11 101
Fashion Jobs
HOLLAND AND BARRETT
B2B Marketing Executive
Permanent · LONDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Leighton Buzzard Superstore
Permanent · LEIGHTON BUZZARD
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Amersham Superstore
Permanent · AMERSHAM
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Warehouse Operative - Freezer - Days
Permanent · DONCASTER
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Stockport Extra
Permanent · STOCKPORT
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Baldock Extra
Permanent · BALDOCK
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Maldon Extra
Permanent · MALDON
TESCO
Customer Delivery Driver - Pontyclun Talbot Green Extra
Permanent · LLANTRISANT
PRIMARK
Visual Merchandising Manager
Permanent · KINGSTON UPON HULL
ESSILORLUXOTTICA GROUP
Regional Medical Science Liaison Midlands UK
Permanent · BIRMINGHAM
BARBOUR
Global Ecommerce Content & SEO Manager
Permanent · SOUTH SHIELDS
BARBOUR
Senior Warehouse Supervisor
Permanent · JARROW
SAINSBURY'S
Home Delivery Driver
Permanent · NANTWICH
PENTLAND
Customer Operations Executive (Edi)
Permanent · SUNDERLAND
PENTLAND
Creative Team (Art Director + Copywriter)
Permanent · LONDON
MARKS&SPENCER
Senior Project Manager - International
Permanent · LONDON
By
Reuters API
Published
Jan 20, 2022
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Amazon to open fashion store where algorithms suggest what to try on

By
Reuters API
Published
Jan 20, 2022

Amazon.com Inc's recipe for the department store of the future includes algorithmic recommendations and what one corporate director called "a magic closet" in the fitting room.


Reuters



The online retailer is making another push to grow its fashion business, announcing on Thursday it will open its first-ever apparel store this year, with a tech twist. "We wouldn't do anything in physical retail unless we felt we could significantly improve the customer experience," said Simoina Vasen, a managing director.

At 30,000 square feet (2,787 sq meters), the planned "Amazon Style" shop near Los Angeles is smaller than the typical department store. Model items are on the racks, and customers scan a code using Amazon's mobile app to select the color and size they would like. To try on the clothes, which are stored in the back, shoppers enter a virtual queue for a fitting room that they unlock with their smartphone when it is ready.

Inside, the dressing room is "a personal space for you to continue shopping without ever having to leave," Vasen said. Each has a touchscreen letting shoppers request more items that staff deliver to a secure, two-sided closet "within minutes," she said.

"It's like a magic closet with seemingly endless selection," Vasen said.

The touchscreens suggest items to shoppers too. Amazon keeps a record of every good a customer scans so its algorithms personalize clothing recommendations. Shoppers can fill out a style survey as well. By the time they arrive in a fitting room, employees have already deposited customers' requested items and others that Amazon has picked.
Shoppers can opt out with a concierge's help, Amazon said.

Amazon has unveiled tech to help customers choose outfits before. The company has surpassed Walmart Inc as the most-shopped clothing retailer in the United States, according to analyst research.

But it still has room to expand and compete with the likes of Macy's Inc and Nordstrom Inc, which have opened smaller-format stores. Amazon's lineup of physical grocery and convenience shops have yet to upend brick-and-mortar retail.
The company's new store aims to attract a broad range of shoppers with hundreds of brands, Vasen said, declining to name examples.

It has hundreds of associates, and no cashier-less checkout like some Amazon stores, Vasen said. Still, using a biometric system known as Amazon One, customers can pay with a swipe of their palm.
 

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.