Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
P&G-owned iconic men's deodorant and body wash brand rejuvenated with viral "Man Your Man Could Smell Like" marketing; mass market positioning competing with Dove Men+Care and AXE.
Old Spice is one of the most iconic American men's grooming brands, producing deodorants, antiperspirants, body washes, shampoos, and styling products known for their bold, distinctive fragrances and irreverent marketing campaigns. Old Spice is owned by Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), which acquired the brand in 1990, and subsequently transformed it from a declining heritage brand associated with older men into one of the most culturally relevant men's grooming brands through a landmark 2010 advertising campaign featuring actor Isaiah Mustafa ("The Man Your Man Could Smell Like").\n\nOld Spice's product portfolio spans deodorant and antiperspirant sticks and sprays (the core revenue driver), body wash (a growing category where Old Spice competes with Dove Men+Care), 2-in-1 shampoos and conditioners, and styling products. The brand's fragrance strategy uses masculine-coded scent profiles (cedar, bergamot, leather notes) with distinctive names like Swagger, Fiji, Wolfthorn, and Bearglove. The packaging redesign and irreverent advertising under P&G repositioned Old Spice for millennial and Gen Z male consumers who appreciated the brand's willingness to be funny and self-aware.\n\nIn 2025, Old Spice competes with Dove Men+Care (Unilever), Degree, AXE (Unilever), and Gillette's grooming line for men's deodorant and body care market share. The men's grooming market has seen premiumization as male skincare routines have expanded, but Old Spice maintains its core mass market positioning at affordable price points with broad distribution. The brand's ability to appeal to younger demographics through humor and cultural relevance while maintaining household recognition differentiates it from newer entrants. P&G's 2025 strategy for Old Spice focuses on digital and social media marketing, new fragrance launches, and expanding the body wash category where margins are higher than deodorant.
Beaverton global athletic footwear and apparel (NYSE: NKE) at $51.4B FY2024 revenue with 18% market share; CEO Elliott Hill returned Sept 2024 with Win Now strategy to restore wholesale channels and running category competing with On Running and adidas.
Nike, Inc. is a Beaverton, Oregon-based global athletic footwear, apparel, and equipment company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: NKE) as a Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 component — generating $51.4 billion in fiscal year 2024 (ended May 31, 2024) revenue with approximately 83,700 employees worldwide and approximately 18% global athletic footwear market share. Nike brands include Nike (performance footwear, apparel, and equipment), Jordan Brand (lifestyle basketball and athletic), and Converse (lifestyle footwear). In September 2024, Elliott Hill returned to Nike as President and CEO (replacing John Donahoe who had led the company since 2020), launching a "Win Now" strategy focused on sport performance product investment, wholesale partner relationship restoration, and competitive positioning in running and basketball categories. Nike Direct (direct-to-consumer e-commerce and owned stores) generated 44% of FY2024 revenue. Nike was founded in 1964 as Blue Ribbon Sports by Phil Knight and Bill Bowerman; renamed Nike in 1978 with IPO in 1980.
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