Expert's View

Beauty’s Next Battleground: Authenticity vs. Algorithm

AI will continue to shape how beauty brands communicate, but technology alone cannot generate trust.

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By: Elle Morris

Principal, Elle Morris Consulting

The beauty industry has always traded in aspiration—promising transformation, enhancement, and confidence through products and rituals. Over time, that aspiration required guardrails. Regulations emerged around false advertising, retouching, and the undisclosed use of false eyelashes, hair extensions, and image manipulation. All of this unfolded before the introduction of artificial intelligence.

What has changed is not the desire for perfection, but the speed, scale, and invisibility of the tools creating it.

AI has rapidly evolved from novelty to infrastructure within beauty marketing. Today, it generates campaign visuals, writes product copy, scripts influencer content, predicts trends, and personalizes messaging at scale. What remains to be seen is whether AI can consistently generate insights that drive purchasing behavior as effectively—or more effectively—than human intelligence.

The result is unprecedented efficiency paired with a growing tension between algorithmic optimization and perceived authenticity. As AI-generated content becomes normalized across the industry, the critical question for beauty brands is no longer whether to use AI, but how to do so without eroding trust.

Consumers are savvy. They understand how AI can simulate authenticity from a concept. The question is whether they will accept what they see and hear as a credible possibility—and reality—for themselves.

The Algorithmic Advantage

AI offers clear performance benefits, with speed-to-market chief among them. Brands can test creative rapidly, localize campaigns instantly, and personalize content without re-shoots or lengthy production cycles.

Estée Lauder Companies, for example, has publicly discussed leveraging AI to accelerate content creation and trend analysis across its brand portfolio—enabling faster go-to-market strategies while maintaining consistency at scale. Similarly, L’Oréal has invested heavily in AI-driven tools, from virtual try-on technology to generative content engines, allowing brands to meet consumers where they are digitally and optimize engagement in real time. However, optimization is not the same as meaning.

When “Perfect” Starts to Feel Fake

Beauty is fueled by emotion and built on trust, identity, and belief. Consumers do not simply buy products; they buy into the values and credibility of the brands they invite into their daily routines. Many go further—becoming vocal brand advocates and identifying themselves through the brands they use.

As AI-generated imagery becomes increasingly polished—and increasingly indistinguishable from reality—the risk is not visual fatigue, but emotional distance, particularly if the results AI represents feel unattainable or misleading.

This tension is already visible in the market. Dove, long outspoken against hyper-manipulated beauty standards, has publicly committed to never using AI to alter women’s bodies in advertising. The move reflects a broader acknowledgment that technical perfection can undermine authenticity, especially among younger consumers who prioritize transparency over aspiration.

At the same time, digitally native brands such as Glossier have built loyalty by embracing imperfection—featuring real skin texture, minimal retouching, and community-driven content. In an AI-saturated environment, these human cues have become powerful differentiators.

Redefining “Real” in the Age of AI

Authenticity in an AI-enabled world does not require rejecting technology. It requires redefining what real means. For most consumers, authenticity is no longer about how content is produced, but whether a brand’s behavior feels consistent and honest. Few object to AI-assisted imagery or copy if the product performs, the claims hold up, and the brand delivers on its promises across touchpoints.

This places renewed importance on brand foundations. Clear positioning, disciplined messaging, and well-defined brand behavior are no longer optional. Brands must decide the role AI plays in their ecosystem—and apply it intentionally. AI can amplify a brand’s voice, but only if that voice is clearly articulated and rooted in truth.

The Role of Packaging as Proof

As digital content becomes increasingly simulated, physical touchpoints—particularly packaging—take on heightened importance. Packaging remains one of the few brand expressions that cannot be filtered, cloned, or endlessly optimized by an algorithm in real time.

Brands such as Aesop and The Ordinary demonstrate how restraint, material honesty, and functional clarity can reinforce authenticity. Their packaging systems act as credibility anchors, signaling values through structure, materials, and information hierarchy rather than spectacle.

In this context, packaging becomes a reality check—a tangible manifestation of promises made digitally.

A Strategic Imperative

The tension between authenticity and algorithm is not a creative challenge; it is a strategic one. AI will continue to shape how beauty brands communicate, but technology alone cannot generate trust.

The brands that succeed will not be those that use AI most aggressively, but those that use it most intentionally anchored by strong brand foundations, credible product performance, and physical expressions that reinforce truth.

In a category built on emotion and belief, authenticity is not something an algorithm can create. It is something brands must define, protect, and prove—before technology does it for them.

For beauty brands navigating this next era, the challenge is not choosing between authenticity and technology. It is deciding where algorithms end—and where responsibility, credibility, and truth must begin.

About the Author
Elle Morris is a senior brand and marketing executive with more than two decades of experience building global beauty brands across strategy, packaging, and integrated marketing. As a regular contributor to Beauty Packaging, her content has consistently ranked among the outlet’s top ten most-read pieces over the past two years. She is also a frequent speaker at industry forums, including Luxe Pack and Cosmoprof.

Photo: Shutterstock/ New Africa

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