Understanding Digital Product Passports
A Practical Guide for Brands, Manufacturers and Retailers
11am Tuesday 24th February
With Andrew Xeni
Founder & CEO, Fabacus
Founder & Chairman, Nobody's Child
Founder & Chairman at Soreto.

About this webinar
Digital Product Passports are quickly becoming a core pillar of product transparency, compliance, and consumer trust.
In this session, Andrew explores how DPPs work, the regulatory drivers behind them, and how brands and retailers can approach implementation in a structured and future-proof way.
The presentation will be followed by an interactive Q&A, allowing attendees to discuss challenges, opportunities, and next steps relevant to their businesses.
About Andrew Xeni
Andrew Xeni is a visionary technology and retail entrepreneur; founder of award-winning businesses that are reshaping their industries.
After building a successful family manufacturing business supplying the UK high street, Xeni went on to establish responsible fashion brand, Nobody’s Child, named 2023 & 2024 Drapers Retailer of the Year (<£100m), as well as building technology ventures; Fabacus, where he serves as CEO, and Soreto, where he acts as Chairman. Operating globally, his businesses are servicing some of the world’s largest organisations in licensing and retail, including Tesco, NBCUniversal and Samsung. Xeni also welcomed Marks & Spencer as a strategic investor and minority shareholder in Nobody’s Child.
Passionate about shaping the future of sustainable retail, in 2023, Fabacus and Nobody’s Child collaborated to launch a Digital Product Passport solution driven by compliant product catalogues, in preparation for incoming legislation around the world, set to redefine and evolve the retail landscape.
Xeni is backed by a number of leading financial institutions and prominent individuals and in addition to managing a diverse portfolio of businesses, he is an active angel investor and mentor.
Hosted by Kate Hills, Founder & CEO Make it British
Kate has been passionate about UK manufacturing ever since she had her own recycled clothing company and micro-factory in the early '90s. After 20 years as a designer and buyer developing products all over the world, she launched Make it British in 2011 to support creative business founders that want to make locally.
Over the last fifteen years, she's helped 1,000s of businesses to work with UK manufacturers and grow their British-made brands.

