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Brazilian Rebrandings That Actually Worked: Lessons from Skol, Natura, Casas Bahia, and Magazine Luiza

Deep dive into four Brazilian brands that transformed through rebranding. From Skol's inclusive shift to Magazine Luiza's tech evolution. Lessons for any business.

12 min readMay 21, 2026

Brazil has produced some of the most remarkable brand transformations in global marketing history. Not subtle logo refreshes or minor color updates — complete identity overhauls that redefined what these companies stood for, who they served, and how they were perceived. Four brands stand out as masterclasses in rebranding done right: Skol, which went from sexist to inclusive; Natura, which went from local to global premium; Casas Bahia, which went from traditional to digital-first; and Magazine Luiza, which went from regional retailer to national tech brand. Each story holds specific, actionable lessons for businesses of any size.

Skol: From Sexist Marketing to Inclusive Icon

The Problem That Could Not Be Ignored

For decades, Skol's marketing followed the Brazilian beer industry playbook: bikini-clad women, beach parties, and objectifying humor. Their iconic campaigns featured women as decoration — props for male consumption alongside the beer itself. It worked commercially. Skol was Brazil's bestselling beer for years.

Then culture shifted. The feminist movement in Brazil gained mainstream momentum. Social media amplified criticism. In 2015, Skol launched a Carnival campaign that was immediately met with backlash. Street art collective "Cerveja Nao e Nao" (Beer Is Not Yes) started pasting stickers over Skol ads reading: "This ad disrespects women." The stickers went viral. Skol's brand perception among women aged 18-35 dropped 22 points in a single quarter.

The company faced a crossroads: double down on the existing audience or transform.

The Transformation

In 2017, Skol launched the "Reposter" campaign. They invited female artists to reimagine their old sexist advertisements. The original ads were displayed alongside new versions that replaced objectification with empowerment. The campaign acknowledged the past directly — no euphemisms, no deflection — and committed to a different future.

The visual identity evolved: warmer color palette, diverse representation in all imagery, photography that showed real people (not models) in authentic moments. The brand voice shifted from "bro humor" to inclusive celebration. Their tagline moved from "Desce Redondo" (Goes Down Smooth) to campaigns centered on togetherness and diversity.

  • Acknowledged past mistakes publicly and specifically
  • Invited the affected community to lead the creative transformation
  • Changed visual representation across ALL touchpoints, not just ads
  • Backed verbal commitments with behavioral changes (sponsoring diversity events, changing hiring)
  • Maintained the core brand energy (fun, social, celebration) while changing the values

The result: Skol regained its position as the best-selling beer in Brazil while simultaneously becoming a case study in inclusive marketing. Brand favorability among women 18-35 increased by 30 points in two years. They proved that you can change everything about your brand's values without losing your market — if the change is genuine.

Skol's lesson: a rebrand can change your values without changing your market position — but only if the transformation is genuine, not performative. Consumers detect inauthenticity instantly.

Natura: From Local Brazilian to Global Premium

The Identity That Almost Held Them Back

Natura was founded in 1969 as a Brazilian cosmetics company with a direct sales model. For decades, they were beloved in Brazil — associated with natural ingredients, the Amazon, Brazilian biodiversity, and the "consultora" network of door-to-door saleswomen. Their brand identity was warm, domestic, and deeply local.

When Natura set its sights on global expansion, that local identity became a constraint. In international markets, "Brazilian cosmetics" did not carry the premium associations it had domestically. The direct sales model evoked comparisons to Avon — not the luxury positioning Natura aspired to. Their visual identity, while charming, looked regional rather than global.

The Evolution

Natura's rebranding was not a revolution — it was an elevation. They kept everything authentic and amplified it to global standards. The Amazon connection went from a footnote to the centerpiece: Natura positioned itself as the world's most innovative sustainable cosmetics company, with biodiversity as its competitive moat.

The visual identity evolved from homey warmth to sophisticated sustainability. Clean lines replaced busy layouts. Premium photography of Amazonian ingredients replaced generic product shots. The packaging became a design statement — recyclable, refillable, beautiful. Typography moved from casual friendliness to elegant confidence.

The acquisition of The Body Shop (2017), Aesop (2019), and Avon (2020) were not just business moves — they were brand architecture decisions. Each acquisition expanded what "Natura &Co" meant globally while the flagship Natura brand maintained its Brazilian authenticity at a premium tier.

Our rebrand was not about becoming less Brazilian. It was about showing the world what Brazilian innovation actually looks like.

Natura brand team (paraphrased from corporate communications)

Today, Natura &Co is the fourth-largest beauty group in the world. The brand that was once perceived as a local direct-sales company is now synonymous with sustainable luxury. The Brazilian identity did not disappear — it became the differentiator.

Casas Bahia: From Paper Catalogs to Digital-First

The Brand That Time Almost Forgot

Casas Bahia was founded in 1957 by Samuel Klein, a Holocaust survivor who started selling blankets door-to-door in Sao Caetano do Sul. The company grew into Brazil's largest furniture and electronics retailer, known for generous installment plans ("carnezinho") that made consumer goods accessible to working-class Brazilians. The brand was synonymous with accessibility, trust, and Brazilian popular culture.

By 2020, that identity was a liability. The logo looked like it belonged in 1995. The brand aesthetic screamed "paper catalog" in a digital-first world. Young consumers associated Casas Bahia with their grandparents' living room furniture, not with the smartphones and gaming consoles they actually sold. E-commerce competitors like Mercado Livre and Amazon were eating their market share.

The Digital Reinvention

In 2020, Via Varejo (Casas Bahia's parent company) executed one of the most ambitious rebrandings in Brazilian retail history. The changes were comprehensive:

  • New logo: simplified, modern, mobile-friendly — designed for screens, not store signs
  • Brand mascot CB: a digital-native character that lives on social media, not in TV commercials
  • Color evolution: maintained the iconic blue and red but modernized the palette
  • Voice shift: from "trusted retailer" formality to conversational, youthful, digitally fluent
  • Channel transformation: heavy investment in app, social commerce, and digital experiences
  • Physical stores reimagined as experience centers, not just transaction points

The masterstroke was the CB mascot. Instead of a traditional brand refresh announcement, Casas Bahia introduced CB as a character on TikTok and Instagram — speaking Gen Z language, creating memes, engaging with trending topics. CB became one of the most followed brand characters in Brazil, giving the 67-year-old brand a digital-native personality.

The rebrand preserved what mattered (accessibility, trust, Brazilian identity) while completely reinventing the packaging. Casas Bahia's e-commerce share grew from 28% to 52% of total revenue in three years. The brand that seemed destined for irrelevance became culturally current again.

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Magazine Luiza: From Regional Retailer to National Tech Brand

The Transformation That Rewrote the Playbook

Magazine Luiza's transformation is arguably the most remarkable brand evolution in Brazilian business history. Founded in 1957 as a small gift shop in Franca, Sao Paulo, it was for decades a mid-sized regional retailer — respected but unremarkable. The story of how it became one of Brazil's most valuable companies and most trusted brands is a masterclass in branding as business strategy.

Under Frederico Trajano's leadership (Luiza Helena Trajano's son), Magazine Luiza did not just rebrand — it re-envisioned what the company was. The physical retailer became a technology platform. The stores became distribution nodes and experience centers. The brand became a digital ecosystem.

The Brand Architecture of Magalu

The rebrand centered on "Magalu" — a contraction of Magazine Luiza that felt digital, friendly, and modern. The visual identity shifted from traditional retail red-and-white to a vibrant, tech-forward palette. The typography became cleaner and more digital-native. But the most powerful brand asset was not visual at all.

Lu — the virtual assistant and brand avatar — became one of the most recognized digital personalities in Brazil. With over 30 million social media followers, Lu is not just a mascot. She is an influencer, a customer service channel, a cultural commentator, and the human face of a technology company. Lu made the transition from "your neighborhood store" to "your digital companion" feel natural rather than jarring.

  • Name evolution: Magazine Luiza to Magalu (shorter, digital-friendly, memorable)
  • Visual modernization: clean, tech-forward design across all platforms
  • Lu as brand avatar: 30M+ followers, bridges physical and digital identity
  • Platform positioning: from "store" to "ecosystem" in brand narrative
  • Social purpose: diversity and inclusion as brand pillars, not just CSR checkboxes
  • Marketplace model: brand extends to enable other businesses, amplifying trust

Magazine Luiza's market cap grew from R$3 billion in 2015 to over R$55 billion at its peak. The rebrand was not the cause of the business transformation — but it was the vehicle through which customers, investors, and employees understood and believed in it.

Lessons for Any Business, Any Size

These four rebrandings share common principles that apply whether you are a multinational corporation or a solo entrepreneur:

  1. Preserve what is authentic, change what is outdated — Skol kept its energy but changed its values. Natura kept its Brazilian identity but elevated it. Neither threw away what made them real.
  2. Rebrand for the customer you want, not just the customer you have — Casas Bahia rebranded for the digital generation. Magazine Luiza rebranded for the tech-savvy consumer. Both attracted new audiences without losing existing ones.
  3. Actions before aesthetics — every successful rebrand was backed by behavioral changes. New logos without new behavior is just decoration.
  4. Invest in a system, not just a logo — all four brands created comprehensive identity systems (visual, verbal, behavioral) that could be applied consistently across hundreds of touchpoints.
  5. Acknowledge the past honestly — Skol explicitly acknowledged its sexist history. Casas Bahia acknowledged its dated image. Honesty during transition builds more trust than pretending the old brand never existed.

The biggest lesson from all four stories: a rebrand is not a new logo. It is a new promise backed by new behavior, expressed through a consistent new identity system.

Your Brand Evolution

You do not need a billion-dollar marketing budget to apply these lessons. The principles are the same whether you are Natura going global or a local business going professional: define what is authentically yours, identify what needs to evolve, build a comprehensive identity system, and commit to consistency.

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Every brand on this list was once small. Magazine Luiza started as a gift shop. Natura started with one founder mixing products. Casas Bahia started with a man selling blankets door-to-door. The size of the business did not determine the success of the rebrand. The clarity of the vision did. Your brand evolution starts with knowing who you are, who you serve, and how you want to be perceived. Everything else is execution.