4.6 • 770 Ratings
🗓️ 3 June 2022
⏱️ 21 minutes
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Imaginary Ventures’ Natalie Massenet, and Natasha Franck, founder of digital ID-maker Eon join BoF technology correspondent Marc Bain to discuss Eon, how the technology works and highlight the opportunities digital IDs could create for fashion.
Each interaction a brand has with a consumer typically ends when a product is sold. Digital IDs have the potential to extend that exchange, integrating digital initiatives with products’ physical lives. A a flock of start-ups and fashion power brokers want every item of clothing, watch or handbag to have a digital twin, meaning, QR code-enabled garments that lead to a website packed with information such as an item’s material breakdown or suggestions on how to style it. It's a concept that is well-established in the automobile industry and a few other sectors, but has yet to gain traction in fashion. Proponents believe it could unlock enormous potential for consumers and brands.
“It's moving from this very transactional relationship that brands have with customers into this service-based continuous relationship between brands and customers,” said Natasha Franck, founder and chief executive of Imaginary Ventures-backed digital ID-maker Eon at BoF’s Technology Summit.
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0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. Welcome to the BOF podcast. It's Friday, June 3rd. In our state of fashion 2021 report, we called out product passports as a key strategic priority for fashion brands, revealing that two out of five fashion executives plan to adopt product passports |
0:22.2 | this year or have already done so. Digital identities for physical clothes promise to make every |
0:29.1 | garment the center of its own ecosystem of data and services. So shoppers could scan a QR code and |
0:35.9 | see the item's sustainability credentials or get get styling tips, or access to special perks. |
0:42.3 | Brands could theoretically use these ideas to collect royalties each time an item is resold, benefiting from its whole life cycle and not just the initial purchase. |
0:52.3 | Eon is a startup building the back-end infrastructure to make this kind of vision possible |
0:57.8 | and has already enlisted partners such as Gabriella Hearst and Target. |
1:02.5 | This week on the Bof podcast, the founder and CEO of Eon, Natasha Frank, |
1:07.7 | and one of her investors, Imaginary Ventures, Natalie Massonay, join our technology |
1:12.6 | correspondent, Morick Bain, to explore the possibilities of building a digital layer for physical |
1:17.7 | fashion. Here are Natasha Frank, Natalie Massonay, and Mark Bain from the BOF Professional |
1:24.0 | Summit, New Frontiers and Technology and Innovation on this week's |
1:27.9 | POF podcast. |
1:30.2 | Explain to us what is a digital ID and why would a brand want one on its clothing? |
1:35.6 | Well, today, brands, their digital and physical world are entirely disconnected. |
1:41.7 | And you have brands selling physical products and and you have all these digital initiatives, |
1:47.7 | and none of them are connected. |
1:49.6 | And so the moment that a brand sells a product, they lose the connection to the customer, |
1:55.5 | they lose the ability to monetize their products, they lose all data. |
2:00.2 | And historically, brands have ID products from point of production to point of sale. |
2:04.6 | Right? |
2:04.9 | We know every product has a barcode or an RFID tag, and that's what makes commerce possible |
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