Daily Signals 30.10.2019

Signals

Element by Westin is a hotel for long-distance friends, T Levels offer a new route into British higher education, and the flourishing market for luxury tourism.

Adidas rewards customers for reselling fashion

Infinite Play, Adidas

UK – Infinite Play invites consumers to trade-in unwanted clothing and shoes in return for benefits.

Adidas has added the service to its app, encouraging its shoppers to easily trade-in worn, torn or tired products that have been purchased directly from the brand in the last five years. To use the service, existing customers can log into its Creators Club via the app, where they’ll see items eligible to trade from their purchase history.

The sportswear brand will then collect the worn gear from customers, where it will sort, clean and repair items as necessary. These will then be resold, giving them a second life and ensuring they do not end up in landfill or ocean waste. For each transaction, users will receive an e-gift card with the total value of items traded, as well as 200 Creators Club points. ‘Adidas gear was made to be played and replayed, time and time again,’ reads a statement by the brand.

By encouraging its shoppers to reconsider throwing away old garments, Adidas is contributing towards a retail future driven by the concept of Fast (Conscious) Fashion.

T Levels will offer British youth a new qualification

T Levels, The Department for Education (DfE), campaign by Havas London T Levels, The Department for Education (DfE), campaign by Havas London
T Levels, The Department for Education (DfE), campaign by Havas London T Levels, The Department for Education (DfE), campaign by Havas London

UK – The Department for Education (DfE) has unveiled a new marketing campaign for its new, post-GCSE technical qualification.

T Levels, which are the equivalent of three A Levels, will combine classroom learning and an extended industry placement to provide an alternative to traditional higher education pathways. Alongside apprenticeships and A Levels, the DfE hopes to establish T Levels as one of the main choices for 16-19-year-old students after GCSEs.

Ahead of T Levels’ introduction in September 2020, a UK-wide campaign created by Havas London aims to raise awareness and generate interest in these ‘Next Level qualifications’. The campaign comprises bold out-of-home, digital and social advertising, a Snapchat lens, a provider toolkit for schools and colleges, and a new commercial, which will run across video and social platforms.

‘This campaign doesn’t look, feel or act like any education advertising that has come before – because T Levels aren’t like any qualification that has come before,’ says Jennifer Black, managing director at Havas London. In our latest youth macrotrend, Paradox Personas, we explore how alternative school systems are slowly acknowledging Generation Z’s faltering trust in increasingly irrelevant education programmes.

This hotel room encourages IRL interactions

US – Element by Westin aims to redefine connectedness among modern nomads and their circle of friends.

The newest member of the Marriott group, the Element brand blends a hotel room with the flexibility of a home. Each suite is comprised of four private guest rooms and large shared kitchen and living room areas, allowing guests to live as they would at home without compromising space, comfort or amenities.

The concept is rooted in research carried out by Element, which found that more than a quarter (27%) of Americans live in a different city than their childhood or college friends and family, and depend on trips to see each other. With contemporary travellers’ friendship groups spread over the world, Element aims to bring friends together for IRL travel experiences that create closer bonds.

As explored in Neo-kinship, living long-distance from friends and family is an increasing reality for people around the world. However, travel and hospitality brands have the power to bring together these networks for memorable experiences.

Studio Common room, Element by Westin

Stat: Luxury tourism is growing faster than overall tourism

According to new figures from Statista, luxury tourism is outpacing the wider tourism market. While tourism in general is forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 6.4% over the next five years, luxury tourism will grow at 7.3% during the same period.

The study defines luxury tourism as consumer goods, services and valuables for and during trips by individuals whose net assets amount to more than $1 million (£777k, €900k). With a value of nearly $263 billion (£204.4bn, €237bn), the United States currently leads the luxury travel market, but China and India’s luxury markets are expected to grow most rapidly over the next five years.

As global wealth fluctuates and younger generations gain economic influence, a new luxury mindset is emerging, with high-net-worth individuals embracing Liberation Luxury and using their wealth to pursue flexible, footloose living.

Previous Daily Signals Articles
Moncler redefines warmth in campaign with Robert De Niro and Al Pacino

Daily Signals

Moncler redefines warmth in campaign with Robert De Niro and Al Pacino

Italian luxury brand Moncler unites cinematic legends Robert De Niro and Al Pacino for Warmer Together, their first such collaboration. The series ...
Luxury : Fashion : Campaign
Stat: UK shoppers experience bargain hunting highs

Daily Signals

Stat: UK shoppers experience bargain hunting highs

According to new research from VoucherCodes, 86% of UK consumers experience a dopamine rush when they find a bargain, suggesting that sho...
Retail : Consumer Behaviour : Statistic
A new era for golf and hospitality begins as Mad Swans launches in the Mendips

Daily Signals

A new era for golf and hospitality begins as Mad Swans launches in the Mendips

Mad Swans, the innovative countryside destination by Longshot, has opened its doors on the UK's Mendip Hills, offering a fresh take on sports-...
Sports : Golf : Travel
Dutch Design Week 2025: kidult aesthetics and serious play

Daily Signals

Dutch Design Week 2025: kidult aesthetics and serious play

On a rainy day in Eindhoven, the design capital of The Netherlands, artists and designers showed us something that really makes us human, that sets...
Design : Dutch Design Week : Play
The Future Laboratory presents The Synthocene Era at TheIndustry.fashion summit

Daily Signals

The Future Laboratory presents The Synthocene Era at TheIndustry.fashion summit

At Nobu Hotel in Marylebone, London, TheIndustry.fashion’s Fashion Retail Reset Summit brought together global executives, industry experts and tho...
Fashion : Global Events : The Future Laboratory
Foresight Friday: Angus Cross, head of business development

Daily Signals

Foresight Friday: Angus Cross, head of business development

Every Friday, The Future Laboratory team offers an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, ...
Foresight Friday : Mobility : Fashion
Stat: UK regenerative coffee sales triple as climate pressures mount

Daily Signals

Stat: UK regenerative coffee sales triple as climate pressures mount

Regenerative coffee sales in the UK have nearly tripled in 2025, signalling a shift toward sustainability in the nation’s £3.6bn ($4.8bn, €4.5...
Coffee : Food : Statistic
Dutch Design Week 2025: Digital afterlives and making space for grief

Daily Signals

Dutch Design Week 2025: Digital afterlives and making space for grief

Dutch Design Week 2025 has so far prompted visitors to question what it means to be human, and what challenges that notion more than death itself.
Dutch Design Week : Design : Global Events
ASOS Live redefines fashion shopping through creator-led video content

Daily Signals

ASOS Live redefines fashion shopping through creator-led video content

ASOS has launched ASOS Live, a new video shopping experience designed to merge inspiration, content and commerce within its app.
Fashion : Asos : Retail
Stat: Gen Alpha face stricter screen time controls at home and school

Daily Signals

Stat: Gen Alpha face stricter screen time controls at home and school

New survey data from Morning Consult reveals that technology bans are already widespread in schools across the US, with more than half of parents o...
Technology : Gen Alpha : Education
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN