Tickets to Ulta Beauty World 2026 went on sale at 10 a.m. on Jan. 21. Roughly 71 minutes later, the ticketing page read "Tickets are sold out." A one-day consumer beauty expo had cleared its full inventory of 3,000 tickets at $160 each before lunchtime, FOX 35 Orlando reported.
Branded, in-person experiences have become valuable enough to sell out a 3,000-ticket expo in about an hour, and the brands exhibiting are responding by building booths as full marketing productions rather than sample tables. Pop Up Mob designed and produced nine of those booths at the Orlando event, each a separate brand environment with its own concept and crew.
Ulta Beauty World is new. Ulta ran the first consumer edition in 2025 in San Antonio, where it drew roughly 1,500 attendees. Orlando doubled the consumer count to 3,000 ticketed guests on April 16 and pushed the combined headcount above 5,000 once Ulta's internal Field Leadership Conference teams were counted.
The event grew out of that internal conference, a gathering for Ulta store leadership that has run for more than a decade and has long included a brand expo day. Ulta opened the format to paying consumers for the first time in San Antonio, then kept the dual-audience model in Orlando. What began as an internal trade show is now a ticketed event, and more than 220 brands have booked space for the 2026 floor.
Every brand at Ulta Beauty World worked inside a 30-by-30-foot square. That footprint had to carry a full pitch in roughly two minutes, the time an attendee spends in a single booth. Inside that window, the booth has to do several jobs at once:
Establish positioning so a visitor grasps what the brand stands for
Tell the product story fast enough to land in passing
Deliver a sampling moment that puts the product in a visitor's hands
Hand over a takeaway the visitor carries out
Stage a photo opportunity built for the platforms they post to
Pop Up Mob's argument, set out in its account of the event, is that a booth treated as a sampling table wastes the space. A stronger play is a compressed brand world that does in 120 seconds what a billboard, a social video and a retail shelf would normally spread across weeks.
Pop Up Mob's nine activations ran across haircare, skincare, sun protection and body care. Each carried a distinct concept:
Cécred got a hot-studio environment that reframed heat styling as controlled performance.
Tatcha translated the Japanese idea of hiyori, a day suited to something you love in the light, into an outdoor ritual space.
Olaplex carried over a science-lab concept first built as a six-day pop-up in SoHo.
Tree Hut became a saturated, gooey playground pulled straight from the brand's ad world.
Nine concepts, nine production timelines, one opening date. "Nine booths at one event means nine different brand stories running in parallel," said Ana Corina Pelucarte, Pop Up Mob's CEO and co-founder. "The work is making sure every space feels like it belongs to the brand standing in it, not to the agency that built it."
Running nine builds in parallel is its own test. Each booth needed separate concept development, design, 3D rendering, fabrication and an on-site crew, and all nine had to open on the same April 16 date. A single late build, or one concept that reads as generic, stands exposed against eight others on the same floor. An agency that can hold nine timelines at once without letting a space slip is the one equipped for a brief like this.
Demand ran far past the 3,000 tickets available. Skift reported that more than 3 million people entered the virtual queue, a mismatch that produced online petitions and national coverage weeks before the doors opened. For the beauty press, that was a hype story. For marketers, it was evidence that a branded event can manufacture real scarcity.
Part of the pull is a change in what shoppers want from retail, and the National Retail Federation's 2026 trend outlook put "Is the mall cool again?" among its five trends for the year. It cited venues like Netflix House and a series of immersive Ralph Lauren pop-ups as proof that shoppers will pay to go places. "In a world increasingly starved for connection," the federation wrote, physical retail can "create spaces that are an antidote to screen time."
A ticketed beauty expo pushes that idea to its commercial edge. Attendees paid $160 to get in, then received a swag bag valued at more than $2,000 plus masterclasses with celebrity stylists, according to FOX 35. It inverts the usual model: an audience pays to spend a day inside a room full of advertising, and 3 million people tried to.
Scarcity that sharp carries a cost. Skift framed its coverage around the millions left unhappy, and would-be attendees filed petitions accusing Ulta of bait-and-switch ticketing. A sellout in 71 minutes is free publicity, but it also converts most of a 3-million-person audience into people who associate the event with a closed door. For the brands exhibiting, that is a useful warning: a booth has to work for the few thousand in the room and for the far larger audience watching its content travel afterward.
A 30-by-30 square at a sold-out expo is expensive, and the people standing in it are unusually receptive, having paid and queued to be there. A booth has to convert that attention into something a marketing team can take to a budget meeting.
Pop Up Mob has developed and produced more than 250 pop-up experiences for more than 175 brands since 2014, and the agency has said it builds measurement into the design stage. That means designing spaces where photo moments, traffic flow, dwell time, sampling, and retail behavior can all be tracked in real time. At an event where every visitor has been pre-qualified by a $160 ticket and a long wait, those numbers carry weight.
A pre-qualified crowd also changes which numbers matter. At a free pop-up on a public street, raw foot traffic is the headline metric, because attention is the scarce thing. Inside a sold-out ticketed expo, attention is already bought, so the useful measures are how far a visitor moved through the space, what they did with the product and whether they posted. A booth that only counts heads at a $160-ticket event is measuring the wrong variable.
Demand is no longer the hard part; the Orlando sellout settled that. The open question is whether a brand can build something worth the two minutes it gets, and nine brands decided they could.