Melanoma Focus is turning barbers into front-line health messengers
UK – British charity Melanoma Focus has developed a free handbook designed to help barbers spot signs of skin cancer on customers’ scalps and necks.
The Life Saving Haircut campaign was developed pro bono by independent creative directors Michele Bona, Chiara Biondi and Michael de Piano. The initiative is a response to a clear insight: barbers regularly see areas of the body that customers struggle to examine themselves. The guide gives barbers enough knowledge to start a conversation and suggest a GP visit if something looks unusual.
In 2022, we published our Salon Confidantes report, which underlined how trust and client wellbeing were becoming integral to salon services. The Life Saving Haircut campaign demonstrates how everyday service settings can become unexpected sites of preventative healthcare.
Strategic opportunity
How can you turn trusted beauty and grooming spaces into informal care networks, where trained practitioners use everyday client interactions as moments for early observation, conversation and referral into wider health and wellbeing support systems?
India’s ‘cockroach’ movement mobilises disillusioned youth
India – A satirical online movement has rapidly evolved into a youth-led political force in India. The Cockroach Janta Party (CJP), founded by Abhijeet Dipke after unemployed young people were likened to cockroaches during a public debate, has attracted more than 22m Instagram followers in just two weeks.
The movement held its first public protest in Delhi, drawing thousands of supporters frustrated by unemployment, exam scandals and a struggling education system, according to the BBC. Initially conceived as satire, the movement highlights how memes and digital communities are increasingly evolving into vehicles for political mobilisation, particularly among younger generations.
Our Gen Z in India report explores how young people in India are pushing back against the status quo while navigating tensions including consumerism and economic precarity, tech innovation and rural stagnation, and rising global visibility and local inequalities.
Strategic opportunity
India’s youth population are fast-growing, disgruntled and digitally native, creating a clear opportunity for brands to align with their frustrations and use social media channels to build collective identity, participation and long-term brand loyalty
Stat: Self-care emerges as a wellbeing driver for older adults
US/Canada – New research from in-home care provider Home Instead suggests that self-care routines are increasingly important to healthy ageing. The survey of 1,000 adults aged 65+ across the US and Canada found that 90% believe self-care positively affects their daily lives, while those who maintain regular grooming and beauty routines report higher levels of happiness.
The findings position self-care as more than a cosmetic practice. Older adults report that grooming boosts confidence and self-perception, with 53% saying it makes them feel prouder of their appearance, 44% more like themselves and 43% more confident. A further 33% say it supports a more positive outlook on life, while 31% associate it with greater independence.
For businesses, the research highlights opportunities to expand products, services and care models that support emotional wellbeing alongside physical health. It also points to growing demand for solutions that help older consumers maintain daily routines, dignity and independence as they age.
Read our Boomer Beauty report to explore how the industry is shifting from anti-ageing narratives to longevity-first approaches across communication, marketing and product development.
Strategic opportunity
Tap into the underserved older adult consumer by designing self-care products and services that reinforce identity, confidence and independence, recognising ageing populations as emotionally engaged, routine-driven wellbeing audiences