like VMG, which had a hand in some of beautyâs most high-profile acquisitions (think Drunk Elephant and Briogeo), many expect Kosas to sell to a strategic or a financial sponsor this year. Zadeh-Daly remains demure about the possibility.
âBusinesses have needs and trajectories that they take. But thatâs the tail wagging the dog. And thatâs not what I do. My objective is always to build the best brand, forever,â she said.
Clean but Not Crunchy
With a background in chemistry and fine art, Zadeh-Daly founded Kosas in 2015 after learning about ingredients to avoid while pregnant.
âThen, we had things like natural and organic makeup, which were so focused on the elimination of ingredients that they also completely eliminated performance,â she said.
At the time, US retail options for clean beauty brands were limited. Zadeh-Daly remembers going to Whole Foods and feeling that the crunchy-granola vibe of beauty products there did not fit with her minimalist-glam aesthetic.
âThere is no universe where I want to buy, like, a wooden compact. It just wasnât something that I wanted,â she said. She sought a retail partner that was more elevated.
Goop filled that niche. Goopâs executive beauty director Jean Godfrey-June was tasked with finding products that lived up to not only the companyâs standards for ingredients, but also for efficacy and design.
âClean beauty started out as a health-food store aesthetic. For it to move the way that it did, it had to evolve,â she said.
When she received a package of Kosasâ first product â a matte lipstick in four shades, it was a godsend. With chic packaging and appealing colours, Goop staffers became obsessed with wearing the lipsticks, especially the cult-favourite shade Rosewater.
âShe changed the aesthetic,â said Godfrey-June.
Gwyneth Paltrow was the first of many celebrities to drive hype for the label. It quickly attracted makeup artists such as Monika Blunder and Lisa Storey, a tall feat for clean makeup at the time.
âWe never really emphasised the clean; I would say thatâs an attribute and itâs true, but itâs not the foundation upon which this brand is built,â said Zadeh-Daly, who said that efficacy, colour and skincare benefits were its main areas of focus.
The brand expanded into both niche and mainstream retail as it launched in more categories, making its way into Credo Beauty, Sephora, Mecca and Space NK.
The buzz and retail presence attracted powerhouse investors including M3 Ventures, Hollywood agent Scooter Braunâs TQ Ventures, Glossier and Skims investor Imaginary Ventures, and CircleUp. Influencers Leandra Medine and Arielle Charnas also invested.
âWe had started to gain some traction in Sephora. At that point, it was actually time to professionalise the business,â said Zadeh-Daly. CMO Adeline Leong was its first executive hire in 2020, followed by its CEO, former Tatcha CEO Jean-Marc Plisson, in 2021. It now has 70 employees.
The TikTok Tipping Point
As Gen-Z tastes began to elevate bold, colourful aesthetics over the millennial âblandingâ that dominated the 2010s, Kosas embarked on an in-house rebrand. A Scandinavian-inspired accent was removed from its logo, and its minimalist black-and-white packaging was replaced with pastel and neon rainbow colours. Its next challenge would be to win over beautyâs new guard of tastemakers.
In 2022, TikTok beauty guru Mikayla Nogueira posted a video titled âFull Face of Makeup I Hate.â In it, the Kosas Tinted Face Oil was a target of her ire.
âThis is so bad on my skin⦠itâs so liquidy, itâs so oily, I hate the scent,â she said, cringing in disgust as she applied the product. At that point, sheâd been critiquing the products since Kosas first sent her a box in 2020.
âI hated a lot of the products. They didnât work for me at all,â she recounted on a call with The Business of Beauty.
Kosas reached out to her; Zadeh-Daly took her out to eat in LA and listened to her honest thoughts. By 2023, the line completed its rebrand. New products like the BB Burst Tinted Gel Cream and DreamBeam Sunscreen were launched with the updated design.
Its rebranding strategy has meant giving up on old favourites. Despite Nogueiraâs aversion, the Tinted Face Oil had been the brandâs best seller at one point; it was discontinued in 2023. The Rosewater lipstick that kicked off Goopâs infatuation has been replaced by a similar shade called Daydream â a fact lamented by fans on Instagram.
âThe fact that they listened to feedback, took it into consideration and actually implemented the changes with a full rebrand, full new formulations, new product lineup, new marketing strategy â itâs super impressive,â said Nogueira, who made clear that she was one of many voices who had assessed the products.
She now frequently posts glowing reviews and sponsored content for Kosas, showcasing products like its Revealer Skin-Improving Foundation and Cloud Set Setting Powder. Most recently, she praised the brandâs January shade expansion of its Revealer Concealer.
This deference to one of TikTokâs most powerful Gen-Z beauty queens is just one example of the brandâs ability to adapt to an evolving market, where customer preference and viral trend cycles are king. In addition to Nogueira, it can be seen across the posts of TikTok beauty leaders: Alix Earle, Meredith Duxbury and, of course, Bieber.
A pivotal moment for the brand was the breakout success of its Revealer Concealer, which Bieber posted about in a 2022 video. After going viral, it is the brandâs top-selling product. Kosas was one of the earliest beauty brands to join TikTok in 2020, while others in the elevated clean category remained aloof about the platform.
âWhen we think about the Hailey era, it coincided with us taking a bet on TikTok,â said Leong. âA lot of brands didnât dive in headfirst. We dove in headfirst.â
Thanks in part to the concealer, the complexion category makes up 60 percent of the brandâs sales.
More complexion launches are in the pipeline, said Zadeh-Daly. Kosasâ goal to reach everyone from full-glam Nogueira to minimalist Bieber has enabled it to be more than a brand of the moment.
âI want Kosas to be a forever brand. I want to leave this behind. I donât want it to have been for nothing,â she added.