Crocs are known for their simplicity. The Colorado-based footwear company says it delights in being confidently comfortable and (soon) a 100% vegan brand.
It’s a theme that resonates with consumers who helped give the company record revenue over the holiday season. In its fourth-quarter and full-year earnings call on Wednesday (Feb. 16), Crocs seemed especially bullish about its future, saying it expects digital and direct-to-customer sales to more than double by 2026.
“This year, we invested in our digital capabilities, including in the Crocs mobile app, global social platforms, such as Douyin, and digital talent across the globe,” CEO Andrew Rees said in a conference call. “We’re confident these investments and our continued focus will drive digital growth globally over the long term. We achieved strong growth in both our direct-to-consumer and wholesale channels with DTC revenues up 64% and wholesale revenues up 69% globally.”
Looking at the numbers from the past year, the optimism is certainly understandable.
Crocs said digital sales were up by double digits for a third consecutive year. They increased by 48% and 122%, respectively, when compared to 2020 and 2019, respectively. It represented 37% of total sales for the year, compared to 42% the previous year and 31% in ‘19.
Direct-to-consumer revenue was $1.13 billion, a 64% increase over the year. By comparison, wholesale revenue was $1.17 million, up $69% over the year.
In Q4, which included the holiday shopping season, digital sales grew 41%, which was 40% of revenues. It’s also growth of 163% for the final quarter of 2019.
“Direct to consumer benefited from strong growth in both eCommerce and retail, while wholesale benefited from exceptional performance in brick and mortar,” said Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Anne Mehlman. “We are extremely pleased with our (Europe, Middle East and Africa) performance, which is benefiting from improved brand relevance and consideration. In Asia, Q4 revenues were $57.1 million, up 10.3% from last year. This growth was driven equally by DTC and wholesale.”
Over the next four years, digital sales are predicted to be $2.5 billion. Crocs says it can achieve this goal through the combination of a fragmented $30 billion casual footwear market, aggressive marketing, customer satisfaction and a year-round digital opportunity.
The digital content has been produced by customers on both TikTok and Instagram channels. Continued exposure by celebrity influencers such as Niki Minaj, Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian will also be important.
Hey, Dude
The $2.5 billion acquisition of Italian comfy shoemaker Hey Dude, which is scheduled to close this month, is expected to play a role in this growth.
“We’re excited about the potential of Hey Dude and incredibly confident in our ability to build a $1 billion brand by 2024,” Rees said.
Going back to the fragmented marketplace, the deal put Crocs closer to the front of its peer group and closer to rivals such as Skechers and Deckers, the parent of UGG. It also moves the brand further ahead of upstarts such as Allbirds, which has been worth about one-third as much.
Revenue for Hey Dude is expected to be between $700 million and $750 million in 2022.
“So in terms of what we’re looking at the brand, its trajectory, its connectivity with consumers, and its relationships with its key partners and wholesale customers. I think the brand is in a great place, and there is clearly far more demand and then the ability to meet that demand in the short term,” Rees said.
Humane, creator of the Ai Pin that received a wave of negative user reviews, is shutting down and selling its assets to HP for $116 million.
HP will get Humane’s artificial intelligence (AI)-powered platform called Cosmos, its technical staff and intellectual property with more than 300 patents and patent applications, Humane announced Tuesday (Feb. 18). The Humane team will form HP’s new innovation lab, HP IQ.
The HP acquisition marks a swift downfall for the AI wearable, which began shipping less than a year ago. It was aiming for sales of 100,000 units but fell far short at 10,000. Now, the startup is telling Ai Pin owners that their devices will stop working after Feb. 28, and all stored data will be deleted.
Humane was founded by Apple executives Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno, who are married. The startup raised $230 million since its 2018 inception, according to Crunchbase. Its investors included Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, SoftBank and Microsoft.
Once named a Time magazine best invention of the year, the Ai Pin disappointed users who complained about malfunctions, its high price and overheating problems. Due to sluggish sales, the Ai Pin had to cut its price from $699 to $499. Users also had to pay $24 a month excluding taxes and fees for connectivity and cloud storage.
“The pin was more vanity than practical. There was really nothing more people could do with the Humane Ai Pin that they couldn’t otherwise do with their smartphones,” Kushank Aggarwal, founder of Digital Samaritan, told PYMNTS. “Plus, voice-only devices haven’t experienced mass adoption yet, so in that respect, it was destined to fail.”
Once compared to the Star Trek communicator badge, the Ai Pin has a square shape and attaches to a shirt or coat using magnets. It uses AI to answer questions and perform tasks, such as making calls, sending messages or taking notes. A laser display projects text onto the user’s palm. Sensors detect hand gestures to control the device.
But early adopters complained that the pin would drag down the front of thinner shirts, that it would overheat, it didn’t work well, had slow response times, made frequent mistakes and its laser projector beaming text onto the hand was hard to read in bright light.
An Engadget reviewer said that “the combination of holding out my hand to see the projected screen, waving it around to navigate the interface and tapping my chest and waiting for an answer all just made me look really stupid.”
Reviewer Marques Brownlee said it was “the worst product I’ve ever reviewed … for now.” Wired magazine’s reviewer opined that “right now, there’s nothing here that makes me want to use it over my smartphone,” although he held out for the next version to be better.
Anant Sood, co-founder of Worxogo, told PYMNTS that “people develop strong habits around existing technologies. … The Humane Ai Pin required users to break smartphone habits across the board instead of breaking one small habit at a time. For new technology adoption, the perceived value had to significantly outweigh the effort to unlearn.”
Andrey Meshcheryakov, an engagement manager at Recombinators, said the company “struggled to identify a compelling use case and validate that its solution truly addresses it. If you’re creating a new category, make sure there’s a real demand or subpar consumer experience you’re [hoping to solve] — not just a futuristic concept people might find cool.”
Meshcheryakov pointed out that Humane, despite having “a dream team with Apple pedigrees,” missed “several blind spots: a deep understanding of customer needs, orchestrating an impactful go-to-market strategy, offering a reasonable business model, and ultimately acing the solution design — getting the combination of hardware, AI and user experience right.”
Moreover, Humane hyped its device before it was ready for prime time, Meshcheryakov told PYMNTS. “It’s better to debut a quietly excellent product than a loudly proclaimed flop,” he said. “Even a great product can falter with poor marketing, and a flawed product has no cushion at all. Additionally, the pricing model was a hard sell without proven value.”
For HP, the deal marks a significant step in its strategic transformation toward experience-driven computing and AI-powered devices.
“This investment will rapidly accelerate our ability to develop a new generation of devices that seamlessly orchestrate AI requests both locally and in the cloud,” Tuan Tran, president of technology and innovation at HP, said in a statement.
HP plans to integrate Humane’s AI capabilities across its entire product line, from AI-enabled PCs to smart printers and connected conference rooms.
As part of the acquisition, Humane’s engineers, architects and product innovators will join HP’s Technology and Innovation Organization, forming a new division called HP IQ. This AI innovation lab will focus on developing intelligent ecosystems across HP’s product range, specifically targeting workplace productivity solutions.
Humane co-founders Bongiorno and Chaudhri highlighted the potential of combining HP’s global reach with Humane’s design-led approach and engineering expertise. “HP’s scale, global reach, and operational excellence — combined with our design-led approach, integration technology, and engineering expertise — will redefine workforce productivity,” they said.
The move comes at a crucial time in the tech industry, as major hardware manufacturers race to integrate AI capabilities into their products. HP’s acquisition positions the company to compete more effectively in the growing market for AI-enabled devices and workplace solutions.
The transaction is expected to close by the end of this month, subject to customary closing conditions.
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