We turn passport obligations into a system teams can actually run.

ClarosDPP helps companies move from scattered product data to a clear operating model for Digital Product Passports. We combine platform thinking, compliance translation, and practical delivery so teams can launch something useful, defendable, and easier to maintain over time.

Four areas of focus. One complete DPP outcome.

Regulation, translated

We translate evolving DPP-related requirements into implementation choices that teams can act on, instead of leaving regulation trapped in policy summaries or slide decks.

Passport infrastructure

We help shape the operating model behind the passport: data sources, validation logic, evidence structure, access layers, and how QR journeys connect to real product records.

Evidence, structured

Many passport programs succeed or fail at the supplier boundary. We focus on practical collection patterns for declarations, recycled content, traceability inputs, and supporting documentation.

The public-facing layer

A strong DPP is not only compliant. It is understandable. We design the landing page, technical summary, and communication flow so the value of the passport is obvious at first scan.

Four steps from scattered data to a passport that ships.

1

Map the reality

Start with product scope, regulation exposure, data availability, and current system ownership so the project starts from reality rather than assumptions.

2

Architect the model

Define how ERP, PLM, supplier inputs, compliance evidence, and approval logic should come together into one DPP operating model.

3

Build the passport

Create the public and technical passport layers so the final result works both as a compliance record and as a useful customer-facing digital experience.

4

Operationalise & scale

Once the first passport works, expand through repeatable templates, validation rules, supplier onboarding, and version-controlled publication.

Common questions. Straight answers.

What is a Digital Product Passport?
A Digital Product Passport is a digital record linked to a product, usually through a QR code or another data carrier. It brings together information such as product identity, materials, compliance evidence, circularity information, service guidance, and end-of-life instructions in one accessible place.
Why are companies acting on DPPs now?
Because DPPs are becoming a practical requirement across more regulated product categories, and they also help companies improve traceability, customer transparency, service readiness, and internal control over product data. Waiting until a deadline is close usually creates unnecessary data and supplier pressure.
Who actually needs a DPP?
The exact obligation depends on the product category and regulation, but manufacturers, importers, brand owners, and other actors placing regulated products on the market are the ones most likely to need a passport strategy. Even companies not yet under a direct mandate often prepare early so their supply chain and data foundations are ready.
What does a passport actually contain?
Typical passport content includes product identifiers, model and batch details, material or chemistry information, recycled content, declarations, carbon or circularity indicators, maintenance instructions, and supporting compliance evidence. The exact fields depend on the regulation and the product.
How does someone access the passport?
Most often through a QR code placed on the product, packaging, or accompanying documentation. That scan opens a digital page where the public-facing summary can be shown first, with more technical or restricted layers available when needed.
When is the right time to start?
Much earlier than the final compliance date. Teams usually need time to map products, gather supplier data, define ownership, create validation rules, and decide what the final passport experience should look like. Early preparation reduces rushed decisions later.
How is a DPP different from a data sheet or PDF?
A PDF is static. A passport is structured, traceable, and designed to be updated over time. It can support versioning, access control, evidence linkage, QR delivery, and a more useful experience for customers, service teams, and regulators.
What does ClarosDPP actually do?
ClarosDPP helps companies shape the architecture behind the passport, prepare the data model, build the customer-facing journey, and create a delivery approach that is easier to explain internally and externally. The goal is not just to launch a page, but to launch a system that holds up over time.

Want to see how your own products could be presented? We can walk you through the operating model, the QR journey, and the passport layout.

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