do.BETTER – Diversity
& Inclusion Report 2022

Inclusive by design

November 7, 2022
Diversity & Inclusion
Header image of Zalando's D&I Report 2022: A collage of photos of Zalando employees
Content
About this report

About this report

In 2021, we published our do.BETTER strategy, reflecting our commitment to build a company in which respect and inclusive behavior are second nature. The strategy defines 12 Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) commitments around four pillars: talent, leadership, customers, and partners. We are committed to creating an inclusive workplace for our talents, accelerating leadership accountability and diversity, providing inclusive experiences and content for our customers, and fostering D&I in the wider fashion industry together with our partners.

Our commitments help us focus our ambitions and direct our efforts toward making Zalando welcoming to everyone. And we are convinced that prioritizing D&I will sharpen our creativity and improve our decision-making at every level. To help us deliver on our ambitions, we have assembled a dedicated D&I team to work with stakeholders across the business. The team drives us toward fulfilling our commitments and helps us embed inclusion into everything we do — we call this being inclusive by design.

In this report, we review each of the four pillars in detail. We show our progress and highlight our key projects and initiatives from the past year. We also identify some key challenges and set out pointers for what is to come. For an overview of our progress, see our D&I Report Memo:

Zalando SE D&I Report 2022 Memo (pdf, 625.53 KB)Download

Building on foundations

Building on foundations

Fashion has so many different dimensions, yet it has a personal meaning to everyone, no matter who they are. We love the diversity of our customers, brands, and creators that makes our fashion culture so rich. We work to create experiences that allow people to follow their interests. This has to start from within: Only if we create a workplace where people feel truly included can we fully build experiences that are welcoming to everyone. That’s why we integrate D&I in every team, strategy, business idea, or feature, from the beginning. We want to be inclusive by design.

We all feel the responsibility toward our customers, our partners, and fellow Zalandos. That’s why D&I is not only an effort run by a dedicated team, but is embedded in all mandates across the organization and owned by our leaders. I’m proud of the passion and dedication that so many Zalandos put into making us inclusive by design.

Portrait of David Schneider, Co-CEO Zalando SE

I am proud of the steps we have taken over the past years. We will continue to invest and build a truly inclusive Starting Point for Fashion – for everyone.

David Schneider, Co-CEO

Over the past year, global macroeconomic conditions have had a significant impact on the entire world, including on the fashion industry. Still, we have continued to pursue our 12 D&I commitments. I’m proud to celebrate some exciting milestones we passed this year:

A significant achievement this year has been the progress we have made on Adaptive Fashion. We’re proud that our private labels are serving our customers who identify as being disabled — a community that makes up about 15% of the world’s population. Adaptive Fashion is now live in our fashion store, and our dedicated offering is the largest among multi-brand platforms in Europe, including brands such as Tommy Hilfiger and Nike.

We’re also pleased to report that we’re closing in on our “Women in Leadership” commitment ahead of our 2023 targets. On average, women now occupy 37.5% of leadership positions, toward our target of 40-60% by the end of 2023. We remain committed to achieving this target at each of our five top leadership levels.

Enabling underrepresented communities to explore careers in technology is a crucial, yet challenging commitment within our industry. For instance, we’re conscious that we currently don’t have enough women in tech roles. Therefore, we challenged ourselves with the ambitious commitment to increase the share of women in tech job families to 40% and 60% by 2023. This ambition makes us go the extra mile to make it happen. Our Reskilling Program is one such example, offering women at Zalando an opportunity to take part in specialist training and start tech-focused jobs. This year, we’re supporting 20 colleagues who identify as women to choose a new career in tech at Zalando, possibly a life-changing experience. We’re proud of the progress we have made — although it isn’t complete yet.

We know that we need to keep our finger on the pulse and understand our employees’ individual and collective experiences. This year, we launched our first voluntary D&I survey, giving a voice to all of our employees. With so many of them having participated, the survey results are helping us now develop action plans to create a more inclusive workplace in the near future.

We’re on our way to making inclusion a reality. This year, we onboarded 63 Black-owned fashion, jewelry, and beauty brands, increasing the amount of brands stemming from and serving underrepresented groups on our platform. We’re particularly grateful to our brand partners, who are helping us change the face of Zalando to better reflect the world around us.

It’s important for us to keep making a positive impact, both for ourselves and the wider fashion industry. We have begun to make progress toward many of our ambitious goals and are proud of the steps we have taken to listen, understand experiences, implement change, facilitate dialogue, and deepen our partnerships. But we’re not done. We’re confident we can do better and will continue to build a truly inclusive Starting Point For Fashion — for everyone.

David Schneider, Co-CEO


Creating an inclusive workplace for our talents
Group photo of five Zalando employees sitting together.

Creating an inclusive workplace for our talents

We are building an inclusive workplace that provides equitable access to opportunities. At the core of our vision is a desire to foster a sense of belonging that enables all our employees to thrive.

In 2022:

  • We launched our first D&I survey, aiming to understand employees’ experiences and informing 24 business unit action plans.
  • We made our buildings more accessible and implemented more inclusive spaces, including adding prayer rooms and all-gender toilets.
  • We facilitated quarterly “D&I Dialogues,” inviting employees to learn about D&I topics and start conversations in their teams.
  • Through our partnership with the Afro German Academic Network (ADAN)1, we enabled another 13 Black and People of Color (BPOC) professionals to start and advance their careers at Zalando.
  • We partnered with Girls Talk London to host the Black Girls in Tech conference at our headquarters, tapping into BPOC tech talent and providing a forum for underrepresented communities in tech.

1ADAN is a non-profit organization supporting the careers of BPOC from the African diaspora.

Workforce diversity in 2022: In gender: 52.4% male, 47.6% female and >0,1% non-binary. In the area of generations: 42.9% between 31 to 40 years, 26.8% between 21 to 30 years, 16.2% between 41 to 50 years, 10.3% between 51 to 60 years, 2.9% over 60 years and 0.9% under 21 years. In terms of internationality: 39.6% Germany, 28.2% others, 8% Poland, 4.6% India, 4.2% France, 3.9% Italy, 2.9% Romania, 2.4% United Kingdom, 2.3% Turkey, 2.1% Spain and 1.8% Russia.

Our commitments


Our commitment: By 2025, we will ensure equity in policies and practices (hiring, promotion, development) by conducting audits to proactively identify and eliminate biases and systemic barriers.2
 
This year, we launched our first company-wide D&I survey, which was voluntary and anonymous and had an immediate impact: helping us better understand our employees’ needs and experiences of inclusion. Based on these results, we redesigned parts of our approach and initiatives and redirected some financial resources to better serve our communities. In addition, through our Diversity and Inclusion Action plans, we will work with our leaders to implement our initiatives and make teams more inclusive across our business units.

This year, we invested in improvements to many of our facilities. We installed fully accessible and all-gender bathrooms on every floor of the 10 buildings on our Berlin campus. And we plan to add more at other Zalando locations, ensuring all employees have easy access to facilities they feel comfortable using. Also in Berlin, we upgraded our prayer rooms, working with our Employee Resource Groups (ERG), including the Muslim Community Network, to identify the best way to meet our employees’ needs.

Our D&I Dialogues are company-wide sessions designed to help employees engage with and learn about Diversity & Inclusion. To date, we have held five sessions led by external D&I experts. We were delighted to see that thousands of employees tuned in to each. D&I Dialogues topics this year included the importance of inclusion, allyship for leaders, and inclusive leadership for businesses. At the most recent event, we invited Karim Mustaghni, founder of Culturedesign.org, and Allie Bangura, founder of our long-term partner ADAN, to explore human-centric cultures based on trust.
 
We continue to build our partnership with Afro German Academic Network (ADAN). The Zalando x ADAN program has enabled 13 young Black people to start and advance their careers at Zalando, accompanied by mentors from across the business. Together, we have also worked to build awareness of Zalando in the Berlin BPOC community. Our initiatives have included sharing job openings and inviting members of the Black Employee Connection ERG to speak at events such as the Afrobeats Festival. The Impact of Diversity Award nominated our partnership with ADAN in the category “Internationality,” which honors businesses striving for greater workforce diversity.

One of our ongoing focuses is making sure that our employees can take parental leave with confidence. We offer guidance and training so that our leaders can support employees on their return to work. Our People Team, together with online resources, help our leaders to facilitate offboarding and reboarding, manage the process, and keep relevant dates in mind. Our Family Friendliness team provides guidance to those who have questions or concerns about family or work-family balance. We also focus on how to prepare for absence associated with caregiving activities and how to return as seamlessly as possible.

We strive to support our employees’ health and wellbeing. Our Company Integration Management Team provides coaching to anyone who has been absent on long-term sick leave, so employees can take the time they need and are onboarded thoughtfully once they return. Our Employee Assistance Service facilitates counseling for personal and work-related issues and has implemented an Employee Assistance Program that refers people to specialist medical support and psychotherapy. This year, we partnered with Gympass, a fitness and wellbeing platform that offers affordable therapy in multiple languages. The sessions are led by licensed therapists from a range of backgrounds. Gympass also offers community-based and on-site fitness options and access to wellbeing apps.

At Zalando Group, the average gender wage gap between women and men with the same job and location was 0.9% this year, compared with 1.3% in 2021. With no adjustment for roles and locations the gap was 12.5%, compared with 13.5% in 2021. At Zalando SE3, the average gender wage gap between women and men with the same job and location was 0.5% this year, compared with 1.3% in 20214. With no adjustment for roles and locations, it was 21.4%, compared with 23.6% in 2021. The narrower gap at the group level is driven by a sizable operational workforce. This tends to close the gap, because fulfillment center employees are, for example, on a more heterogeneous grading structure and subject to tighter salary bands. Meanwhile, Zalando SE employs more men than women in senior positions and tech jobs, which receive higher compensation on average. We continue to work on closing the gender pay gap through several Women in Leadership initiatives (see commitment 7) and dedicated projects such as our reskilling program for women (see commitment 3).

For comparison, the unadjusted gender wage gap in Germany’s private sector was 20% in 2021, with significant variations across sectors. For example, transportation & storage averaged 6%, wholesale and retail trade averaged 20%, information and communication averaged 23%, and professional, scientific & technical averaged 27%.4

Although in the past we have used the internationally-recognized log-linear least squares approach for gender wage gap analysis5, in 2022 we realized that past Zalando D&I reports underestimated the true gap. Therefore, we switched our methodology to a Poisson Pseudo Maximum Likelihood estimator to calculate current and past wage gaps.

This year, we were ranked fifth in Germany by the German Diversity Index, which measures the diversity commitment of Dax-40 companies by applying uniform criteria on the basis of annual and sustainability reports.

2 Equity refers to the act of ensuring that processes and programs are impartial, fair and provide equal possible outcomes for every individual.

3 Zalando Group workforce without fulfillment center employees

4 In our D&I report 2022, the Gender Wage Gap data for 2021 were falsely reported on. We have retroactively corrected this data in this current report. For transparency:
- False adjusted wage gap 2021: 1.4% ; corrected adjusted wage gap 2021: 1.3%
- False unadjusted wage gap 2021: 12.6%; corrected unadjusted wage gap 2021: 13.5%

Statistisches Bundesamt (September 15th, 2022)

6 The common practice in the applied empirical literature is to estimate a log-linear least squares regression on a gender dummy variable and a set of controls that are important for pay formation in order to compare similar men and women with respect to these characteristics.

D&I at fulfillment centers

As part of our do.BETTER strategy, we are working toward meeting the needs of our fulfillment center employees7. This year we focused on learning and enablement opportunities. D&I representatives in our Customer Fulfillment team hosted monthly “D&I Supporter Calls.” These covered topics including unconscious bias and allyship and provided updates on D&I initiatives across Zalando. The calls gave employees an opportunity to connect with D&I initiatives at the group level and involve themselves in projects.

In another initiative, we used screens and posters to boost awareness of D&I topics such as company values and our Code of Ethics. We organized enablement sessions and put educational materials in break rooms, so that all employees are aware of our anti-discrimination policies and processes.

In every fulfillment center, our employees elect designated representatives for disabled employees8. In addition, this year, we launched new initiatives for deaf and hard-of-hearing employees, for example, focusing on career opportunities. To support safety at work, employees were equipped with vibrating devices that alert them in case of emergency. Finally, professional sign language interpreters visited regularly to further improve on-site communication. They will continue to do so in the year ahead.

Zalando German fulfillment centers are located in Ludwigsfelde, Lahr, Mönchengladbach, and Erfurt

At Zalando we intentionally choose to use "disability-first" language when referring to the disabled community, after collaboration with disability-led consultancy All is for All and extensive customer research. We acknowledge that "people-first" language is also commonly used.


Our commitment: By 2025, employees who self-identify as having a disability feel included and supported as measured by the Zalando Inclusion Index.

Disability inclusion at Zalando means creating an inclusive and accessible environment for everyone. Over the past year, we are pleased to have made progress in creating spaces that are more welcoming to everyone.

Our Real Estate Development team is committed to making our buildings more accessible — as seen in the design of the new BHS and BHW highrises on our Berlin campus. In both buildings, inclusion and accessibility have been considered from the start. For example, common working areas were designed to be barrier free. In all our new buildings, there are accessible toilets on every floor, mechanically operated or easy-to-use doors, and step-free circulation areas. Across our German workplaces, we are rolling out signage with improved legibility and contrast. This also extends to other European sites, including Dublin and Zurich, where our Technology and Size & Fit teams have recently moved into fully accessible buildings.

Portrait Kazi Buehlke

With increased buy-in from leadership and engagement with key stakeholders [we will] improve experiences of disabled employees across Zalando.

Kazi Bruelke, Disability Inclusion Officer

To support disabled employees, our Disability Inclusion Officer provides on-demand enablement for team leads. They also offer counseling sessions for employees who need help or information. We have established a Mobile Works Agreement, which enables severely disabled employees to permanently work remotely if they choose. And our external employee assistant program through the Fürstenberg Institute offers targeted support on how to apply for severe disability status under German law.

"Through my work, I'm able to have a positive impact on the lives of disabled employees at Zalando through on-demand enablement and empowering team leads to be better allies. We will continue to drive this work with increased buy-in from leadership and engagement with key stakeholders to improve the experiences of disabled employees across Zalando," says Kazi Bruelke, Disability Inclusion Officer.


Our commitment: By 2023, we will increase the share of women in tech job families to 40% and 60%.9

As of August 2022, women made up 24.8% of roles across Zalando technical job families, a 3.6 percentage point increase from last year.

A key enabler of our progress on gender diversity has been a significant increase in our headcount. This has given us the opportunity to make inclusive hiring decisions while growing our tech teams. We have doubled the share of women in tech roles over the past five years.

We set ourselves an ambitious target, one that we knew would be difficult to achieve, even without the uncertain economic conditions we find ourselves in. We have 1 year left to fulfill this commitment, but we see that recruitment continues to be a challenge. However, we are making retention a priority and are focused on hiring inclusively for our open roles. In addition, we are continuing to improve our hiring process, reviewing gender breakdown at each phase of the pipeline to create more equal opportunities. We identify women candidates applying for tech roles and add them to a dedicated candidate pool. Additionally, the talent acquisition team has reviewed job descriptions across the board, using inclusive language that aims to speak to all.

We are proud of our Women in Tech Reskilling Program. This focuses on enabling employees who identify as women to take up entry-level software engineering roles. In April 2022, Zalando launched a software engineering pilot in which 20 candidates decided they would like to shift their careers into the world of software engineering. They were interviewed and offered new roles, before starting a 3-6 month full-time course. Next year, to build on the successful pilot, we will continue to work with our partner StartSteps, which helps people identify and learn about career paths in tech.

Our colleague Flora Ohlsen, Community Manager & Assistant in Partner Services, says: “I have always pictured myself in tech, but years spent as a stay-at-home mother made it too much of a stretch on my time and finances. Two years ago, I plucked up the courage to enroll in an online programming course, but again, juggling a full-time job [at Zalando] and family proved too much. In February this year, I came across the program at Zalando's [internal] career fair week and saw how much thought and care has been put into the program. I knew I had to apply! The question that has challenged me over the years was not why to start a career in tech but rather how to do so? This was answered in the career orientation part of the program, delivered by StartSteps.”

This year, we partnered with Girls Talk London, an award-winning social enterprise that aims to remove barriers to women in sectors where they are traditionally underrepresented.10 The enterprise works to showcase promising jobs and opportunities, including for women from marginalized communities. As part of the partnership, we aim to connect Black women working in tech in Germany with each other and with BPOC women working in tech at Zalando. In addition this year, we hosted the Black Girls in Tech Berlin conference, welcoming over 170 guests. Participating employees spanned a range of experience and seniority, giving attendees broad insights into their experiences. We also took part in a virtual edition of the event, which had the additional benefit of recruiter sessions and a larger audience.

We aim to achieve balanced representation of genders, hence remain in a 40-60% corridor.
10 Underrepresented refers to a person or group of people who are inadequately represented — in this case, within the fashion industry across Europe.


The overall share of women in all tech professions is 24.8%. The target for 2023 is to increase the share to 40-60%. The proportion of women in software engineering is 17.3%, applied science 20.5%, product design 57.1%, product management 39.2%, software project management 54% and enterprise architecture 25.6%.
Portrait of Flora Ohlsen

I came across a tech program at Zalando's internal career fair. I knew I had to apply!

Flora Ohlsen, Community Manager & Assistant in Partner Services


Accelerating leadership
A group of four Zalando employees sitting together in conversation

Accelerating leadership

Inclusive leadership is necessary to create safer workplaces in which employees feel valued. If our senior leaders live and breathe the principles we aspire to, we can cascade these into our daily activities. Moreover, if they embody inclusive behavior, all employees can feel represented and have opportunities for personal and career growth. Therefore, we do our best to equip our leaders to make decisions that are inclusive by design.

In 2022:

  • On average, 37.5% of our leadership positions are now occupied by women, toward our target of 40-60% before the end of 2023.
  • We formulated 24 dedicated D&I Action Plans for business units.
  • We added new classes in Inclusive Behavior training and Inclusive Leadership training to our Leadership class roster to translate learning into action.
Zalando SE D&I Report 2022 Astrid Arndt

It's about saying ‘That’s not good enough’ when women aren’t candidates for leadership positions.

Astrid Arndt, Chief People Officer

The overall percentage of women in management positions is 37.5%. The target for 2023 is to achieve a share of 40-60% for both genders in the top five management levels. The proportion of women on the Board is currently 33.3%, Senior Vice President 36.4%, Vice President 41%, Director 37.4% and Head 37.3%.

Our commitments


Our commitment: By 2025, all leaders will champion Diversity and Inclusion in the way they lead people and teams.

We have rolled out training in inclusive behavior and inclusive leadership for our top five leadership levels11. The training is designed to equip our leaders to delve deeper into the roles they play in creating inclusive environments. They also explore how leaders can broaden their understanding to engage more effectively in D&I discussions. Leaders have taken part in 11 sessions this year.

Portrait of Frank Hsaio

I learned how I can create safer spaces where everyone can be their authentic self, as well as how I can be more empathetic.

Frank Hsiao, Director Finance Strategy & BI

Inclusive behavior training helps our leaders understand the importance of D&I and how personal reflection can lead to self-awareness. If our leaders are more aware of their privileges and experiences, they can better understand the challenges others face. The training also addresses the importance of using inclusive language and acknowledging diversity — conveying respect, being sensitive to differences, promoting fairness, and deepening inclusion across Zalando.

Portrait of Roeland Loof

After the inclusive leadership trainings, my personal role shifted from silent supporter to activist

Roeland Loof, VP Finance Performance Management

Inclusive leadership training is a three-module program that aims to help senior decision makers lead diverse teams. It focuses on inclusive communication, psychological safety, and intercultural competency.

“The inclusive leadership trainings enabled us to deepen the conversation on inclusion, which furthered our understanding of how to act inclusively and improve mutual engagement. I found my personal role shifted from a silent supporter to an activist around D&I, because I was better able to recognize low-inclusion situations and actively intervene," says Roeland Loof, VP Finance Performance Management.

11 Positions include Head, Director, Vice President, Senior Vice President, and Management Board.


Our commitment: From 2022 onwards, we will have Diversity and Inclusion action plans in all business units.

In May 2022, we conducted our first D&I survey — a voluntary and anonymous initiative that helped us gauge lived experiences and how our employees feel about inclusion, fairness, and access to opportunities. We aggregated the results into a dedicated report for each business unit, highlighting areas of success and where work is required to improve the collective experience.

Additionally, we worked with HR analytics consultancy People Insights Ltd to create a D&I Inclusion Index. The index represents opinions on people’s inclusion experience. The average response feeds into the index and creates a critical performance indicator for some of our commitments (primarily talent and leadership), as well as highlighting where we need to make improvements.

Lastly, we are working with our leaders to entrench D&I in our workflows. Our 2022 operational plans already include key D&I initiatives. For 2023, we will embed D&I in all our business unit operational plans.


Our commitment: By 2025, we commit to broaden the representation of visible and invisible diversity dimensions and backgrounds in our senior leadership levels.

Our 11 Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) are conceived and operated by employees who share identity traits or experiences. The voluntary groups create safer spaces12 where people come together, share a sense of community, raise issues, and boost awareness in our leadership teams. They enhance the workplace experience for all employees by creating a more respectful and inclusive culture. Our ERG members are also initiators of community projects and act as advisors and sounding boards for new ideas.

12 The term safe(r) space generally means “a place or environment in which a person or category of people can feel confident that they will not be exposed to discrimination, criticism, harassment, or any other emotional or physical harm.

Portrait Lisanne Dorn

Black Employee Connection (BEC) gives me a team outside my team.

Lisanne Dorn, Acting Director of Partner Sales at Zalando Direct, Core-Member of Zalando’s Black Employee Connection

Among recent projects, the Mental Wellbeing Community teamed up with the Corporate Health Management Team to create a space for employees to share their feelings and facilitate conversations with those directly or indirectly affected by the war in Ukraine.13 The Mental Wellbeing Community organized a regular event called “How are you REALLY feeling?” Through a collaboration with the Corporate Citizenship and D&I teams, ERGs identified organizations supporting Ukrainian refugees. They have partnered with several organizations14 that enable the evacuation and aftercare of members of the BPOC and LGBTQI+ communities, as well as disabled and chronically ill refugees. In addition, Zalando has donated to organizations that combat human and child trafficking.

Zalando once again celebrated Pride in collaboration with the LGBTQI+ ERG. For Pride 2022, members and allies of the ERG designed, produced, and executed internal and external events to increase awareness on the importance of Pride, allyship, and their community needs. Experts from branding, marketing, communications, and logistics organized a panel with members of the Board to discuss how we can build back better for the LGBTQI+ community. Our senior leaders contributed via a video message, sharing their thoughts on why Pride matters and the importance of visible LGBTQI+ leaders. The LGBTQI+ community also created videos and content pieces to tell our our employees’ stories. ERGs also organized our participation in Berlin CSD 2022.

For International Women’s Day in March, the Women's Network, together with the Women in Tech and Women in Finance ERG, followed the official International Women’s Day hashtag #BreakTheBias. They facilitated 13 sessions in one week, hosting internal events, workshops, and podcasts for all employees. Topics included real estate investing, intersectionality and beauty standards, gender experience and expression, and understanding the menstrual cycle.

In Berlin, Dortmund, Ansbach, Lahr, and Helsinki, the Muslim Community Network celebrated its first community get-together for Iftar15 and Eid16. Collaborations between Muslim employees in fulfillment centers and head offices around Europe led to new prayer room designs and long-sleeve uniforms for those that wanted them.

“Being part of Black Employee Connection (BEC) gives me a team outside my team. It is a diverse network of people who share at least parts of my biography and identity. I believe that meaningful change is only as successful as its composition of voices and perspectives. I want to contribute by sharing the concerns of BEC and other historically marginalized groups, as well as using my professional experience to influence decision making,” says Lisanne Dorn, Acting Director of Partner Sales at Zalando Direct, Core-Member of Zalando’s Black Employee Connection.

Looking to the future, we are developing a new ERG strategy that will redefine our ERG program and our strategic focus. The strategy will include new measures around governance, recognition of ERG core members, and collaboration between ERG and the business. It will also establish how we measure success. The effort will help us better support our ERG and guide them to successful partnerships with Zalando.

13 The full extent of Zalando’s Ukraine support will be reported in Zalando’s Sustainability Report 2023.

14  Outright International, Fight for Right, International Office for Migration, ADAN, Voices of Children

15 Iftar, also known as futoor, is the evening meal with which Muslims end their daily Ramadan fast at sunset. They break their fast at the time of the call to prayer for the evening prayer.

16 Eid Al-fiitr is an official holiday celebrated within Islam. The religious holiday is celebrated by Muslims worldwide because it marks the end of the month-long dawn-to-sunset fasting of Ramadan.


Our commitment: By 2023, we will increase the share of women in each of our five17 top leadership levels to 40-60%.18

One of the highlights of the past year has been the speed at which we have widened representation in our leadership teams. With an average of 37.5% of top-five leadership level roles occupied by women, we are on the right path to achieving our target for women in leadership. Our progress reflects our conviction about the benefits of gender-equitable leadership.

“It was really about someone in the room saying ‘That’s not good enough’ when women weren’t on a candidate list for leadership positions. We knew the problem wasn’t a lack of talented and qualified women, so we looked to address why they weren’t sitting in front of us as often in interviews. Thankfully, this has resulted in some really valuable hires, which is why we have been able to make so much progress on this commitment,” says Astrid Arndt, Chief People Officer.

This year we also expanded gender representation on our Board. We appointed Dr. Sandra Dembeck as our new Chief Financial Officer, responsible for the Finance and Group Governance teams.

17 We included the Supervisory Board level in external communication of the goal to achieve a share of 40-60% in each of the top 6 leadership levels. We focus now only on leadership levels within Zalando that we have hiring influence over.

18 By setting a corridor for this target, we aim to achieve a balanced representation of both women and men, hence a share of 40-60% for both genders.

Portrait of Sandra Dembeck

I fully believe in the power of diversity as an important driver of a company's growth.

Sandra Dembeck, Chief Financial Officer

“I fully believe in the power of diversity as an important driver of a company's growth. At Zalando, we have experienced such rapid development over the past years. I am glad we have taken this as an opportunity to diversify perspectives of our leadership. My motto is to see D&I as crucial to creating a company where people feel valued and being able to offer a product that resonates with customers,” says Sandra Dembeck.

We are continuously improving on our senior leadership hiring processes. Our executive search teams are committed to identifying a diverse pool of candidates and ensuring that candidates have a great experience during their recruitment journey. They also make sure that we have gender representation on our interview panels. We are also committed to promoting from within, making sure that advancement opportunities are visible and possible for women throughout our organization. This year we introduced Grow@Zalando, an internal career development week where we focus on growth topics such as understanding our performance frameworks.


The overall share of internationals in management positions is 45.6%. The share of internationals in the top five management levels: Board of Directors is 16.7%, Senior Vice President is 45.5%, Vice President is 56.4%, Director is 50.5% and Head is 43.4%.

Portrait of Padmaja Bomareddy

It is important for people to see leaders that look, sound, and feel familiar to them.

Padmaja Bommareddy, Senior Vice President of Corporate Development

Padmaja Bommareddy joined Zalando this April as Senior Vice President of Corporate Development. Growing up, role modeling — seeing people who looked like her in leadership — was a valuable part of her career development, both as a woman and a person of Asian descent. Having reached a leadership position herself, Padmaja tries to lead by example, placing value on creating access and equity. One of the ways she puts this into practice is by serving as a sponsor for the Asia Pacific Community Circle Employee Resource Group.

“It is important for young people to see leaders that look, sound, and feel familiar to them, people who have shared experiences. ERGs are important because they provide learning opportunities and a place where people are able to speak freely about their experiences without judgment. It is also important to create a community for people that may not have one of their own, particularly at an international company like Zalando in Berlin, because so many people are new to the city.”


Inclusive customer experiences
Two Zalando employees working together, sitting on a big pillow in a ball pool

Inclusive customer experiences

We are learning all the time and working to challenge beauty and fashion stereotypes on behalf of our more than 50 million customers. However, we know that our business, like many others, reflects unconscious bias in many of its operations and interfaces. Over the past year, we have accelerated our response, aiming to champion Diversity & Inclusion, improve accessibility, and offer a welcoming space for customers to discover and express themselves.

In 2022:

  • We created a more accessible digital experience, including better readability, easier navigation, and a more intuitive layout of our corporate website.
  • We offered dedicated training around accessibility and Adaptive Fashion for our engineers, product designers, specialists, and private label designers.
  • We celebrated our customers’ diversity in our content, campaigns, and storytelling.

Our commitments


Our commitment: By 2025, we commit to providing an equally accessible, relevant and welcoming digital experience for customers from underrepresented groups and regularly evaluate our digital experience by an independent external panel.

We were proud this year to launch our Adaptive Fashion collections. To create a more inclusive and accessible digital experience, we assembled a dedicated team of software engineers, product designers, product managers, data analysts, and researchers, who are working together to improve our disability proposition.
 
To further understand our disabled customers’ experiences, we conducted in-depth interviews and surveyed more than 1,300 people in the disabled community. One in five consumers has an impairment that implies a need for Adaptive Fashion, with 20% of those pointing out that they don’t know where to shop for Adaptive Fashion. Insights from these interviews have helped us understand how to design a more inclusive digital experience, as well as how to craft our communications around our Adaptive Fashion collections.

Portrait photo of Juniper Grace

Our team of pan-disabled people has worked across Zalando Adaptive Fashion to ensure best practice.

Grace Stratton, Director and Founder of AIFA

We worked with All is For All (AIFA), a consultancy for disability inclusion, which has helped us shape our customer research and messages that are inclusive and authentically represent our disabled customers’ experiences.

“Over the last year and a half, our team of pan-disabled people have worked across all touch points of Zalando’s Adaptive Fashion launch to ensure best practice, authenticity, and connectivity with our community. A disability rights approach19 has informed, meaningfully, every single piece of work. This is a continuing journey, but we are thrilled to be part of this and are very proud of what was produced,” says Grace Stratton, Director and Founder of AIFA.

We have prioritized making customers’ digital experiences accessible on app and online. As a first step, we improved our corporate website’s accessibility, offering better readability, easier navigation, and a more intuitive layout. In parallel, we asked external experts to audit our customer digital experience against Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). The results have encouraged us to start work to enable disabled customers to find, choose, and purchase products more easily, as well as to ensure we make accessibility a permanent capability. As part of the initiative, we offer enablement and accessibility training to software engineers, designers, and product managers across our Digital Experience teams.

By listening to disabled customers and co-creating experiences with experts in the disability community, Zalando will continue to celebrate disability, connect customers with brands, and boost accessibility with cutting-edge assistive technology.

Portrait photo of Stacia Carr

We wanted to grow awareness of how our customers feel about seeing their bodies [and to] integrate the demands of inclusive design into our way of working.

Stacia Carr, VP Size and Fit

We continue our efforts on size inclusion, with our Size Advice and Body Measurements team taking part in additional training.

"With this training, we wanted to grow awareness of how our customers feel about seeing their bodies in the digital space and, consequently, of ways to integrate the demands of inclusive design into our way of working. It was a discovery exercise where we discussed diversity, inclusion, body privilege, and retail micro aggressions, as we worked on eliminating non-inclusive language and enabling technical solutions. Developing an inclusive experience is an 'always on' task. This is why we keep working and researching to overcome any technical constraints to reach our goal and make sure that all our customers feel both represented and included," says Stacia Carr, VP Size and Fit.


Our commitment: By 2023, our customer experience and communications reflect and celebrate diversity through our visuals, language, and narratives — we also encourage and support our partners to do the same.

Zalando recognizes its responsibility to create authentic, representative, and inclusive content. That includes marketing campaigns, media partnerships, and events. Our photographers, stylists, and creatives have analyzed where we can do better and put inclusion at the center of our creative processes.

Our initiatives this year included collaborations with photographers and influencers to deliver monthly bite-size content on beauty (@and.bloom) and styling (Ways to style), as well as expanded campaigns for Zalando’s Fashion Store and our brand partners. For our Holiday 2021 campaign “Joy Is Ours”, we cast models and influencers from 23 European nations, showcasing diversity including gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and age.

In our Adaptive Fashion campaign “Embrace what makes you, you”, we continued to craft our messaging to be inclusive by design. To represent leading voices from the disabled community, we are proud to have collaborated with AIFA and photographer Debra Brune. Both AIFA members and Debra have lived experience of disability. Our storytelling leads with a diverse mix of disabled talent and interviews them on what fashion means to them. We also offer a dedicated online destination for our customers to explore our Adaptive assortment, focusing on fashion first, functionality second.

We are committed to celebrating and amplifying communities at moments in the year that resonate with them. Our 2022 Pride campaign highlighted voices from the LGBTQI+ community; nine creators spoke about the role of fashion and beauty in expressing identity and pride. Our Pride campaign was accompanied by the launch of our permanent Pride landing page, a dedicated space on the Fashion Store where customers can look for inspiration.

Portrait of Ivy Monteiro

That's where makeup helps me tremendously to express myself the way I feel and to be the person I want to be that day.

Ivy Monterio, in akut magazin

This year, we launched our global Zalando Beauty campaign showcasing the diversity of Beauty and Care enthusiasts. To amplify our commitment to inclusive beauty, we partnered with “Kweer Ball”, a dance party series “inspired by queer ballroom culture.” Through a media partnership with akut magazine, Zalando documented the beauty transformation of talents Ivy Monterio and Bran Dee for the "Kweer Ball" in April. Ivy and Bran Dee became their favorite superhero characters using products available in Zalando’s beauty assortment.

"Being non-binary and gender fluid is very relative, but for me it means moving and performing sometimes as a man, sometimes as a woman, and sometimes as something in between. That's where makeup helps me tremendously to express myself the way I feel and to be the person I want to be that day," says Ivy Monterio in akut magazine.

In 2022, Zalando Marketing Services partnered with the US- American fashion brand GAP to create Sharing Pride. This campaign supported three LGBTQIA+ film directors in Germany — Adam Munnings, Zoey Lee, and Harun Güler — to create their own short films responding to GAP's core message: “The freedom to be yourself is the most profound sense of joy.” The partnership enabled each director to create their own interpretation of this core message. The films navigate culture, identity, and gender while embodying the belief that liberation and happiness come when you live your truth.

Our marketing teams this year took part in a knowledge-sharing D&I Fashion Series. The participants engaged in three discussions, starting with Representation in Fashion, which focused on the importance of representative images and the consequences of stereotypes. The second session, Cultural Appropriation in Design, discussed cultural appropriation in products and how to recognize and avoid it. The final session, Celebrating Diversity, highlighted the importance of ethical communication and widening representation in marketing. Through discussions and analysis, participants set goals for incorporating D&I ambitions into their business activities.

"The session was informative and engaging and highlighted our need for more solid guidelines around D&I when creating campaigns. Consequently, I’ve joined the Representative Content Working Group on behalf of our team. We strive to represent society and champion diversity in the campaigns we pitch to external brands,” says Isabelle Jordy, Senior Creative, Fashion Store.

 


Portrait of Isabelle Jordy

We strive to represent society and champion diversity in the campaigns we pitch to external brands.

Isabelle Jordy, Senior Creative, Fashion Store

Group photo of the three models of the ZMS campaign for GAP: Harun, Zoe, and Adam.

Creating dimension in Pride campaigns: ZMS x GAP

How Zalando Marketing Services created a truly inclusive campaign for GAP


Working with our partners
Two Zalando employees in a meeting room

Working with our partners

Our partners help make us who we are, and we are fortunate to work with some of the world’s most inspiring brands that are committed to supporting us in promoting D&I across the fashion industry. Over the past year, we have collaborated with long-standing partners and joined with several more, enabling us to deepen our initiatives and assemble new ideas across our operations.

In 2022:

  • We launched Adaptive Fashion with more than 300 styles in garments and shoes from Zalando’s Private Labels, Tommy Hilfiger, and Nike.
  • We launched “Limitless Fashion,” a genderless and exclusive capsule collection of 32 pieces.
  • Our inclusive beauty assortment expanded by 60% over the past three years.
  • We onboarded 63 Black-owned brands to the Zalando Fashion Store, including collections by Thebe Magugu and Dechase.
  • In Bangladesh, we ran a skilling course for 800 workers in partner facilities.
  • We entered three new and continued four partnerships with NGOs19 and consultancies that help us understand the experiences of marginalized communities and amplify their voices.

Our commitments


Our commitment: By 2025, we commit to offer a truly diverse assortment for underrepresented groups by providing product choices and thoughtful experiences in every category across price, size, and style.21

In October 2022, we launched Adaptive Fashion collections with Tommy Hilfiger, and Adaptive shoes by Nike — both key moments in our inclusion journey. We designed Adaptive collections for five of our private label brands: Anna Field, Even & Odd, Zign, Pier One, and YOURTURN. And we are working with a host of partner brands to help them roll out Adaptive collections on Zalando.

Our starting point in launching our Adaptive Fashion collections was ensuring that our employees had an opportunity to learn about and understand the disabled community and their fashion inspirations. We conducted workshops to train people in design, marketing, and communications, helping them get a better idea of disabled individuals’ needs.

New assortments on our platform include items for people who need to sit while getting dressed and fabric that is comfortable to those that are sensitive to touch. The collection includes more accessible clothing features, such as zippers that can be fastened with one hand, magnetic closures, and easy-to-use buttons.

To make our assortment even more inclusive, we expanded our Modest Fashion offerings. We built a Modest Fashion22 landing page, making it easier for our customers to find products and providing a one-stop shop for inspiration. Since July 2021, our work with modest brands, including Modanisa and Touche Prive, has given customers interested in Modest Fashion more options. Our new style inspiration and dedicated Get the Look content is live on the Fashion Store, with influencers such as Aminia Belal highlighting their favorite pieces on the site. Content creators on YouTube also talk about our Modest Fashion collections: see Ways to Style Modestwear with Beza

21 Underrepresented refers to a person or group of people who are inadequately represented — in this specific case, within the fashion industry across Europe.

22 Modest Fashion is designed for people who want their clothes to align with religious or personal preferences.

Portrait photo of JoannaHummel

We’ve seen a growing demand for gender-free clothing and want to continue inspiring our customers.

Joanna Hummel, General Manager for Zalando’s Nordic markets

This summer, we launched “Limitless Fashion”, a capsule collection of 32 pieces of Genderless Fashion ranging from outerwear and knitwear to crop tops, shorts, blazers, and dresses, available exclusively at Zalando. The collection showcases four Nordic labels: Han Kjøbenhavn, Martin Asbjørn, Makia, and Double A by Wood Wood.

The collection and the campaign were very well received. Both created high engagement with customers and were picked up and talked about by local media.

“We’ve seen a growing demand for gender-free clothing and we want to continue to inspire our customers, as well as support local brands. Our “Limitless Fashion” campaign did just that and sparked conversations about what gender-free looks today in the media and on social platforms,” says Joanna Hummel, General Manager for Zalando’s Nordic markets.

Inclusive Beauty

In 2018, we launched our D&I beauty proposition. We aim to onboard brands and products that meet consumers’ individual needs. The Zalando wholesale assortment has grown to 11 brands across haircare, skincare, and makeup that cater to BPOC skin tones and hair texture. They include Fenty Beauty, Danessa Myricks, Dizziak, and Atina Cosmetic.

Our buying team works closely with our partners to widen our assortment of foundation shades. Currently we offer more than 800 across our top 11 beauty brands. A leading brand on the platform is MAC Make up with 56+ foundation shades on our platform.

Our inclusive assortment has expanded by 60% over the past three years, and we encourage onboarded brands to launch with a wide range of shades. We have also welcomed several new brands that specifically focus on underrepresented groups. Since October 2021, we have partnered in Germany with Sephora, which offers a wide range of shades for deeper skin tones. In our professional haircare category, we focused on highlighting products for different hair types. We highlighted a new assortment of brands, including L’Oreal Professionnel, Aveda, and Kérastase, which have launched new hair products to cater to a diversity of hair textures, thicknesses, and colors. We implemented a Haircare finder with Kérastase. We also onboarded brands that cater specifically to curlier hair types, including Dizziak and Bouclème.

Looking ahead, we plan to add more inclusive brands catering to a diversity of hair textures, skin shades, and skin types, as well as all-gender beauty products for mature skin.

 


Our commitment: By 2025, we will be the European e-commerce partner of choice for brands and retailers that serve or stem from underrepresented groups.

Mirroring the “Fifteen Percent Pledge”23 initiated by Black designer Aurora James after the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement, we have set ourselves the target of onboarding more Black-owned brands to the Zalando Fashion Store. This year, we onboarded 63 Black-owned brands across beauty, jewelry, and fashion.

In addition to major brands such as Karl Kani, our buyers and sales teams have set out to identify smaller brands from around the world. They have offered advice throughout the onboarding process and helped to boost brand visibility with marketing credits for our in-house agency ZMS.

23 This initiative challenges US companies to dedicate 15% of their shelf space to Black-owned Brands, a number derived from the 15% Black citizens of the USA.

Portrait Rene McDonald

For a small independent brand, [the support from Zalando] has been invaluable.

Rene Macdonald, Founder and Creative Director of Lisou

For Black History Month in February, we published interviews with three Black-owned brands. Rene Macdonald, founder and creative director of Lisou, Thebe Magugu, creator of the luxury South African fashion brand of the same name, and Milki Abadura, digital marketing manager at Dechase, provided insights into their inspirations and business journeys.

“We have been with Zalando for a few seasons now and they have really helped us gain a presence in Europe. Additionally, the team has been great at supporting us with onboarding, product testing, and so on. For a small independent brand, this has been invaluable. We look forward to a growing relationship over future seasons,” says Rene Macdonald, Founder and Creative Director of Lisou.

“Our objective is to empower Black-owned brands by embracing them as partners, supporting them to become successful, amplifying their voices, and driving business for them,” says Jemma Garner, Principal Business Developer.

We will continue to support brands that serve or stem from underrepresented groups, taking into account their goals, the implications of intersectionality, and our customers' needs.


Our commitment: By 2025, we will be a central collaboration point in fashion, bringing together brands, retailers, NGOs, academia, community thought-leaders, and members of the media to systematically empower and amplify underrepresented voices in the industry.

Our partnership commitment aims to empower underrepresented groups and facilitate collaboration with NGOs and academic institutions. We learn from our partners’ experiences and gather ideas that could help us be welcoming to everyone. This year, we continued to develop our relationships and welcomed several new partners.

In November 2021, we held our first D&I Forum at Zalando headquarters in Berlin. D&I and industry professionals came together to exchange ideas and learn. This year, we expanded the concept by launching D&I Roundtables, bringing together brand partners and D&I professionals from the broader tech industry, aiming to develop best practice on D&I topics. This November, we will host our first roundtable on “How to embed D&I in your organization.” More than 70 D&I leaders and professionals from Berlin tech companies will come together to share knowledge and exchange ideas.

Zalando partners with The Outsider's Perspective, a social enterprise that combats low representation of BPOC on the operational side of fashion. The focus of the project is to equip BPOC talent with the knowledge and skills needed to work in marketing, merchandising, finance, human resources, and/or digital and to introduce them to fashion brands. We believe this is an important step in encouraging diversity in fashion, increasing representation, and engaging the next generation of consumers.

"Our consumers are so international and diverse. If you are not reflecting that in your teams, how are you speaking to them? This is key for Gen Z for buying into authentic brands," says Jamie Gill, Founder, The Outsider’s Perspective.

Portrait Jamie Gill

Our consumers are diverse. If you don't reflect that in your teams, how do you speak to them?

Jamie Gill, Founder The Outsider’s Perspective

Zalando will partner with Special Olympics, the world's largest sports organization for children and adults with intellectual and physical disabilities.24 In 2023, we are proud that we will be a partner for the Special Olympics World Games in Berlin. We will run several projects to highlight the importance of disability inclusion in sport and fashion. One of the projects we kicked off this year is a collaboration with the Lette Verein fashion college to launch a course on Adaptive Fashion design. This autumn, students are creating items for athletes and receiving lessons from Zalando designers and buyers on how to produce commercial garments. Athletes from the German Special Olympics team will act as models and consultants.

For the past two years, we have been a member of Valuable 500, an organization that challenges global corporations to make disability inclusion a business priority. The key focus in our partnership is to support work on representation. The partnership has enabled Valuable 500 to conduct qualitative and quantitative research into representation among member companies. This has led to the creation of a media hub that will support companies in accurately and authentically portraying disabled people. The hub will provide stock imagery, music, and a directory of models, photographers, and creative directors.

24 Persons that have certain limitations in cognitive functioning and skills, including communication, social, and self-care skills (SOD)

Portrait photo of Chloe Matharu, Chief Marketing Officer at Valuable 500

Zalando has provided support, helping us shape our plans and connecting with our partners.

Chloe Matharu, Chief Marketing Officer at Valuable 500

“Throughout this time, Zalando has provided support and guidance, helping us shape our understanding and plans. It has been active in connecting with our directory partners and disability business experts in areas such as Adaptive wear and inclusive casting/model booking, as well as with companies in the Valuable 500 to learn about best practice in other sectors and geographies,” says Chloe Matharu, Chief Marketing Officer at Valuable 500.

Partnerships help us connect with diverse communities. Zalando recognizes that in times of crisis and war, marginalized groups, such as disabled people, BPOC, and LGBTQI+ community members, face heightened risks. Since the beginning of 2022, we have worked with charities and crisis response teams in Ukraine to support marginalized groups such as BPOC and the LGBTQI+ community. Our partners also help people who have struggled to flee Ukraine due to age, disability, or lack of passports, as well as supporting women and unaccompanied minors. We have financially supported organizations including Outright International, Fight for Right, International Office for Migration, ADAN, and Voices of Children.

With quick funding, these organizations were able to respond during the early months of the war and help get people to safety, as well as provide initial support in other countries. In collaboration with our Corporate Citizenship team, we are supporting organizations (for example, Ashoka) that drive policy and design solutions for the inclusion and better treatment of refugees fleeing from Ukraine and through other migration corridors such as the Mediterranean Sea.

Last but not least, we collaborated with Shimmy Technologies and Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) to empower women working at Zalando partner facilities in Bangladesh (producing garments for our private labels). The training gave 800 employees the opportunity to develop skills to adapt to a changing workplace and advance their careers. Topics included reducing gender bias among senior managers, as well as the positive impact of more women in leadership and the economic advantages of equal-opportunity workplaces. Following the training, we saw the first promotion of a woman to a management position in our Bangladeshi partner facility. In all of our locations, we work to ensure the highest standards of human and labor rights.


Portrait of Jemma Garner

Our objective is to empower Black-owned brands by embracing them as partners.

Jemma Garner, Principal Business Developer D&I

Lina Barker from Aaron Wallace

Making space for Black voices in the beauty industry

Black-owned beauty brands Aaron Wallace and Maréna Beauté talk about why representation is needed in the skin and hair care industry


Looking to the future

Looking to the future

As we work to make Zalando welcoming to everyone, we are proud of the progress we have made and are excited about our plans for the future. Our work over the past year has energized us even more to make decisions that will boost D&I at Zalando and across the industry. We are committed to the cause and we want to build on the foundations we have laid. As the world continues to tackle challenges, we will ensure that D&I remains at the top of our agenda.

Over the past year, we have reached some key milestones. Adaptive Fashion is live in our Fashion Store, and we are the first multi-brand platform in Europe to offer an extensive Adaptive Fashion collection. We have more women in leadership positions and tech roles and are ensuring that more of our customers’ individual needs are met. Moreover, we are working closely with our partners, helping them support representation across the industry. With the Special Olympics World Games coming to Berlin in 2023, we want to push harder on disability inclusion and Adaptive Fashion, showcasing what we can achieve when integrating D&I commitments in our business objectives.

Next year, we will strive to build on our achievements, continue to embed best practice, and innovate for a more inclusive future for our talents, leaders, customers, and partners. We plan to refine our policies and practices and expand our inclusive assortments. We will engage with our stakeholders, setting an example whenever we can. Moreover, we are committed to accelerating our progress on increasing representation at all levels of the business, going even further in being welcoming to everyone. We look forward to pursuing these ambitions with passion and continuing to embed Diversity and Inclusion in everything we do.

Acknowledgments

Authors: Helene Mathelemuse, Samet Akti, Angela Waters, Julia Burpee, Wim Lefebure, and Vikki Leach.
Copywriter: David Wigan (English), Anne Sophie Ritscher (German)
Design: Sultan Berlin Design Studio

The authors would like to thank everyone at Zalando who helped create this report, including Toufik Akiki, Emilie Julie Alonso, Astrid Arndt, Katharina Asbrock, Maddalena Benedetto, Joseph Walter Bernier, Padmaja Bommareddy, Kazi Bruelke, Verena Brune, Jose Campillo, Stacia Carr, Rosa-Maria Chacon, Sarah Cordivano, Lana Criggs, Sandra Dembeck, Lisanne Dorn, Gabriel Erguezel, Alexis Evans, Ciro Fakhr, Katrin Fox, Svenja Gaab, Jemma Garner, Jamie Gill, Amanda Glaeser-Bligh, Ellen Gleeson, Frank Hsiao, Joanna Hummel, Jamilah Jaidi, Isabelle Jordy, Coskun Karakus, Jema Kakar, Wim Lefebure, Roeland Loof, Jeff Lovejoy, Marc-Andre Luik, Rene Macdonald, Chloe Matharu, Rhiannon Meagher, Monique Meche, Ivy Monterio, Daniel Motino, Dshamila Mueller, Sebastian Munoz, Abiola Muritala, Diogo Nogueria, Flora Ohlsen, Adina Popa, David Reiner, Christopher Riedl, Johanna Salewsky, Matthias Schaefer, Veronica Schilling, David Schneider, Mark Ivan Serunjogi, Stefania Simbula, Caleb Spahr, Niall Starling, Sophia Steinmann, Grace Stratton, Lucy Stubley, Kristall Thamas, Virginia Tirado, Alex Walker, Elisabeth Wierczoch, Carmen Wolfschluckner, and Meike Zehlike.

Special thanks also goes to Zalando’s Works Councils and Employee Resource Groups for their collaboration and feedback.