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How this CVS Health executive is compelling beauty companies to use unaltered images in their ad campaigns

For battling unrealistic beauty standards, CVS Health CMO Norman de Greve is one of Fast Company’s Most Creative People of 2019.

How this CVS Health executive is compelling beauty companies to use unaltered images in their ad campaigns

[Photo: Jesse Burke]

BY Elizabeth Segran1 minute read



In an age when beauty standards have become wildly unrealistic, CVS Health—the country’s second-largest beauty retailer, with nearly 10,000 stores—is fighting back. Under CMO Norman de Greve, the company began assessing a year ago all the images in its stores, social media feeds, advertising materials, and on its website, and applying a “Beauty Unaltered” watermark to those that had not been substantially retouched—and a “digitally altered” label to those that had. Today, some 70% of images have been examined as part of the Beauty Mark initiative, and de Greve is working closely with every brand in CVS, including L’Oréal, CoverGirl, and Revlon, to achieve its goal of labeling 100% of the images in its stores by 2020 and moving the needle toward greater transparency in the beauty industry. “We have a platform that can enable this to happen,” he says.

Fast Company: Why did you decide to pursue this initiative?

Norman de Greve: Research shows that the majority of women feel worse about themselves after seeing a beauty ad, and digitally altered images of women are contributing to this problem. But we also saw that consumers were gravitating toward social influencers who are authentic and wear their flaws on their sleeve.

FC: How has the beauty industry responded?

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elizabeth Segran, Ph.D., is a senior staff writer at Fast Company. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts More


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