
South Korea sits at the center of one of the most innovative beauty industries in the world. Over the past decade, Korean skincare has reshaped global beauty routines by emphasizing prevention, ingredient transparency, and long-term skin health rather than quick cosmetic fixes. That philosophy is not abstract to me. A significant portion of my own skincare routine already relies on Korean products, and through my experience working in beauty retail and creating beauty content, I have watched K-beauty move from an emerging curiosity to one of the most influential forces in global cosmetics.
That personal connection is part of why the opportunity I have been presented with is interesting to consider. The role would place me in South Korea working in beauty marketing, but the objective would not be helping Western companies enter the Korean market. The strategy moves in the opposite direction. Korean beauty products have already gained enormous attention in the United States, largely through social media, where skincare routines, ingredient education, and product reviews circulate widely online. Largely sold online, Korean beauty has only recently entered American beauty retailers, but these brands still occupy relatively small sections of shelf space compared with their influence on consumer trends. The opportunity would involve helping Korean beauty companies expand their presence so that the scale of their retail visibility better matches the demand that already exists.

Evaluating, in part, whether to accept the assignment requires understanding the cultural and market environment in which the Korean beauty industry operates. What makes that environment distinctive, in many ways, is the uniqueness of the Korean market itself. Hofstede’s cultural dimensions, introduced in the course lectures (Cieri & Turner, 2026), provide a framework for understanding cross-cultural differences, while Seoha Lee (2023) applies these dimensions to explain several characteristics of the South Korean market, directly comparing South Korea and the United States. In Lee’s analysis, Korea’s stronger collectivist orientation helps explain why consumer decisions often circulate through social groups and online communities rather than remaining purely individual choices. Higher uncertainty avoidance also shapes the market by increasing the demand for detailed information, ingredient transparency, and reliable product performance before consumers adopt new products. The masculinity-femininity dimension helps illuminate the cultural importance placed on presentation and appearance, which contributes to the prominence of skincare within everyday life. Analyzing these dimensions helps to explain why the Korean market operates differently from the American market and why understanding those cultural patterns becomes important when evaluating the possibility of working there.
That environment has also helped shape the Korean beauty industry into one of the most innovative in the world. Because consumers expect transparency, evidence, and results, companies invest heavily in formulation testing and product development, helping establish the reputation Korean beauty products now hold for quality and performance, and creating a strong opportunity to expand their presence in the U.S. market. As in the United States, skincare routines are openly discussed across social platforms in Korea; however, ingredient literacy among Korean consumers is unusually high compared with many Western markets. The constant scrutiny placed on brands pushes companies to improve quickly, helping explain why Korean skincare has produced so many widely adopted innovations over the past decade.

Cultural differences extend beyond consumer behavior and become visible in the structure of the workplace itself. Korea reflects a higher power distance than the United States, which influences how authority and hierarchy are perceived within professional settings (Lee, 2023). Workplace culture in South Korea is shaped by expectations around hierarchy and seniority, which influence communication and decision-making within organizations. Anyone working in that environment would need to understand those dynamics before attempting to influence strategy or operations. My undergraduate background in psychology, sociology, and anthropology has trained me to approach cultures that way; observing how systems function before assuming that outside practices should replace them. That perspective is particularly important in international work, where successful collaboration depends on understanding how local systems already operate.
Of course, accepting an international assignment involves more than understanding the industry. Clouse and Watkins (2009) emphasize that overseas leadership roles often fail when individuals underestimate the personal and cultural adjustments involved in relocating abroad. Successful expatriate assignments usually depend on several practical factors: stability at home, the ability to build credibility within the new organization, and a willingness to learn how local systems operate before attempting to introduce change.
Those considerations would play an important role in evaluating this opportunity. My husband’s military career involved years of being stationed internationally, which means adapting to new environments is something our family already understands. My children are also largely grown, reducing many of the logistical challenges that often accompany international moves. These circumstances make the possibility of working abroad far more realistic than it might otherwise be.

Professional approach would matter just as much as personal readiness. Leaders entering international roles sometimes try to diagnose problems and introduce solutions immediately. Clouse and Watkins (2009) argue that this approach can undermine credibility. Listening first, observing how teams operate, and building relationships before attempting to influence strategy often produces far better results. In a market as culturally specific as South Korea, understanding how Korean beauty companies already succeed would be essential before attempting to expand those strategies into new markets.
South Korean beauty brands already have a presence in the United States, but that presence remains much smaller than their influence on consumer trends would suggest. Accepting the assignment would depend on more than whether the industry interests me. I would need confidence that the role was structured in a way that made expatriate success realistic. That would mean entering an organization with enough support, preparation, and time to learn how Korean teams operate before trying to scale anything in the American market. It would also mean approaching the assignment the way Clouse and Watkins (2009) recommend, by building credibility through questions, observation, and local insight rather than assuming I already know the right strategy. Family stability would matter as well, since the readings make clear that international assignments often fail when the home foundation is unstable or when the disruption of relocation is underestimated (Cieri & Turner, 2026; Clouse & Watkins, 2009). Compliance and cultural judgment would matter just as much, because working internationally requires understanding where local business norms end and where ethical or regulatory risks begin. If those conditions were in place, the assignment would make sense as a serious professional move, not simply because I care about Korean skincare, but because it would allow me to help scale an already influential category from limited retail visibility into a much stronger position within the American beauty market.

References:
Cieri, M., & Turner, M. (2026). MGMT 553: Human Resources Management, Lectures 3–5. Oregon State University.
Clouse, M. A., & Watkins, M. D. (2009). Three keys to getting an overseas assignment right. Harvard Business Review.
Lee, S. (2023). Analyzing Korean customers with Hofstede’s four cultural dimensions. Localization Institute.