Global sportswear giant Puma is building on its now-seven-year+ association with Hyrox, renewing and extending the partnership with the fast-expanding brand behind the World Series of Fitness Racing until 2030.
Puma
FashionNetwork.com spoke to its CEO Arthur Hoeld at a major Hyrox event in Hamburg. But first, let’s take a look at the details of its partnership.
It’s calling the extension “a powerful brand moment” and it’s easy to see why. The Hyrox community aims to “break 1.6 million” global members next year “cementing Hyrox as a global fitness phenomenon”. And let’s not forget this is a growing spectator sport too.
As part of the extension, Puma will now also serve as the exclusive title partner of the Hyrox World Championships and will coordinate a Puma x Hyrox signature event annually.
Of course, the Germany-based brand, where Hyrox is also based, will provide all the official sportswear.
It has also signed three additional elite Hyrox athletes as global brand ambassadors.
For those not yet familiar with Hyrox, it’s an indoor functional fitness race that combines running with different functional workout stations, repeated sequentially.
It attracted 900,000 athletes in the 2024/25 season and expects to top 100 races of various levels by 2026, becoming “a major movement in the industry by combining running and functional training into one fast-paced competition, [which] is the world’s fastest growing fitness sport”.
And Puma saw the signs early, “recognising the great potential of this sport” since the first race in Hamburg in 2017 before becoming a global partner in 2023.
Puma
Since then, Puma “has used the partnership as a successful platform to increase brand awareness with the sport’s many passionate participants and provide performance products that are tailored to the needs of the athletes”.
Calling the association “one of our strategically most important partnerships as a sports brand”, Arthur Hoeld noted it becomes a “great showcase for our innovative performance products… such as our combination of Nitro technology and industry-leading PumaGrip.”
He added: “Our products have proven that they support the different requirements of athletes in this very versatile sport and help them to achieve great results. We are very encouraged by the great feedback we have received from athletes and partners alike, which helps us position ourselves even stronger as a sports brand.”
Athlete roster grows
As part of the announcement at the first major event of the season in Hamburg, Puma also announced an expansion of its roster of elite Hyrox athletes.
These include Men’s Open Doubles world record holder, Jake Williamson, Women’s Pro Doubles world record holder and Australia’s fastest female, Joanna Wietrzyk, and Hidde Weersma, the Dutch athlete who won the Men’s pro 25-29 World Championships in 2024 (he’s also the strength and conditioning coach of the the body responsible for the participation of Dutch athletes in the Olympic and Paralympic Games).
They’re now part of a roster of more than 60 Puma athletes in the sport, including recently crowned 2025 Hyrox World Champion Linda Meier, 2024 Hyrox World Champion Megan Jacoby and three-time Hyrox World Champion and Men’s Pro world record holder Hunter McIntyre, among others.
Puma’s VP of Brand and Marketing, Richard Teyssier, added that “the continuation of this partnership reinforces Puma’s commitment to the growth of fitness racing and provides the right platform to increase our brand awareness within the Hyrox community and beyond”.
View from the top
Arthur Hoeld – Puma
Speaking further to Arthur Hoeld, we dug deeper to find out what’s special about Hyrox, why Puma will always be about performance sports rather than just style, and much more.
FashionNetwork.com: What is it about Hyrox that’s key for you?
Arthur Hoeld: Puma is a very dynamic brand in a very dynamic industry and celebrating the extension of the Hyrox partnerships [builds on that dynamism]. It is a great platform for us, that’s why I was very keen when I joined three months ago I asked how can we leverage [this partnership]?
FNW: It was clearly clever of Puma backing the right horse all those years ago by getting involved with Hyrox.
AH: It’s important to feel at the grass roots what’s happening, for who are the new players. For Puma it was seeing the potential of [Hyrox] becoming a global movement and being involved in that was important, not just the sport itself, but as a platform for developing new products, which [this] sport doesn’t have right now.
The sport and the competition element itself hasn’t been done before. Our industry has training products which are very static (like weightlifting) or you have running products, which we have as well and are very proud of. But the intersection between those two sports and all of its demand on the equipment, on technology, it is totally new. And we will be the ones to harness this together [with Hyrox] developing those products.
FNW: So you’re ahead of the game here? Are these new sports going to be the football and tennis of the future?
AH: Oh, yes, absolutely. In just seven years Hyrox risen from [an] idea based here in Hamburg and has become a major phenomenon that when we go to any major city right now we have the same amount of participants as the marathon — and marathons have been there for 100 years! We go to London, Berlin, New York, wherever, we command the same amount of attention by a growing group of very dedicated athletes and participants, so the potential is phenomenal.
FNW: And it’s becoming a growing spectator sport too so that’s another avenue to tap?
AH: Absolutely. It’s broadcast on YouTube and is creating excitement and a major following around the world, but it’s only the very beginning. The dynamic that can start now is people coming to attend the games and watch them taking the broader community beyond the ever-growing active participants.
FNW: And does this have appeal beyond the male sports market?
AH: This is a very democratic unisex sport — men, women alike so I’m very keen on developing female products from the feet up. Anyone can do apparel and specifically in the German female training sector there is a lot of training apparel that has made great strides forward in the last 10 years. But if you want to crack footwear you have to be one of the established brands that can do footwear, and Puma is one of the very few that can do that. Our reputation for innovation and technology will give us a major advantage.
FNW: So how big will Hyrox association be?
AH: It will be bigger than training is nowadays but I think the potential of this new sport will be… well [he said, with a look suggesting that sky’s the limit].
FNW: Looking beyond Hyrox and more generally at Puma, some see this as a golden age for sportswear as a fashion statement. How much is the crossover to be a fashion brand as well as a sport brand important to you and Puma?
AH: [Under my watch] Puma will never be a fashion brand. Puma is and will be a sports brand. It distinguishes us and has distinguished us… rooted in traditional sports, new sports, the potential for innovation, in community-building and the excitement of sports as phenomena, that’s where we are.
Of course, Puma has been making [style] archives over the last six or seven decades and we will continue to use that, but also match that with innovation. We are here to show serious people we are not just here for style purposes, we have authenticity and a great story to tell. But we are all about sports.
FNW: And how will you communicate that? Earlier campaigns this year for Puma centred on ‘Sporting Emotions’, will that theme continue?
AH: We’re looking at that currently but our communication and how we appear as a brand will have a significant grounding in our sport and innovation in our product. [Technical footwear brand] Nitro is an amazing platform, the technology is winning races in many, many places, but we have a significant opportunity still to tell what it is and how much it can support you as an athlete to run better, run faster. That’s what we will be talking about.
FNW: And is there plenty of upcoming tech, innovation?
AH: [We’ll be] developing further product around the Nitro platform and PumaGrip [footwear], then there will be new technology in apparel — moisture wicking and heat management — all of which are important for [Hyrox], which is predominantly done indoors and no one has really cracked the code for those things yet.
FNW: So are you close to doing that?
Hoeld wouldn’t commit to answering that question, although he did offer a wry smile!
So it seems there could be news to come on that front. And there will be plenty of news on other subjects with an announcement on the brand elevation strategy due at the end of the month, news that the new London flagship store on Oxford Street “is progressing well” and will open before Christmas, and more store expansion announcements due later this year too.
An Hermes handbag that once belonged to Jane Birkin was sold for $2.86 million (2.45 million euros) at auction in Abu Dhabi on Friday, just months after the record-breaking sale of her first bag from the French brand, Sotheby’s said.
Jane Birkin with one of her signature Hermes bags – Sotheby’s
Hermes first created the design for the British singer and actress in 1984 and it has gone on to become a modern and highly prized classic, sought by fashionistas the world over. The first prototype was sold for 8.58 million euros ($10 million) at a Sotheby’s auction in Paris in July, smashing previous price records for a handbag.
The one sold on Friday was a ‘Birkin Voyageur,’ which was gifted to the former wife of French singing legend Serge Gainsbourg in 2003. The final sale price was around six times times higher than the estimated price range of $230,000-$430,000 given before the sale.
“Jane Birkin’s handbag legacy continues to captivate collectors,” Sotheby’s said in a statement sent to AFP, adding that bidding took place over 11 minutes between six collectors. The new owner was a phone buyer and has not been identified.
The handbag was one of four owned by the late celebrity, who used to sell them to raise money for charitable causes. It has a handwritten inscription in French inside from Birkin that reads: “My Birkin bag, my globetrotting companion.”
A third Hermes bag owned by Birkin is set to go under the hammer on December 15 at the Hotel Drouot auction house in Paris. It was entrusted by the late star to her friend and biographer Gabrielle Crawford, who is selling it to help fund the future Jane Birkin Foundation, Drouot said in a statement.
Produced in very limited numbers, the modern Birkin bag manufactured by Hermes has maintained an aura of exclusivity and is beloved by celebrities such as the Kardashians, Jennifer Lopez, and Victoria Beckham. The most expensive fashion item ever sold at auction was a pair of ruby red slippers worn by actor Judy Garland from The Wizard of Oz in 1939, which sold for $32.5 million in 2024 in Dallas, Texas, according to Sotheby’s.
Artificial intelligence (AI) continues its march to transform businesses’/consumers’ lives with customer advocacy platform Mention Me launching ‘AI Discovery IQ’, a free-to-use tool that “helps brands reach target consumers in the new age of generative AI search”.
Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP/Archives
It claims to allow brands to “instantly audit how discoverable they are within popular AI systems” such as ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Perplexity.
According to Mention Me, 62% of UK consumers now turn to generative AI tools for product recommendations, brand discovery and comparisons, “bypassing traditional search engines entirely [so] businesses are under pressure to respond to this behaviour change,” said the platform’s CEO Wojtek Kokoszka whose platform works with firms including Charlotte Tilbury, Huel and Puma, “helping marketing teams to boost consumer awareness and sales”.
With AI, it says the modern customer journey, powered by natural language prompts instead of outdated keyword strings, means consumers are 4.4 times more likely to convert if they find a brand through a large language model (LLM).
“The rise of ‘agent-mode’ assistants and AI-driven voice search has pushed brands into a new world of digital visibility. Despite this, most brands have little to no insight into how they appear in AI-generated answers”, said Kokoszka.
AI Discoverability IQ claims to give brands an overall LLM discoverability score, specific details on areas such as technical website elements, content and structured data, and actionable recommendations to improve their AI discoverability.
Its tool generates “measurable, trackable outputs” like AI Visibility Score, brands’ prompt-based results, and a side-by-side comparisons with their competitive set. This means brands “can react quickly to improve their discoverability scores” with Mention Me’s wider suite of products and unique first-party data.
It’s also “innovating and evolving” its platform to include more capabilities, such as the ability to benchmark against competitors, to drive further improvements for marketing leaders in the age of AI.
Mention Me CMO Neha Mantri said: “AI Discoverability is not yet a named practice within most marketing teams; the same way SEO wasn’t in the early 2000s. But when up to 31% of consumers say they’re more likely to trust responses from generative AI than traditional search results, this needs to change. Mention Me is naming the problem and providing a solution at just the right time.”
A host of celebrities and high-end brands have donating goods to ensure Savile Row’s latest annual ‘Pop-Up Crisis’ store will continue to support the Crisis charity event that has so far raised over £650,000 since 2018.
Image: Crisis charity
Across 8-13 December, the pop-up store at 18-19 Savile Row in London’s Mayfair will sell a curated selection of designer clothing, past stock and samples from luxury brands.
Celebs donating goods include Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Naomie Harris, David Gandy, Jarvis Cocker, Louis Partridge, Jamie Redknapp and Emma Corrin, among others, for a week-long event and raffle with all proceeds going to help end homelessness across Britain.
Hosted by landlord The Pollen Estate, the temporary shop is also selling designer goods donated by Savile Row tailors including Mr Porter, Wales Bonner, Crockett & Jones and many other luxury brands from Barbour, Tod’s to Manolo Blahnik and Watches of Switzerland Group.
This year, celebrity model and fashion entrepreneur David Gandy will also be curating an exclusive online edit on shopfromcrisis.com, including donations from his own wardrobe as well as items from friends including Redknapp’s brand Sandbanks, Hackett and Aspinal of London.
Gandy said: “Having supported Crisis for a number of years, I’m delighted to have had the opportunity to curate my own online edit this year with the help of some of my close friends. It means a lot to know that donations from my own wardrobe are going towards such an important cause. Whether you’re looking for the perfect Christmas gift or to treat yourself, your purchase can help make a real difference to people facing homelessness this Christmas.”
Liz Choonara, executive director of Commerce and Enterprise at Crisis, added: “Pop-Up Crisis is such an iconic event in the Crisis calendar and one that we look forward to every year. We’re thrilled to be partnering with the team once again for another week celebrating the iconic craftsmanship and style of Savile Row – with all proceeds going towards our crucial work to end homelessness.”