Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
AI-personalized hair and skincare DTC brand achieved $165M revenue in 2024 with 29% growth; expanded into custom skincare in 2025; manufactures all products in Brooklyn with a West Coast expansion adding production capacity and reducing shipping times.
Prose is a New York-based personalized beauty company founded in 2017 that uses a proprietary algorithm to formulate custom shampoos, conditioners, hair masks, and skincare products based on an individual consumer consultation covering hair type, scalp condition, lifestyle, and environmental factors. The company manufactures all products in small batches in its Brooklyn facility.\n\nProse achieved $165 million in annual revenue in 2024, representing 29% year-over-year growth, making it one of the fastest-scaling DTC beauty brands in the US. In 2025, the company expanded aggressively into custom skincare — applying the same personalization engine to cleansers, serums, and moisturizers — and opened a second customization center on the West Coast to reduce shipping times and scale production capacity.\n\nThe brand released its first national TV advertising campaign in 2025, signaling a move toward broader mainstream awareness beyond its core DTC subscriber base. Prose competes with Function of Beauty in the personalized haircare space but differentiates through in-house manufacturing, dermatologist-reviewed formulas, and a premium pricing tier that skews toward skincare-savvy millennials.
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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