Ulta Beauty partnered with NielsenIQ to survey over 500 Gen Alpha children and teens before committing shelf space to new SKUs, according to Glossy. The retailer asked what they want, how they shop, and how they engage with AI tools — then used those answers to guide product assortment and in-store experience decisions.
The move is straightforward: commission structured research on the customer cohort before the trend reports arrive. Ulta went direct to kids and teens to map preferences and motivations, bypassing influencer noise and platform hype. The data informed which brands land on shelves, which finishes get stocked, and how the retail environment adapts to a generation raised on different buying signals.
This works because retail assortment risk compounds when you rely on lagging indicators. By the time a category report confirms a shift, the supply chain is already committed. Ulta's approach inverts the timing: gather signal from the end user, shape the buy, then let the trend cycle validate the bet. For a beauty retailer managing thousands of SKUs across shifting demographics, direct consumer input cuts the revision cycle and reduces dead inventory.
The mechanism scales down cleanly for a small physical-product brand. You do not need NielsenIQ or a 500-person panel. You need 25 structured responses from your next customer cohort. Write six questions: what they bought last, why they chose it, what they wished it did differently, where they heard about it, what they'd pay, and what stops them from repeating. Deploy it as a post-purchase email, a type-form on your site, or a one-question SMS after delivery. Offer a $10 credit or a free sample unit. Capture answers in a spreadsheet. Read them before you commit to your next production run.
Use the responses to adjust three levers: which variant you produce in volume, what language you lead with in ads, and what the product page prioritizes. If 18 of 25 respondents mention durability but your copy leads with aesthetics, rewrite the page. If they wanted a smaller size, prototype it before the next order. If they discovered you through a specific subreddit, double your presence there. The survey becomes your assortment map.
The broader pattern is pre-commitment research as a category design tool. Ulta is not waiting for Gen Alpha to age into spending power and then guessing what they want. They are mapping preferences now, shaping the offer, and owning the relationship before the cohort fully monetizes. A founder running a 5,000-unit product line can do the same: ask the next 25 buyers, adjust the next batch, and enter the next growth window with better fit than competitors who shipped on intuition.
The takeaway
Survey your next 25 customers before placing your next order — their answers are your assortment strategy.
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