Press release from the issuing company
Simple Chic’s custom-branded Digital Product Passport
Companies use blockchain- and cloud-based Digital Product Passports to di?erentiate around sustainability and comply with European Union regulations
Salt Lake City – Today, PicoNext announced new customer momentum in Digital Product Passports, with a collection of four fashion retailers across the globe adopting the technology to provide increased transparency into their sustainability efforts. The boutique clothing brands are using a combination of blockchain- and cloud-based Digital Product Passports to detail environmental and social attributes of their products, avoiding “greenwashing” and backing their sustainability programs with data.
Introduced in March 2022 by the European Union, Digital Product Passport (DPP) regulations require brands to provide sustainability data to customers, including reporting on attributes such as materials sourcing, carbon footprint, recyclability and more. Typically accessed via a QR code or a Web link, Digital Product Passports powered by PicoNext allow customers to easily view this environmental information by category, and enable companies to create a brand experience around the data while improving transparency and trust.
In fact, according to recent PicoNext sustainability research of 1000+ consumers in Europe and the U.S., 73% of customers indicate that access to this type of detailed sustainability information helps them have more trust in a brand, with 67% also saying that they would be more likely to purchase a product with this increased data.
“Innovative brands are using Digital Product Passports to differentiate their offerings around sustainability,” said Dave Dickson, founder of PicoNext. “Using the PicoNext platform, they are not only increasing trust with eco-conscious Generation Z customers, but also driving compliance with upcoming European Union DPP regulations.”
The four fashion brands launching DPPs today – including Simple Chic in Sydney, Australia; Bon+Berg in Dublin, Ireland; The Morphbag in London, England; and Atelier Tammam, also in London, England are using their Digital Product Passports to show progress in sustainability programs and drive greater trust with their environmentally focused customers. Customers Simple Chic Based in Sydney, Australia, Simple Chic is an on-demand and circular clothing e-commerce platform. It features made-to-order women’s clothing in 100% natural fabrics by local, independent, women-led designers and makers, and provides circular clothing services that are easily accessed during- and post-purchase of clothing. From made-to-order designs, repairs, alterations, upcycling, resale and recycling to extend the life of clothing and to support the planet, the company’s vision is to create a more inclusive, equitable & regenerative world of clothing where all women and our planet flourish.
Simple Chic implemented PicoNext Enterprise APIs into a custom Web site in order to render its DPP information and make it easily available for customers through a QR Code. This way, Simple Chic could retain full control over the brand and customer experience of its DPP, ensuring compliance with brand and sustainability guidelines.
View Simple Chic’s Digital Product Passport
Atelier Tammam Atelier Tammam is a couture fashion studio in London, England with a long-term commitment to environmental and social responsibility. Its recent collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA) features stunning prints of landscapes affected by climate change through satellite imagery on its high-end scarves.
The brand ensures its designs use cruelty-free materials, its sourcing is from sustainable supply chains, and its production is in accordance with ethical principles. Atelier Tammam’s blockchain-based DPP traces the "fiber-to-finish" philosophy of its sourcing and production process for its new ESA scarves collection.
View Atelier Tammam’s Digital Product Passport
Bon+Berg Based in Dublin, Ireland, Bon+Berg focuses on making sustainable women’s undergarments. The brand’s bras and bottoms incorporate sustainability at every point in the value chain, and the company encourages customers to embrace slow fashion and avoid greenwashing.
Bon+Berg’s Digital Product Passport uses PicoNext and the environmentally friendly Polygon blockchain to immutably secure its sustainability data on a public ledger – allowing data events to be traced, and ensuring they can persist indefinitely, regardless of vendor status. To accelerate speed-to-market, the brand also used a pre-formatted DPP viewer from PicoNext to render sustainability data from the public ledger alongside its own branding.
View Bon+Berg’s Digital Product Passport
The Morphbag by GSK The Morphbag by GSK, based in London, England, produces vegan-leather totes, cross-body handbags and clutches for busy and stylish women. The company’s Digital Product Passport highlights the vegan certifications it has received for its products, as well as details of its factory audits and social impact initiatives – including planting trees in the Amazon rainforest for every handbag set sold, and collaborating with UK charity Smartworks to prepare women for workforce reintegration after a career break.
The Morphbag uses PicoNext to produce a cloud-based DPP in order to flexibly update sustainability attributes in its passport as its supply chain strategy evolves, with the option to transition to a blockchain-based solution in the future. A preformatted, Web-based DPP viewer renders and displays sustainability data from the cloud, without customers needing to download or install any additional apps.
View The Morphbag’s Digital Product Passport
Quotes
Mira Mikosic, founder of Simple Chic "Our Digital Product Passports enable us to securely and transparently share each product's provenance story, sustainability disclosures and our impacts towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Importantly, they unlock new customer and business value through the inclusion of our Circular Product Services, which are designed to engage our customers throughout a product's lifecycle, including clothing repairs, upcycling, resale and recycling. Our DPPs are a new Simple Chic branded customer experience designed to educate and engage while staying ahead of emerging regulations."
Lucy Tammam, founder and creative director of Atelier Tammam “Just as our new Tammam X European Space Agency fashion collection incorporates stunning satellite imagery, our Digital Product Passport gives a bird’s eye view of our sustainability practices,” says Tammam. “Our customers can use the DPP to see what’s happening with our environmental and social programs, where the product was made, and what it is made of – all in one place that’s easy to access.”
Siobhán Dunphy, founder of Bon+Berg “Our garments strive to be good in every way possible: ethical, sustainable, and fair-trade. We’re pleased that our Digital Product Passport drives transparency with customers, and shows them exactly what we’re doing to be environmentally responsible.”
Giovanna Sessi-Knott, founder of The Morphbag “After learning about the new E.U. Digital Product Passport rules, I knew we wanted to get ahead of these emerging regulations. Our DPP helps us collect our environmental info in one place and communicate our sustainability philosophy directly to our customers.”
Availability Digital Product Passport solutions – along with blockchain-based capabilities for experience design, sustainability, and customer loyalty – are currently available to brands and organizations.
About PicoNext PicoNext is an end-to-end platform for experience brands to engage their customers using public ledgers. With integrated Digital Product Passport, sustainability transparency, and loyalty capabilities, PicoNext enables companies to use blockchains to attract and retain Generation Z and Millennial customers. For more details, visit PicoNext.com.
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