Ulta Beauty partnered with NielsenIQ to survey more than 500 Gen Alpha children and teens, gathering data on their preferences, motivations, and attitudes toward beauty brands, according to Glossy. The retailer is building a behavioral map of consumers who won't hold serious purchasing power for another five to seven years.
The research covers how Gen Alpha interacts with beauty products, what language they use to describe ingredients and outcomes, and how they engage with AI tools in discovery and purchase decisions. Ulta is treating this as forward intelligence, not immediate conversion data.
This works because Gen Alpha is learning brand vocabulary now. A child who knows a brand name at age eleven will default to that brand at seventeen when they control discretionary spend. The mechanism is pre-preference formation: you shape the mental category before the purchase decision exists. Ulta is buying early positioning in a cohort that will spend an estimated $5.46 trillion annually by 2029, per NRF projections cited in separate retail research.
The second return is in packaging and product language. Gen Alpha uses different terms for the same ingredient benefits. They care about transparency but define it differently than Millennials. They expect brands to explain AI use in formulation or recommendation. Knowing this now lets a brand design packaging, copy, and digital interfaces that feel native to the cohort when they arrive with wallets open.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: run a lightweight qualitative study with 20-30 kids in your target age range before you finalize packaging or product messaging. You don't need NielsenIQ. You need a dozen parents who will let you interview their children for 15 minutes each in exchange for a $25 gift card. Ask them to describe your product category in their own words. Ask what they look for on a label. Ask how they decide if a brand is "real" or "fake." Record it, transcribe it, and pull the exact phrases.
Then use those phrases in your packaging copy, your product descriptions, and your social captions. If a twelve-year-old says "I want to know what's in it without reading a whole essay," your label should have a clean ingredient list in large type with a single-sentence explanation per ingredient. If they say "I like when brands show how they make stuff," your unboxing experience should include a one-page illustrated process card. You're not pandering; you're speaking the native language of the cohort that will either adopt your brand or ignore it in three years.
The broader pattern: early cohort research is cheap for small brands and gets more expensive as the cohort matures. Interview them now while they're eager to talk and parents control access. By the time they're sixteen, everyone is chasing them and the cost of attention has tripled.