Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
World's largest hardware cooperative with 5,500+ independent owner-operated stores in 60+ countries; $9B retail network competing with Home Depot and Lowe's through neighborhood service and cooperative economics.
Ace Hardware is the world's largest hardware cooperative — a retailer-owned cooperative of 5,500+ independently owned hardware stores operating across 60+ countries, where each store owner is both a customer of Ace's wholesale distribution and an equity member of the cooperative that determines pricing, programs, and brand strategy. Founded in 1924 in Chicago, Ace Hardware generates approximately $9 billion in retail sales annually through its cooperative network, competing with Home Depot (NYSE: HD) and Lowe's (NYSE: LOW) as the dominant neighborhood hardware alternative.
Dallas global commercial real estate services (NYSE: CBRE) ~$35B revenue; world's largest CRE firm, Industrious $400M acquisition creates flexible workplace segment, data center advisory growth competing with JLL.
CBRE Group, Inc. is a Dallas, Texas-based commercial real estate services and investment company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: CBRE) as an S&P 500 Real Estate component and the world's largest commercial real estate services company — providing advisory, transaction, project management, property and facilities management, and real estate investment management services through approximately 130,000 employees and 750+ offices in 100+ countries. CBRE serves occupiers, investors, and developers across every commercial real estate segment: office, industrial, retail, multifamily, healthcare, data centers, and hospitality. In a defining 2025 expansion, CBRE announced the acquisition of Industrious — a leading flexible workplace solutions operator with 200+ premium coworking locations in 65+ US cities serving Fortune 500 corporate occupiers — for approximately $400 million (reflecting an implied enterprise value of ~$800 million), creating a new CBRE business segment called Building Operations & Experience (BOE). The Industrious acquisition enables CBRE to offer corporate real estate occupiers both traditional leasing advisory (CBRE's existing business) and flexible workspace management (Industrious's product), positioning CBRE as the end-to-end workplace solutions provider as corporate space strategies shift from long-term dedicated leases toward hybrid portfolios of core offices supplemented by flexible coworking space. COO Vikram Kohli was promoted as part of the leadership restructuring associated with the new BOE segment. CEO Bob Sulentic leads CBRE's strategy of expanding beyond transaction brokerage into recurring-revenue real estate services.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.