Lush (company)

(Redirected from Lush (store))

Lush Ltd.[1] is a British cosmetics retailer which is headquartered in Poole, Dorset, United Kingdom. It was founded in 1995 by trichologist Mark Constantine, his wife Mo Constantine and five other founders.

Lush Retail Ltd.
Company typePrivate
IndustryCosmetics
Founded17 June 1994; 30 years ago (1994-06-17)[1]
FoundersMark and Mo Constantine, Andrew Gerrie, Liz Weir, Rowena Bird, Helen Ambrosen and Paul Greeves[2]
Headquarters
Number of locations
886 stores (2024)[3]
ProductsSkin care
Websitelush.com

It produces and sells creams, soaps, shampoos, shower gels, lotions, moisturisers, scrubs, masks, and other cosmetics for the face and hair.

The organisation claims it uses only vegetarian recipes, 95% of which are also vegan. The company operates stores in 51 countries globally, as well as production facilities located in the United Kingdom, Canada, Croatia, Germany, Japan, Australia and Poland.

History

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Early years

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The original Lush store, located in Poole, Dorset, UK. The store also houses a Lush Spa, accessed via the door on the left.

Co-founders Mark Constantine and Liz Weir met in the 1970s and subsequently set up a cosmetics business. Constantine began training as a hairdresser and, after completing his training, began working for Elizabeth Arden in London.[4][5] Constantine began working at Marc Young's Beauty Salon in Poole, where he met Liz Weir, who was freelancing at the salon as a beauty therapist. Weir and Constantine started their own business selling natural hair and beauty products.[4][when?]

Constantine and Weir started supplying Anita Roddick's Body Shop when she launched her second shop in 1977. The pair would become the Body Shop's biggest supplier until, in the early 1990s, the retailer became uncomfortable with not owning the formulations of many of its products. The Body Shop bought Constantine and Weir out, paying them £6 million for the manufacturing rights to the products they had been supplying.[6][7] Both co-founders signed a non-competition agreement, which was enforced until 1994.[8]

 
The former Lush logo

Creation of Lush

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In 1995, Constantine and Weir opened a cosmetics shop on High Street in Poole, creating cosmetics from freshly purchased fruits and vegetables.[9] The company's name was chosen after a customer competition in the store's newsletter.[9] Lush opened two new stores in Covent Garden and Kings Road, London.[10] Lush expanded into other countries, first with stores in Croatia[11][12] and then Australia in 1997,[13] Brazil in 1999 and Dublin, Ireland, in 2000.[14][15]

"B Never Too Busy To Be Beautiful" was an experimental brand launched in 2003 by Lush.[16] The first B Never store opened in 2003 and was located on Carnaby Street in London,[16] before Lush expanded to opening 205 stores overseas.[17] B Never closed its stores in 2009.[18]

Recent history

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In 2010, Lush launched Gorilla Perfume, a collaboration between perfumers Mark Constantine and his son Simon Constantine.[19] In December 2010, Mark and his wife Mo Constantine were awarded the OBE in the New Year's Honours list, for services to the beauty industry.[20] In 2014, Gorilla perfume opened its own standalone store in Islington, London.[21] In December 2018, Lush launched its Naked skincare range, which includes solid facial oils and cleansers and a seaweed gel eye mask, and opened a number of Naked shops, in Manchester, Milan and Berlin.[22] In 2019, Lush opened its biggest store in the world in Liverpool.[23]

At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Lush offered the public free handwashing in all its stores, as a means to help slow the spread of the virus.[24] However, due to the pandemic, Lush temporarily closed all North American stores on 16 March 2020, but continued to pay staff, with stores in Australia closing four days later and those in the UK closing on 21 March.[25][26][27][28] Later in March, the company announced it was laying off staff in Canada due to the impact that the pandemic was having on its operation, facing a future with a "much smaller business".[29]

In 2021, Lush removed its Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok accounts citing negative mental health and body image effects caused by such services.[30] In February 2022, following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the company announced that it would be closing all 15 of its stores in Ukraine due to safety concerns.[31]

In 2023, the company partnered with Nintendo and Illumination to make cosmetics based on The Super Mario Bros. Movie.[32]

Business structure

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Lush is a privately owned company with a small number of shares available on an invitation-only basis.[33] The company operates in 49 countries, with approximately 20% of its stores located in the US as of 2017.[12]

Many of the global operations outside the UK were founded via joint venture agreements between Lush and third parties.[34] In 1996, a joint venture agreement was signed to expand the cosmetics operation to North America. This began by opening stores in Canada, and six years after the initial move into the North American market, Lush opened its first store in the United States.[35] A similar arrangement saw the launch of Lush Australia in 1997, when the first store opened in the country.[36]

The company follows a "no advertising policy", in which it does not spend money on TV campaigns or celebrity endorsements, and instead relies heavily on user-generated content.[37] However, the company partnered with drag queens from RuPaul's Drag Race alumnae Kim Chi, Detox and Shea Couleé in the holiday season of 2018 to create photo campaigns for their new products.[38] Products are also advertised through staff engaging in "random acts of kindness", where they are allowed to give away products to customers.[39] Lush states that it does not have a target demographic, and that as a brand it is "trying to make [its] stores welcoming to all".[40]

Products

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Lush produces creams, soaps, shampoos, shower gels, lotions, moisturisers, fragrances, scrubs, toothpaste tablets, masks and other cosmetics for the face, hair, and body using only vegetarian or vegan recipes. In 2016, Lush produced 41 million products, of which 13.3 million were bath bombs.[12] In July 2012, Lush began selling their "Emotional Brilliance" makeup collection, which includes liquid lipsticks, liquid eyeliners, cream shadows, and mascara.[41][42] They also sell lifestyle products such as home fragrance (candles) and merchandise.[43]

The company also offers spa treatments, such as massages and facials, at their Lush Spa locations in Glasgow CityBath, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Leeds, Liverpool, London, and Poole in the UK.[44]

 
Lush shower jellies

Ingredients and ethics

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Lush does not buy from companies that carry out, fund, or commission any animal testing.[45][46] They test their products on human volunteers.[47]

In the 1980s, the founders worked with Cruelty Free International (previously known as BUAV), with the aim of developing an ethical testing standard, specifically for cosmetic companies.[48] The project led to the creation of cruelty-free standards still used today in the field of cosmetics.[48]

Lush stipulates that they will not knowingly purchase from suppliers or supply chains that have been party to animal testing in any way, including the testing of raw materials on animals.[49] This stance against animal testing has meant that there are some countries where Lush refuses to sell its products.[50] An exception to this is REACH legislation, which was implemented by the European Union in 2007.[51][52]

In late 2007, Lush introduced its first palm oil-free soap entitled "Greenwash", utilising a blend of sunflower oil, rapeseed oil, and coconut oil.[53][54] Due to the soap's success, the company decided to switch both UK and overseas production from palm oil to this blend,[53][55] significantly reducing the amount of palm oil the company purchased.[56] However, many Lush products continue to contain palm oil, and palm-oil derivatives such as stearic acid, cetostearyl alcohol and sodium stearate.[55][57][58] Since 2017, Lush has campaigned against the production and harvesting of palm oil, which is associated orangutan habitat destruction in Sumatra,[57] and since 2018 has purchased two plots of land bordering the Leuser Ecosystem on Sumatra to reforest.[59]

Lush products are 100% vegetarian, and 95% of the products are also vegan.[citation needed] They often contain fruits and vegetables such as grapefruit juice, vanilla beans, aloe vera, avocado butter, rosemary oil, fresh papaya, and coconut.[60] However, some products contain honey, and/or beeswax. Eggs used to be in products but was removed early 2019 and replaced by aquafaba, similarly lanolin was removed from all formulas in 2023. Parabens are used to preserve a number of the products.[61]

Lush focuses on limited packaging for its product range, or package-free products.[62][58][63]

The Environment Possibility Award conferred the "Award of Earth Defender" to Lush in 2020.[64]

Boycott Israel controversy

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During the 2023 Israel–Hamas war, a sign was placed in front of Lush's Dublin store saying "Boycott Israel".[65] This caused a backlash with their call to boycott. Lush released the following statement: "Recently, one shop within the UK&I business briefly displayed a 'Boycott Israel' message in their window. It was an isolated occurrence that does not represent the Lush ethos that 'All Are Welcome. Always.' and was swiftly removed. Lush deplores all acts of violence and our wish is for peace and safety for all Israeli and Palestinian people. We support the upholding of international law and the human rights of all peoples."[66][67]

Donations and campaigns

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In 2006, the REACH legislation was proposed by the European Union and contained legislation that Lush believed would increase animal testing. The cosmetics company wrote to its European customers and also ran an in-store marketing campaign, asking for postcards objecting to the legislation be sent to MEPs, a move which resulted in 80,000 Lush customers sending postcards.[68] In December 2006, Lush protested outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg, by attempting to dump horse manure outside the building.[69]

Lush is a supporter of direct action, animal rights operations including Sea Shepherd.[70] Lush has been a supporter of anti-taxation-avoidance grouping UK Uncut.[71]

In 2007, Lush started openly supporting campaigning groups by sending a dozen cheques for £1,000 each, including road protests groups such as Road Block and NoM1Widening, Hacan Clear Skies (anti-aviation group), and Dump the Dump (which is fighting against an incinerator).[72][73] In 2011, Lush supported OneWorld's track Freedom for Palestine, which led to backlash from Israel advocacy groups, such as StandWithUs.[74] Lush has since claimed to support collaboration between the two nations especially in almond farming. It uses both Israel and Palestine as suppliers for almond oil.[75][76] In 2012, Lush had a performance artist endure ten hours of animal testing in the window of their Regent Street store window as part of their 'Fight Animal Testing' campaign.[77]

Lush Cosmetics donated £3.8 million to charities in 2014.[78] In 2014, Lush supported the first Hen Harrier Day, with all its UK stores prominently highlighting the illegal persecution of hen harriers on upland grouse moors.[79][80]

Following the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season, Lush launched a campaign titled All The Wild Things, with proceeds from the sales of the koala-shaped soap bars would go to relief efforts aimed for Australian wildlife affected by the bush fires.[81][82]

#Spycops campaign

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On 31 May 2018, Lush launched a campaign aimed to highlight previous abuses by undercover police officers in the UK. The company put up window displays in its stores with a mock-up of a police officer in and out of uniform alongside the tag-line "Paid to lie #Spycops". In some stores replica police tape was put on the shopfront windows with: "Police have crossed the line".[83] The campaign attracted immediate criticism from serving officers and members of the public due to its "broad brush" approach which appeared to suggest that police officers were liars and involved in a cover-up.[84] Many notable figures were critical of the campaign by Lush, including Chief Police Officers and the Home Secretary, Sajid Javid.[83] Lush responded to the backlash by stating that the campaign was "not an anti-state/anti-police campaign" and that they were aware "police forces of the UK are doing an increasingly difficult and dangerous job whilst having their funding slashed". They also stated that the campaign was "not about the real police work done by those front line officers who support the public every day – it is about a controversial branch of political undercover policing that ran for many years before being exposed."[85] Lush suspended the window campaign "for the safety of our staff" on 8 June 2018,[86][2] but resumed it on 13 June.[87]

Lush Prize

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In 2012, Lush created The Lush Prize, a global award and grant given to researchers that find solutions and alternatives to animal testing. In the first six years, The Lush Prize donated nearly $2 million to award winners.[citation needed] Past winners of the award have included PETA and a research team at The University of Cambridge.[88][89] Recently the Lush Spring Prize was introduced, a biennial award with prize fund for projects that assist repairing the planet's damaged systems.[90]

Criticism

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In 2015, Lush was criticised for insensitivity when it stocked a new product, Lavender Hill Mob – a brand of incense inspired by the 2011 London riots, featuring a graphic of a burning building. Lavender Hill itself had been targeted by looters and rioters, but Lush stated that it was "created to emphasise the importance of community".[91]

Labour relations

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In July 2018, Lush Australia admitted owing more than 5,000 staff members up to $2 million in back pay. Lush Australia director Peta Granger said staff across the retail and manufacturing businesses have been underpaid since 2010 due to incorrect interpretations of the retail award.[92] In 2020, The Guardian raised concerns about the labour conditions at the Lush kitchen in Sydney, Australia, due to the high rate of injury reported by factory staff.[93] During the August 2020 resurgence of COVID-19 in Auckland, New Zealand, Lush employees were given 48 hours notice that they would not receive pay for the duration of level 3 restrictions when the stores were unable to open, prompting negotiations between Lush and First Union New Zealand. Lush were ineligible for the government wage subsidy for staff, as their revenues had not decreased enough during this period.[94]

Beginning in 2020, Lush North America faced criticism for union busting and poor working conditions. In September 2020, Lush workers in Toronto launched a campaign to unionise.[95][96] Employees complained about having their voices stifled by the company; facing retaliation for speaking out; having pay well below a living wage; and unfairly barring some employees from stability and benefits by abusing the company's seasonal contract policies. In response, Lush handed out anti-union leaflets, held captive audience meetings, and allegedly targeted union organisers.[96] This is in contrast to the company's ethical buying policy, which states the importance of collective bargaining. Workers United Canada Council, the union representing Lush Workers, filed charges against the company in both the United States and Canada. The charges allege that the company's actions in response to the union organising drive, as well as retaliation against individual employees was unlawful.[97][98] Lush North America was officially acquired by Lush UK in 2021, but as of 2021 these issues remain unchanged.[needs update]

See also

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References

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