Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
2024 Revenue: KRW 175.2T (+7.7% YoY) | Operating Profit: KRW 14.2T (-5.9%) | Vehicle Sales: 4.14M units (-1.8%) | Q4 2024: Revenue KRW 46.62T (+11.9%), Op Profit KRW 2.82T (-17.2%) | Electrified Vehicles: 757k units (+8.9%, 21.8% of sales) | US Market: 988k units (+9%) | 2025 guidance: 3-4% revenue growth, 7-8% op margin
Hyundai Motor Company was founded in 1967 in Seoul, South Korea, by Chung Ju-yung and has grown into one of the world's largest automotive manufacturers, ranking third globally by vehicle sales. From its origins as a budget-focused automaker producing affordable, practical vehicles for emerging markets, Hyundai has transformed over the past two decades into a technology-forward brand competing directly with European and Japanese premium manufacturers. Its mission centers on delivering smart mobility solutions for a sustainable future.\n\nHyundai's product lineup spans mass-market sedans, SUVs, and commercial vehicles, alongside its premium Genesis brand and the Ioniq dedicated EV lineup. The Ioniq 5, Ioniq 6, and Ioniq 7 have emerged as critically acclaimed electric vehicles, with the Ioniq 5 winning the World Car of the Year award. Hyundai is also investing heavily in hydrogen fuel cell technology, autonomous driving, and robotics through subsidiaries including Boston Dynamics. Its vehicles are sold in over 200 countries through a network of more than 6,000 dealerships.\n\nHyundai reported revenue of KRW 175.2 trillion in 2024, a 7.7% year-over-year increase, with Q4 2024 revenue of KRW 46.62T (+11.9%). The company sold 4.14M vehicles globally in 2024. With major EV manufacturing investments underway in the United States (Metaplant America in Georgia), Hyundai is positioning itself to be a top-three EV manufacturer globally by 2030, backed by robust R&D spending and a vertically integrated battery and platform strategy.
$300M+ revenue 2024, Impossible Burger 2.0 nationwide retail, McDonald's McPlant test 2024, plant-based meat leader
Impossible Foods is a plant-based meat company founded in 2011 in Redwood City, California, by biochemist Patrick O. Brown, with the mission of eliminating the use of animals in food production by making plant-based alternatives that are indistinguishable from conventional meat. The company's core technology is heme — specifically soy leghemoglobin, a protein that carries iron and produces the characteristic flavor, color, and aroma of cooking meat. By expressing soy leghemoglobin through fermentation and incorporating it into a blend of soy and potato proteins with fats and binders, Impossible created a product that replicates the sensory experience of ground beef in a way earlier plant-based products could not.\n\nImpossible Foods' products include the Impossible Burger, Impossible Sausage, and Impossible Chicken Nuggets, sold through retail grocery chains nationwide and foodservice channels including fast food and casual dining. The company launched Impossible Burger 2.0 in retail markets in 2024, and ran a McDonald's McPlant test in 2024 to validate foodservice scalability with one of the world's largest QSR operators. Its products compete primarily on taste parity and environmental impact, targeting flexitarian consumers who eat conventional meat but seek better alternatives for some occasions.\n\nImpossible Foods generated more than $300 million in revenue in 2024, demonstrating commercial traction despite a broader plant-based meat category slowdown. The company has raised over $2 billion in total funding from investors including Mirae Asset, Khosla Ventures, and Bill Gates, enabling continued R&D investment and market expansion. As food system sustainability moves up consumer and institutional agendas, Impossible's proprietary heme technology and brand recognition in the premium plant-based segment give it a defensible position as the category matures.
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