Due to the larger variations in the shape and size of the female body, the female FitBot robot was more complicated to accurately model than the male torso and took longer to perfect. Fitbots are available to match over 85 percent of female shoppers.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":298812,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,social,","session":"C"}']Clothing is currently the largest online retail sector, estimated to be worth $26 billion a year in the US alone. Yet only 7 percent of clothing is bought online. The fact that shoppers cannot try on clothing before purchasing results in a very high rate of returned merchandise (over 40 percent for some types of fitted clothing) and associated costs for retailers.
Female clothing tends to be more fitted and more varied than male garments. Based on personal experience, I know that it is very difficult to be sure an item bought online will fit and hang right. Hawes & Curtis has seen sales to new customers increase by 57 percent since the introduction of the male FitBot, and returns are at a record low of 2.99 percent. The impact on female shoppers is likely to be even greater.
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When a shopper wants to see a size on her own body shape, mathematical algorithms are used to manipulate the most similar image of the robot. This is combined with information about the physical properties of the garment and how it takes on shape (some materials are more clingy or stretchy than others) to show the shopper a simulation of the garment on her own body shape.
Fits.me doesn’t seem to have any direct competitors, although there are plenty of companies that provide styling or sizing advice and virtual dressing rooms of various types. Based in Estonia, Fits.me launched in May 2009 and has raised a total of 2.3 million EUR ($3.32 million) from the Estonian development fund and private investors.
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