Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Action camera company with $1.1B revenue; Hero series waterproof cameras for sports with GoPro Plus subscription amid smartphone camera competition compressing the addressable market.
GoPro is an action camera hardware company known for its durable, compact, mountable cameras used for capturing sports, adventure, and lifestyle content from first-person perspectives — the Hero camera series, 360-degree Max camera, and accessories ecosystem. Founded in 2002 by Nick Woodman in San Mateo, California and listed on NASDAQ, GoPro generates approximately $1.1 billion in annual revenue primarily from camera hardware sales, with a growing subscription business (GoPro Plus cloud storage and editing). The company has faced significant revenue pressure as smartphone cameras have improved, compressing the addressable market.\n\nGoPro's camera lineup (Hero 12, Hero 11 Black, Max 360) features waterproofing, shock resistance, and stabilization optimized for active use cases — surfing, skiing, mountain biking, motorsports, and aerial footage. The camera form factor supports mounting to helmets, boards, handlebars, and drones. GoPro's Quik mobile app provides AI-assisted video editing that automatically assembles highlight reels from raw footage. The GoPro Plus subscription provides cloud backup, camera replacement, and Quik premium editing features.\n\nIn 2025, GoPro faces continued challenges as the action camera market has contracted significantly from its peak — smartphone cameras now handle most casual action capture, and professional creators increasingly use mirrorless cameras with action-specific lenses. GoPro's strategy focuses on its core enthusiast customer (surfers, mountain bikers, motorsport participants) who value the waterproofing and mount ecosystem that smartphones cannot replicate, growing its subscription revenue for recurring income, and using the GoPro Labs hardware modification program to maintain credibility with technical creators. The 2025 strategy also includes cost reduction through workforce restructuring and manufacturing optimization.
San Jose enterprise networking and security (NASDAQ: CSCO) at ~$57B annual revenue; $28B Splunk acquisition completed March 2024 integrating SIEM/SOAR with Cisco Security Cloud competing with Palo Alto Networks for enterprise cybersecurity.
Cisco Systems Inc. is a San Jose, California-based global technology conglomerate — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: CSCO) as a Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 component — generating approximately $57 billion in annual revenue and employing 86,000+ employees across 150+ countries, operating as the world's leading enterprise networking equipment manufacturer and an expanding cybersecurity and observability platform following the $28 billion acquisition of Splunk (completed March 2024, Cisco's largest-ever acquisition). Cisco's product portfolio spans networking (Catalyst switches, ASR routers, Meraki cloud-managed networking), security (Duo MFA, Cisco Firepower, Umbrella DNS security, SecureX XDR), collaboration (Webex conferencing, Webex Calling), data center (Nexus switches, UCS servers, HyperFlex HCI), and observability (Splunk SIEM/SOAR, AppDynamics APM, ThousandEyes network intelligence). CEO Chuck Robbins has led the company since 2015. Founded 1984 by Stanford computer scientists Leonard Bosack and Sandy Lerner.
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