Carol Phillips and the Creation of Clinique
When Mr. Lauder introduced Phillips and Estée, there was an immediate kinship (they both liked to speak their minds). Estée also found the idea of creating a new beauty line that was bold, fresh, and different—and which armed women with straightforward information—irresistible.
To seal the partnership, Mr. Lauder asked Bob Nielsen, then general sales manager for Estée Lauder, to take Phillips to lunch and further discuss the idea. He wasn’t certain Phillips would go for his plan; after all, she was an editor at Vogue, highly glamorous and influential in her own right. Did she really need to start a beauty company? “I told Bob, ‘I don’t want to have her turn me down,’” Mr. Lauder recalls.
In the days before emails, before even international phone calls or faxes became the norm, the cablegram served as basic long-distance communication, especially overseas; and, that's how Mr. Lauder received the good news while he was in Paris. He recalls Bob Nielsen forwarded just three simple words: “Carol said yes.”
The Launch
Almost exactly 12 months later, in September 1968, Clinique was introduced to the world at New York’s Saks Fifth Avenue. Evelyn Lauder, Leonard’s late wife and a woman who likewise would emerge as a beauty pioneer, conceived the name Clinique after a visit to Paris. Throughout the city, Evelyn kept noticing signs for "Clinique Esthétiques," where Parisian women went to get facials and treatments. She immediately loved the word for suggesting a fresh, clinical approach to skincare with a hint of French glamour. The new brand's packaging was equally chic—a pale celadon green color that was chosen for its soothing appeal.