Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
FY2024 Sales: $88.8B (+4.3%) | Net Profit: $14.1B (+5.6%) | EPS: $5.79 | Adjusted EPS: $9.98 | FY2025 Guidance: Operational Sales Growth 2.5-3.5%, Adj EPS $10.75-$10.95 (+8.7% midpoint)
Johnson & Johnson is one of the world's largest healthcare companies, founded in 1886 by brothers Robert Wood Johnson I, James Wood Johnson, and Edward Mead Johnson in New Brunswick, New Jersey, where the company remains headquartered. Established to manufacture ready-to-use surgical dressings at a time when post-operative infection was a leading cause of surgical mortality, J&J was built on the scientific principles of antiseptic surgery advocated by Joseph Lister. The company trades on the NYSE under ticker JNJ and has evolved over 135+ years from a consumer health products manufacturer into a focused MedTech and pharmaceutical enterprise, completing the spinoff of its consumer health segment (Kenvue) in 2023.\n\nJohnson & Johnson now operates through two segments: Innovative Medicine and MedTech. Innovative Medicine encompasses oncology, immunology, neuroscience, infectious disease, and cardiovascular pharmaceutical products — including blockbusters Darzalex, Stelara, Tremfya, and Rybrevant. The MedTech segment includes surgical robotics (Ottava platform in development), electrophysiology (Abiomed, Biosense Webster), orthopedics (DePuy Synthes), and surgery systems, serving hospitals and surgical centers worldwide. Following the Kenvue separation, J&J is a pure-play healthcare technology and pharmaceutical company with significantly higher growth and margin profiles than its historical blended consumer-pharma-medtech structure.\n\nJohnson & Johnson reported FY2024 sales of $88.8 billion, up 4.3% year over year, with net profit of $14.1 billion, up 5.6%. The company's Innovative Medicine segment continues to grow driven by oncology and immunology portfolio strength, while MedTech benefits from procedure volume recovery and robotic surgery adoption. J&J's scale, R&D pipeline depth, and global commercial infrastructure — spanning more than 60 countries — position it as one of the two or three most consequential healthcare enterprises globally, with a patent portfolio, clinical trial network, and regulatory expertise that are nearly impossible to replicate.
American luxury goods conglomerate (NYSE: TPR) with ~$6.7B revenue in FY2024; owns Coach ($4.5B revenue, 30%+ operating margins), Kate Spade, and Stuart Weitzman targeting accessible luxury consumers in North America and Asia.
Tapestry, Inc. is an American house of modern luxury brands, owning Coach, Kate Spade New York, and Stuart Weitzman. Founded as Coach in 1941 and rebranded as Tapestry in 2017 to signal its transformation into a multi-brand luxury platform, the company targets the "accessible luxury" segment — premium leather goods, handbags, footwear, and accessories priced aspirationally but within reach of upper-middle consumers in North America and Asia.
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