By now, many consumers instinctively feel that modern online shopping is heavily influenced by algorithms.
The same products repeatedly appear. The same trends dominate feeds. The same “must-have” recommendations follow consumers across the internet.
But here’s the important thing:
Algorithms are not destiny.
Consumers still have agency.
The moment shopping becomes intentional instead of reactive, algorithms become significantly less powerful.
So how do you break the beauty algorithm?
1. Slow Down Your Purchasing Decisions
Most online systems are designed to encourage impulse behaviour.
Urgency. Scarcity. Repetition. Notifications. Retargeting.
Intentional shopping starts by slowing down.
Instead of asking: “What’s trending?”
Ask: “What actually makes sense for my skin?”
2. Don’t Assume Visibility Equals Quality
The products you see first are not always the products most deserving of trust.
Visibility is often influenced by:
- advertising budgets
- conversion optimisation
- engagement metrics
- algorithmic performance
Sometimes the best products are not the loudest.
3. Buy Fewer Better Products
Modern beauty culture often encourages overconsumption.
Consumers are constantly told they need:
- more products
- more steps
- more trends
- more routines
But thoughtful skincare is often simpler than modern marketing suggests.
Intentional routines usually outperform cluttered routines.
4. Discover Brands Before They Become Trends
Independent brands often drive experimentation and innovation long before trends become mainstream.
Supporting thoughtful independent brands helps preserve:
- creativity
- originality
- formulation innovation
- genuine differentiation
5. Ask Better Questions
Instead of simply asking: “What’s popular?”
Try asking:
- Why is this product being shown to me?
- What values does this brand represent?
- What am I actually paying for?
- Does this product align with what I genuinely need?
Intentional shopping isn’t about rejecting technology.
It’s about staying conscious inside systems increasingly designed to influence behaviour.
At BLAQ, we believe consumers deserve:
- thoughtful discovery
- transparent brands
- intentional skincare
- products built for skin, not search rankings
Because the future of beauty shouldn’t belong entirely to algorithms.
Consumers still have a choice.








