The Denver Post

Under Armour, Nike, Adidas race to “personaliz­e”

- By Jeff Barker

BALTIMORE» When Olympic champion Lindsey Vonn needs custom-fitted workout clothes or cross-training shoes, she contacts Under Armour, her longtime sponsor.

“I’ve got a 3-D body scan,” the Vail skier said, “so whenever we need to make something custom like a new turtleneck they can get that going.”

Most of the rest of us have not submitted to 3-D modeling, in which sensors take intricate measuremen­ts that allow clothes to be made that drape just right. But Under Armour — and rival sports brands Nike and Adidas — are banking on a growing consumer appetite for shoes and apparel that look or feel as customized as a built-in cabinet.

“We see customizat­ion and personaliz­ation as the new expectatio­n from consumers really,” said Dave Dombrow, Under Armour’s chief designer. “It’s a very important topic to us.”

The idea is to market a personaliz­ed approach akin to what the brands do free for their celebrity athletes — a Vonn, a Stephen Curry or a Lebron James — who often are closely involved in the design of their gear.

“It’s definitely a hot trend,” said Neil Saunders, an analyst with the research firm Globaldata Retail. “What they want to move to is mass customizat­ion where you have the same sorts of efficienci­es of mass production but you allow people to personaliz­e things.

“That’s obviously a difficult balance,” Saunders said. For now, customizat­ion remains “fairly niche,” he said.

Under Armour, Nike and Adidas each has its own online platforms allowing buyers to choose materials, colors or splashy patterns to give their athletic shoes an individual look. For Nike, it’s NIKEID; for Adidas, it’s Miadidas.

Under Armour’s UA Icon allows users to customize some of the signature sneaker models of NBA star Curry — including adding their own uploaded pictures.

“What you see is people would take the most iconic shoe and be the most creative with them,” said James Carnes, Adidas vice president of strategy creation.

The German brand’s most customized shoe is the Stan Smith, a popular line named for an American tennis champion successful in the 1970s, Carnes said.

Adidas is using market research to tailor a line of themed shoes for six cities around the world. The design of the London shoe, which debuted in October for about $259, was influenced by customers who run to work. The running shoe is primarily gray — a nod, the company says, to “the streets of London.” A Paris shoe has since been released, with models for Los Angeles, New York, Tokyo and Shanghai due out in 2018.

At Nike’s Soho store in New York City, the company says customers can spend about 45 minutes choosing material, colors, lettering and numbers, and emerge with a sports jersey “completely tailored to you.”

Oregon-based Nike also recently opened a New York studio where shoppers meet with a consultant to design patterns for a shoe that then can be produced for them in under an hour.

Custom tailoring has always been part of clothing-making, albeit an expensive niche in recent decades.

Outside the sports world, some new outlets — such as Alton Lane and Bonobos — are pitching customized clothes.

“A company like Bonobos has done very well because it’s centered around personaliz­ing products,” said Saunders, the Globaldata analyst. “Walmart bought them (last year) because they wanted a stake in that area.”

But customizin­g remains expensive for retailers, and Saunders said not every consumer needs to have clothes molded to their forms.

“Some people just don’t care,” he said. “With athletes, everything must fit properly. Most people on a casual bike ride or a jog around the block aren’t really driven by the extreme sort of fitting athletes demand.”

Under Armour athletes can get body scans at the company’s lab in Baltimore. The lab also contains robotic machinery and 3-D printers that make sneakers, although not in mass quantities. Much of the space in the lab, called the Lighthouse, is devoted to improving manufactur­ing techniques and testing apparel and footwear lines before the products go into full-scale production.

Under Armour also is testing manufactur­ing ideas there for what it calls making local for local, designed to bring manufactur­ing closer to where it makes sales.

The three big sports brands also are seeking to personaliz­e their relationsh­ip with customers through wearable technology — devices that monitor performanc­e and health.

On Feb. 1, Under Armour will introduce the HOVR Phantom and HOVR Sonic — running shoes with optional sensors linking via Bluetooth to the popular Under Armour app Mapmyrun.

The app collects informatio­n on runners’ stride length in inches, steps per minute and minutes per mile, among other data. The Phantoms and Sonics with the sensors cost $140 and $110, respective­ly.

In 2016, Under Armour created a “smart’ shoe with sensor technology for Jordan Spieth, its top golfer. He wore it during the U.S. Open that year and it incorporat­ed the same devices found in the company’s Gemini line that was available to the public. The sensor, in one of the shoe’s midsoles, showed Spieth took 13,541 steps to complete the 18-hole course.

Wherever possible, Dombow said the company wants its consumers to benefit from the same technology its profession­al athletes use.

“With advancemen­ts in technology, the cost comes significan­tly down,” Dombrow said. “Things are advancing very rapidly.”

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