Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Unilever personal care brand with MotionSense microencapsulation technology releasing freshness actives in response to movement; expanded into whole-body deodorant in 2024; parent company reported €60.5B revenue in 2024.
Degree is a personal care brand owned by Unilever, originally launched in 1990 in the United States under the mission of delivering protection that keeps pace with active lifestyles. The brand was built around MotionSense technology — a microencapsulation system embedded in the deodorant formula that releases additional freshness-active ingredients in direct response to physical movement and body heat, providing increased protection precisely when protection is most needed. This responsive delivery mechanism became a defining product innovation that differentiated Degree from static deodorant formulas and established it as a performance-oriented choice for active consumers.\n\nDegree's product line spans antiperspirant and deodorant sticks, dry sprays, clinical-strength formulas, and a rapidly expanding whole body deodorant category launched in 2024 — products designed to address underarm odor protection in non-traditional body areas as consumer hygiene norms evolve. The brand operates across men's and women's segments, with Degree Men as one of the leading men's deodorant franchises in the US market. Degree also maintains a partnership program with Paralympic and adaptive athletes, embedding its active credentials with inclusive positioning that resonates across a broad consumer base.\n\nDegree is part of Unilever's personal care division, which contributes to Unilever's €60.5 billion total revenue in 2024. Within the US men's deodorant category, Degree Men holds market leadership alongside Old Spice, competing on performance credentials and broad retail distribution across mass, drug, and grocery channels. The brand's 2024 expansion into whole body deodorant reflects a broader market shift toward full-body freshness solutions and positions Degree to capture incremental volume in a category it helped define.
Paris global luxury conglomerate (EPA: MC) at ~€84.7B 2024 revenue; 75+ brands (Louis Vuitton, Dior, Hennessy, Sephora), named preferred buyer for Giorgio Armani (€10B+) after founder's Sept 2025 death, competing with Kering and Hermès.
LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE is a Paris, France-based global luxury goods conglomerate — publicly traded on Euronext Paris (EPA: MC) and the world's largest luxury company by revenue — owning and managing 75+ prestige brands across Fashion & Leather Goods, Wines & Spirits, Perfumes & Cosmetics, Watches & Jewelry, and Selective Retailing through approximately 213,000 employees serving luxury consumers across 6 continents. LVMH's flagship brands include Louis Vuitton (the world's most valuable luxury brand), Christian Dior Couture, Moët & Chandon, Dom Pérignon, Hennessy cognac, Givenchy, Celine, Fendi, Bulgari, TAG Heuer, Hublot, Sephora, and DFS. In fiscal year 2024, LVMH reported revenue of approximately €84.7 billion, with the Fashion & Leather Goods segment (Louis Vuitton and Dior, ~40% of revenue) demonstrating resilience in a challenging global luxury environment characterized by post-pandemic demand normalization, Chinese luxury consumer caution, and currency headwinds. CEO and Chairman Bernard Arnault — the world's wealthiest individual — has built LVMH through decades of acquisitions of trophy luxury brands. LVMH's most significant strategic development for 2025-2026 is the preferred buyer designation for Giorgio Armani following the Italian fashion designer's death in September 2025 — with LVMH named in Armani's will as the preferred acquirer of the €10B+ Armani Group, with an initial 15% purchase within 18 months potentially leading to a full acquisition of one of the world's last independent luxury fashion houses.
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