Planograms used to be slow medicine. A fixed grid, refreshed on a calendar, told you where every SKU lived for the quarter. When theretailbulletin.com reported on 11 March 2026 that Superdrug is rolling dedicated fixtures to surface trending and viral beauty lines, the shift was not cosmetic. It is a bet that shelf space follows attention the same way media inventory does: whoever can rotate fastest captures the margin while the hype lasts.
Viral placement is the new rent on the beauty aisle
According to theretailbulletin.com, Superdrug has launched the Next Big Thing in over 40 stores and aims to reach 122 UK locations by end of March 2026. Each fixture is built to highlight brands and products the retailer says are currently shaping the beauty landscape. Made By Mitchell, which theretailbulletin.com notes has a strong social following, is among the first featured; Anua, Medicube, Biodance, HaruHaru Wonder, Skin1004, and end caps for Tir Tir, Daise, and Revolution Beauty round out the launch set. Megan Potter, Superdrug trading director, told theretailbulletin.com that customers want to discover the latest trends in store and that the fixtures create a dedicated destination for what everyone is talking about.
That language mirrors how platforms sell ad slots. Cosmetics Business has documented Superdrug debuting TikTok’s first high street make-up stand with e.l.f. Cosmetics, with TikTok branding across hundreds of stores. IGD has described a market-first TikTok collaboration trajectory for the chain. The through-line is not a single campaign but a structural choice: permanent real estate reserved for whatever is blowing up this week.
Beauty retail has shifted toward discovery-led shopping. Younger shoppers often find products on TikTok or Instagram before they see them in store; the Next Big Thing fixtures are designed to close that loop by giving viral brands a physical home. Retail Bulletin’s March 2026 report names the featured brands explicitly – Made By Mitchell, Anua, Medicube, Biodance, HaruHaru Wonder, Skin1004, Tir Tir, Daise, Revolution Beauty – and frames the rollout as a response to demand for “what everyone is talking about.” That phrase is telling: the shelf is curated by social velocity, not only by margin or legacy contracts.
Why hype SKUs beat static planograms on margin
Retail Dive and industry analysis on the TikTok shelf describe retailers monitoring engagement and trending tags, then reallocating space in near real time. Frozenet analysis frames the TikTok shelf as sections that can change weekly based on what is trending. That is the opposite of the classic planogram, where slotting fees and annual resets governed who got eye level. When virality earns placement, the retailer captures the spike without promising a brand the same square footage once the trend cools.
Slotting fees and annual resets have not disappeared, but they now sit alongside a parallel system where placement can be earned by proof of demand. Brands that trend on TikTok or Instagram can lobby for inclusion in the Next Big Thing bays; retailers get to look responsive and capture the margin while the trend is hot. TheIndustry.beauty and similar trade coverage have cited figures suggesting a large share of beauty purchases after TikTok exposure are unplanned – which makes the physical shelf the conversion point. Superdrug’s bet is that dedicating real estate to “what everyone is talking about” will capture that impulse better than a static planogram.
Superdrug’s parent AS Watson sits inside CK Hutchison; Retail Week and others have tracked strong profit growth and expansion plans including dozens of new stores and refits in 2026. The Next Big Thing fixtures sit inside that capital program as discovery infrastructure. If 82% of beauty purchases after TikTok exposure were unplanned, as TheIndustry.beauty cited in prior Superdrug TikTok work, the fixture is less about loyalty card mechanics and more about intercepting impulse at the shelf.
What This Actually Means
The business read is blunt. Superdrug is renting aisle authority to momentum. Brands that can prove velocity get placement; brands that cannot fall back to the standard bay. That reallocates risk toward suppliers who can feed the algorithm and away from legacy listings that paid for permanence. It also invites the same criticism Which? and others have aimed at promotional mechanics elsewhere: if discovery is the hook, transparency on everyday price still matters. The fixture strategy does not erase that tension; it adds a new layer where the shelf itself behaves like a feed.
What is the Next Big Thing? How does viral shelf placement work?
The Next Big Thing is Superdrug’s dedicated fixture concept for trending and viral beauty products. Launched in over 40 UK stores in March 2026 with a target of 122 locations by end of that month, it reserves prime shelf space for brands and products that are currently driving social and search buzz. Key points:
- Superdrug trading director Megan Potter stated that the fixtures create a “dedicated destination” for what customers are already talking about.
- First featured brands include Made By Mitchell, Anua, Medicube, Biodance, HaruHaru Wonder, Skin1004, with end caps for Tir Tir, Daise, and Revolution Beauty.
- Precedent: Superdrug previously launched TikTok’s first high street make-up stand with e.l.f. Cosmetics, with TikTok branding in hundreds of stores (Cosmetics Business, IGD).
- Industry analysis (Retail Dive, Frozenet) describes “TikTok shelf” models where space can change weekly based on trending tags and engagement.
Unlike traditional planograms, placement is tied to current hype rather than annual slotting deals. The retailer captures margin while trends are hot and can rotate in new names when attention shifts.