Britain's ASOS Sees Sales Rise 10% in Lockdown Period

New employees wait in the lobby on their first day of work at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
New employees wait in the lobby on their first day of work at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
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Britain's ASOS Sees Sales Rise 10% in Lockdown Period

New employees wait in the lobby on their first day of work at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)
New employees wait in the lobby on their first day of work at the ASOS headquarters in London April 1, 2014. (Reuters)

British online fashion retailer ASOS said on Wednesday its sales rose 10% in the four months to June 30, benefiting from trading through the coronavirus lockdown while store based rivals were forced to shutter shops.

The group, which is focused on the 20-something demographic, said it was cautious on the short to medium term outlook on demand but forecast full year pretax profit towards the top end of market expectations, despite material incremental COVID-19 costs.

ASOS also said it would repay previously claimed job retention furlough support from the UK government.



Zalando Uses AI to Speed Up Marketing Campaigns, Cut Costs

FILE PHOTO: A person with a shopping bag of Zalando outlet walks along Kurfuerstendamm shopping street looking for bargains in Berlin, Germany, December 3, 2022. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A person with a shopping bag of Zalando outlet walks along Kurfuerstendamm shopping street looking for bargains in Berlin, Germany, December 3, 2022. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo
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Zalando Uses AI to Speed Up Marketing Campaigns, Cut Costs

FILE PHOTO: A person with a shopping bag of Zalando outlet walks along Kurfuerstendamm shopping street looking for bargains in Berlin, Germany, December 3, 2022. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A person with a shopping bag of Zalando outlet walks along Kurfuerstendamm shopping street looking for bargains in Berlin, Germany, December 3, 2022. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo

European online fashion retailer Zalando is using generative artificial intelligence to produce imagery faster for its app and website, it said on Wednesday, as AI shakes up the fashion industry and cuts costs.
Zalando, which sells branded clothes, shoes, and accessories across 25 markets in Europe, is using AI to produce imagery quickly enough to respond to short-lived fashion trends spread on social media. It is also developing AI-generated "digital twins" of models to use in its marketing.
"We are using AI to be able to be reactive," Matthias Haase, vice president of content solutions at Zalando, told Reuters in an interview.
Using generative AI cuts the time needed to produce imagery to around three to four days from six to eight weeks, and reduces costs by 90%, Haase said, adding the AI-generated content drives greater engagement from customers.
"It's not because of AI content that is better than human-created content, it is really about how new, how relevant it is to our customers," Haase added.
Around 70% of Zalando's editorial campaign images were AI-generated in the fourth quarter of last year as it has increased use of the technology. AI-generated images illustrated Zalando's recap of the year's biggest trends, including "brat summer", "mob wife", and double denim.
For an industry used to costly, meticulously planned fashion shoots on sets or in far-flung locations, the prospect of using AI to speed up production and use marketing money more efficiently is of particular appeal to retailers with far smaller budgets than the big, luxury players.
Zalando is the latest retailer to try out AI-generated digital twins of models, after Sweden's H&M in March said it created digital twins in collaboration with a modelling agency.
The AI-generated three-dimensional replicas enable Zalando to feature a model in a campaign and show an exact replica of that model in the app's product pages, without needing to take hundreds of photos.
Asked how generative AI could affect job prospects for fashion photographers, Haase said traditional fashion shoots will still be needed, but that photographers and other creatives will also have to adapt to using AI tools.
"Creative people fear that AI makes creatives redundant," Haase said. "I don't see that at all, to be honest... I see it rather that creative minds have now, instead of two hands, six hands."