Mary Kay Inc. announced on Thursday the appointment of Dr. Lucy Gildea to the role of chief brand and scientific officer.
Dr. Lucy Gildea – Mary Kay
In her expanded role that now encompasses chief brand officer, Gildea will guide the cosmetic giant’s brand identity, image, and strategy, ensuring consistency across all platforms and geographies, as well as activating the brand through engagement strategies and resonant brand storytelling, according to a press release.
Joining Mary Kay in 2017 as chief scientific officer, before being promoted to chief innovation officer, product and science in 2022, Gildea has been credited for “modernizing and enhancing” the Dallas-based company’s competitiveness through product innovation and by improving organizational efficiencies.
Prior to Mary Kay, the health professional spent 15 years at Procter & Gamble working primarily in beauty technology and beauty/skin product development. She also held a variety of senior roles including leading development teams for upstream technology and measurement sciences across healthcare, beauty and personal care industries. Before P&G, Gildea lived in Singapore, advancing her experience with international markets.
“With her expertise in science and beauty innovation and customer-centric approach, Lucy will lead a strategic chapter of our transformation into the future,” said Ryan Rogers, chief executive officer of Mary Kay.
“The new global brand and science organization will contribute to our mutual business success by enabling our independent beauty consultants to share a transformative brand experience with their customers and thrive as personal beauty advisors, thus reinforcing the unique value proposition of direct selling.”
Gildea is also STEM advocate for women and girls, and serves as a board member at Baylor Scott & White Dallas Foundation and a board advisor at Baylor Scott & White Charles A. Sammons Cancer Center.
“Mary Kay was founded on a dream to enrich women’s lives with a product portfolio rooted in science. I am confident that integrating brand and science is the winning formula to meet global consumer needs and work toward our continued success. I look forward to maximizing synergies across our teams to captivate our Independent beauty consultants and invite a new generation of consumers to fall in love with our brand,” said Gildea.
The European Commission has asked online fast-fashion retailer Shein to provide internal documents and more detailed information on risks linked to the presence of illegal goods and content on its marketplace, the EU executive said on Thursday.
Reuters
Shein said it welcomes “efforts that enhance trust and safety for European consumers when shopping online”.
The Commission said it had given Shein a deadline of February 27 to provide detailed information on measures it has adopted to mitigate risks relating to consumer protection, public health and users’ wellbeing.
Under the powers granted by the Digital Services Act (DSA), the Commission also asked the Chinese online retailer about the transparency of its recommender systems, access to data for qualified researchers, and it requested details on the protection of users’ personal data.
It added the request related to an ongoing DSA investigation against Shein, which was founded in China and is headquartered in Singapore. The Commission has also been investigating Shein rival Temu, part of Chinese e-commerce giant PDD Holdings, under the DSA.
On Wednesday, the Commission said Temu and Shein, which is working towards a London IPO this year, would be held liable for the sale of unsafe products on their platforms, as part of a crackdown on cheap e-commerce imports into the European Union (EU).
It said its concerns were triggered by some 4.6 billion parcels worth less than 150 euros ($155.39) bought online and imported into the EU duty-free last year, equal to 12 million parcels per day, 91% of which came from China. The number of shipments was double that in 2023.
The EU executive, which has proposed customs reforms including ending the duty exemption for low-value shipments, said on Wednesday it aimed to bring forward some of the changes to 2026 rather than 2027.
As part of tariffs on China, U.S. President Donald Trump‘s administration this week gave businesses just over 48 hours’ notice of the end of its equivalent “de minimis” provision, used by retailers including Temu and Shein to import packages worth less than $800 from China.
Fossil Group announced on Thursday the appointment of Joe Martin as chief commercial officer and Antonio Carriero as chief digital information officer and general manager for the EMEA region.
Fossil Group names Joe Martin as chief commercial officer and Antonio Carriero as chief digital information officer and general manager of EMEA – Fossil
In his role, effective February 17, Martin will oversee all global revenue-generating activities, focusing on building a high-performing, scalable commercial organization. He joins Fossil from Adidas where he served as senior vice president of wholesale, team services and omni operations and marketplace, North America.
Meanwhile, starting February 12, Carriero will be responsible for overseeing the company’s global technology strategy, operations, cybersecurity, and the development of future capabilities, while leading the company’s commercial business in the EMEA region. He brings extensive experience in digital transformation and e-commerce growth from his previous roles at Salomon, Breitling SA, and Richemont Group.
“The expertise and proven record of sustainable, long-term results that both Joe and Antonio bring to the company make them ideally suited to advance our turnaround strategy as we focus on building a stronger, more innovative watch business that creates long-term value for all our stakeholders,” said chief executive officer Franco Fogliato.
These appointments are a part of Fossil’s commitment to drive a successful business turnaround, returning the company to profitable growth, and creating long-term shareholder value, the company said.
Amazon.com posted sales in last year’s final quarter that topped Wall Street estimates, but investors initially drove shares down due to weakness in the cloud computing unit and a lower-than-expected revenue estimate.
Reuters
Amazon’s shares fell as much as 4% in extended trade after the report, erasing about $90 billion worth of stock market value, and were last down about 2%.
The tech company’s sales estimate for the first quarter failed to meet analysts’ expectations, even if a negative impact of $2 billion from last year’s Leap Day is included. The company said it anticipates between $151 billion and $155 billion, compared with the average estimate of $158 billion.
The company’s cloud unit, Amazon Web Services, reported a 19% rise in revenue to $28.79 billion, falling short of estimates of $28.87 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Amazon joins smaller cloud providers Microsoft and Google in reporting weak cloud numbers.
The cloud weakness occurs as investors have grown increasingly impatient with Big Tech’s multibillion-dollar capital spending and are hungry for returns from hefty investments in AI.
“After very strong third-quarter numbers, this quarter the growth rates all missed. That’s what the market doesn’t want to hear,” said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust. He said this is particularly true after the emergence of new competitors in artificial intelligence such as China’s DeepSeek.
Like its rivals, Amazon is investing heavily in artificial intelligence software development. At its annual AWS conference in December it showed off new AI software models that it hopes will draw new business and consumer customers. Later this month, it is set to release its long-awaited Alexa generative artificial intelligence voice service after delays over concerns about the quality and speed, Reuters reported earlier this week.
Competitors Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet both posted slowing cloud growth in last year’s fourth quarter, sending shares lower. The companies, along with Meta Platforms, said costs to develop infrastructure for artificial intelligence software contributed to sharply higher anticipated capital expenditures for 2025, a total of around $230 billion between them.
Amazon’s retail business helped offset the cloud weakness, with the company reporting online sales growth of 7% in the quarter to $75.56 billion. That compared with estimates of $74.55 billion.
Amazon forecast operating profit of $14 billion to $18 billion for the first quarter of 2025, missing an average analyst estimate of $18.35 billion.
The company reported revenue of $187.8 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with the average analyst estimate of $187.30 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Advertising sales, a closely watched metric, rose 18% to $17.3 billion. That compares with the average estimate of $17.4 billion.
Net income nearly doubled to $20 billion from $10.6 billion a year earlier. The Seattle retailer reported earnings of $1.86 per share, compared with expectations of $1.49 per share.