Ulta Beauty Lays Out Strategy to Fuel Long-term Growth

In This Article:

When the going gets tough — the tough double down.

Such was the message Ulta Beauty chief executive officer Dave Kimbell delivered during the retailer’s 2024 Investor Day, acknowledging the realities of a fast-changing competitive environment and laying out Ulta’s strategy for the next three years.

More from WWD

“We have a strong position in a growing and dynamic category. We have a proven business model and we’re investing to make it even stronger,” Kimbell said. “We have clear strategies to drive growth. We have a powerful team and culture and are ready to go. I’m very optimistic about growth.”

Kimbell’s confidence comes during a challenging period for the company. In August, it lowered its full-year outlook for 2024 after missing Wall Street forecasts on the top and bottom lines in the second quarter.

Going forward, Kimbell pledged to deliver 4 to 6 percent net sales growth from 2026 and beyond, targeted operating margin of about 12 percent of sales and low-double-digit diluted EPS growth.

However, he and chief financial officer Paula Oyibo cautioned analysts that 2025 results are expected to be more in line with 2024, with operating margin anticipated to be below 12 percent but remain above 11 percent and comp store sales growth of three to four percent.

While Ulta’s stock dropped modestly on the news, about 3 percent, Kimbell and his leadership team laid out an aggressive strategy to reignite growth, including increasing its U.S. store count by 200 doors over the next three years, opening its first international market in Mexico in 2025, doubling down on wellness and exclusivity in its merchandising strategy and amplifying its loyalty program with a key partnership with Adobe to drive real-time automated personalization around everything from product recommendations to content curation.

Dave Kimbell
Dave Kimbell

“We have clear strategies that set us up to drive market share and continue to lead the beauty industry and most importantly deliver a great experience for our guests,” Kimbell said during an exclusive interview with WWD. “That is our focus and if we continue to do that as we have done for 30 years, we know we will be successful and continue to gain share.”

Oyibo said that Ulta will continue to invest in the business, particularly around new store openings, which have remained strong and delivered returns of 20 percent on average. The company plans to open 200 stores over the next three years, both in existing markets like Dallas, Phoenix and Denver, and smaller markets like Del Rio, Texas, Jasper, Ind., and Wilson, N.C. It has developed a smaller, 5,000-square-foot prototype for such locations.