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Tech

ZeroLight losses widen as automotive industry puts the brakes on marketing

The 3D car visualisation specialist said it had been impacted by the postponement of new model launches

Darren Jobling, CEO of Zerolight(Image: Kevin Gibson Photography Ltd)

Newcastle tech firm ZeroLight saw losses widen to £7.9m, new documents reveal, amid major disruption across the automotive market.

The Quayside based company allows people to customise cars through its cloud-based, 3D interactive technology, and the first year of lockdown saw it accelerate deals with a number of car manufacturers, keen to keep launches on track despite the pandemic. However, accounts for the firm - which works with the likes of MW, Audi, Lamborghini, Porsche, Volkswagen, Skoda and Nissan - show its revenue fell for the first time since its launched in 2014, dropping from £8.3m to £6.7m.

The firm, which was born out racing game developer Eutechnyx, said the sudden drop in activity by some brands had been offset by its work with emerging electric vehicle companies such as Lucid Motors which rely heavily on digital marketing. While operating losses in the year to the end of March 2022, grew from £4.5m to £7.9m, ZeroLight continued to invest in research and development activity - recording £5.2m spend during the period.

Read more: North East tech innovator Honcho collapsed with £4.87m deficiency, documents show

The firm took on 20 new staff during the year, in a move that followed recruitment the year before, and took office numbers to 129.

Writing in the accounts document, ZeroLight founder and director Darren Jobling said the firm's future remained "highly positive". Following publication of the accounts, Mr Jobling told BusinessLive said: "ZeroLight continues to lead the world, from our base in the North East, defining the future of the car buying journey as we move from traditional retail to a direct to consumer online purchasing model.

"However, new car sales have been severely impacted by the Covid pandemic, chip shortages, and supply chain issues caused by the war in Ukraine. In the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ alone, SMMT figures show that new car production was down -29.3% in 2020, and 28.7% in 2021, compared to 2019.

"We’ve continued to work with our global customer base during this challenging period, but this has had an obvious knock-on effect on our own results, as ZeroLight’s performance is intrinsically linked to expenditure to support new car sales. The good news is that the deals we were forecasting to arrive in FY22 have only been delayed, and as production has started to recover these deals are arriving, leading to ZeroLight currently having five car manufacturers on global rollout.