VusionGroup FY25: The numbers that matter
VusionGroup reported €1.5B in FY25 revenue, up 51% year-on-year. That growth rate won't sustain — but it doesn't need to. The installed hardware base creates a recurring software layer underneath it: EdgeSense AI subscriptions, Captana computer-vision analytics licenses, and cloud repricing SaaS running on top of hardware already bolted to shelves across Tesco, Carrefour, Casino, and 300+ other retailers.
The hardware/software revenue split is shifting in a direction that matters strategically. In FY24, hardware was 74% of VusionGroup revenue. In FY25: 61%. This is not a margin story; it's a competitive moat story. Once the ESL hardware is deployed and the analytics platform is running, switching costs for the retailer become prohibitive. The retailer's pricing infrastructure, planogram compliance workflows, and waste-reduction processes are all built on top of VusionGroup's API. You don't rip that out for a 20% cheaper hardware quote from Hanshow.
The Tesco deployment: what 340% actually means
When Tesco upgraded 2,400 UK stores to VusionGroup's ESL 6.0 platform, the press release led with sustainability — fewer paper labels, lower waste. The real operational story was pricing velocity.
- Price-change frequency on fresh produce: +340% in the first six months post-deployment (from ~50,000 dynamic pricing events/week to 180,000+)
- Labour hours saved: 14,000 hours/week across the estate — at UK retail labour rates, that's ~£9.4M/year
- Waste reduction on fresh: automated markdown sequencing triggered 4 hours before close, based on real-time sell-through data from EdgeSense
- Competitor price integration: Aldi and Lidl pricing is scraped and incorporated into Tesco's dynamic repricing algorithm at SKU level
The strategic implication: Aldi and Lidl cannot replicate this. Their low-SKU, high-volume model doesn't require ESL-level repricing agility. VusionGroup gives Tesco something the discounters structurally cannot copy: responsive pricing on fresh without margin erosion.
Repricing velocity: a visual comparison
WEEKLY REPRICING EVENTS — ESTIMATED · SOURCE: COMPANY DISCLOSURES, AISLEINTEL ANALYSIS · FY25
The Monoprix 65% uplift: Captana CV in practice
Monoprix deployed VusionGroup's Captana computer vision module across 280 urban stores in France. The headline number — 65% improvement in promotional compliance — comes from one specific operational change: Captana detects planogram deviations within 4 hours of a promotion going live, versus the previous audit cycle of 2-3 days.
In practical terms: when Monoprix runs a promotion on Greek yoghurt in 280 stores, Captana flags stores where the promotional facing wasn't executed (product not fronted, signage missing, wrong location) within the same trading day. The store operations team can correct before the promotional period's peak traffic window. Previously, most corrections happened on day 3 — after the peak.
The 65% compliance uplift translates directly to promotional ROI. Promotions that reach 95%+ compliance across the estate deliver 2.3x the incremental volume of promotions at 60% compliance. This is Monoprix's internal benchmark, reported in VusionGroup's FY25 earnings materials.
Hanshow and SoluM: the competitive picture
| Vendor | Est. Revenue | Geography | AI / Analytics | Switching Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VusionGroup | €1.5B (+51%) | EU, US, Asia (80+ countries) | EdgeSense AI + Captana CV | High — deep API integration |
| Hanshow | ~$800M | Asia-Pacific dominant, EU growing | Hardware-first, thin software | Low — hardware swappable |
| SoluM (Samsung) | Est. $400–600M | Germany, Nordics, Korea | Basic analytics, no CV layer | Medium — Samsung B2B ties |
The competitive distinction is not hardware quality — all three vendors produce reliable ESL units. The moat is the analytics platform. Hanshow's pitch is price. VusionGroup's pitch is data. For a retailer evaluating ESL purely on hardware ROI (labour savings, paper elimination), Hanshow wins on unit economics. For a retailer who wants the repricing agility, shelf intelligence, and waste-reduction layer — VusionGroup wins on strategic value.
The SoluM angle is different: it's a Samsung subsidiary, which creates B2B friction for retailers already deep in Samsung's enterprise ecosystem (common in German retail, notably REWE and Kaufland). Samsung's potential to build a competing analytics layer in-house is the long-term threat to VusionGroup's moat — not Hanshow.