Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Orlando full-service restaurant operator (NYSE: DRI) ~$12.1B FY2025 revenue; Olive Garden 900+ locations, Ruth's Chris acquisition 2023, LongHorn expansion, competing with Bloomin' Brands and Texas Roadhouse.
Darden Restaurants, Inc. is an Orlando, Florida-based full-service restaurant operator — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: DRI) as an S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary component — owning and operating approximately 2,000 restaurants across eight brands including Olive Garden (Italian casual dining — 900+ locations), LongHorn Steakhouse (casual steakhouse — 600+ locations), The Capital Grille (upscale steakhouse — 60+ locations), Yard House (upscale casual — 80+ locations), Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen (value casual dining), Bahama Breeze, Seasons 52, and Eddie V's through approximately 175,000 employees. In fiscal year 2025 (ending May 2025), Darden reported revenues of approximately $12.1 billion, integrating Ruth's Chris Steak House (acquired for $715 million in 2023, adding 150+ fine dining steakhouse locations) and navigating a casual dining environment where value-seeking consumer behavior and competitive pressure from fast-casual alternatives (Chipotle, Chick-fil-A) challenged traffic counts at all casual dining brands. CEO Rick Cardenas has executed "Back to Basics" operational simplification — reducing menu item counts at Olive Garden (eliminating Never Ending Pasta Bowl in 2024, the decades-long promotional fixture), standardizing kitchen operations across the company, and investing in employee wages and training to improve service quality and reduce turnover. Olive Garden's "Never Ending Breadsticks and Salad" hospitality model and its brand loyalty (highest unaided awareness of any full-service Italian restaurant in the US) provide Darden a durable casual dining anchor that generates reliable traffic from family celebrations, date nights, and business casual dining occasions.
Hershey PA chocolate and snacks (NYSE: HSY) ~$10.2B FY2024 revenue; Reese's #1 US candy brand, cocoa inflation $2.5K→$12K/MT crisis, SkinnyPop salty snacks, competing with Mars and Ferrero.
The Hershey Company is a Hershey, Pennsylvania-based confectionery and snacks company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: HSY) as an S&P 500 Consumer Staples component — manufacturing and selling chocolate, candy, mints, gum, and salty snacks through iconic brands including Hershey's (chocolate bars, Kisses), Reese's (peanut butter cups — America's #1 candy brand by revenue), Kit Kat (licensed from Nestlé for the US market), York Peppermint Patties, Jolly Rancher, Ice Breakers, Skinny Pop, Dot's Pretzels, and Pirate's Booty through approximately 18,000 employees in 80+ countries. In fiscal year 2024, Hershey reported net sales of approximately $10.2 billion, with earnings per share significantly compressed by unprecedented cocoa commodity inflation: West African cocoa prices (Ghana and Ivory Coast provide 70%+ of global cocoa supply) surged from $2,500/metric ton in 2022 to over $12,000/metric ton in early 2024 — the highest prices in 50+ years — driven by El Niño-related drought and crop disease (swollen shoot disease) reducing cocoa harvests, creating a chocolate manufacturer cost crisis that Hershey absorbed through price increases and hedging while managing volume declines as consumers resisted higher candy prices. CEO Michele Buck has guided Hershey through the cocoa inflation crisis by implementing 10-15% retail price increases in 2023-2024, reformulating some lower-margin products to reduce cocoa content, and hedging cocoa commodity exposure on a rolling 12-18 month forward basis to smooth out extreme spot price volatility.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.