Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Traceable DTC vitamin brand with $250M+ gross revenue in 2024; launched at Walmart in 2025; advocates for supplement industry regulation; discloses every ingredient supplier in minimalist formulas across multivitamins, prenatal, and protein products.
Ritual is a Los Angeles-based women's health supplement company founded in 2015 by Katerina Markov Schneider. The company is known for its minimalist, transparent multivitamin formulas that disclose every ingredient supplier and reason for inclusion. Ritual has raised approximately $68 million in total, with a Series B led by Norwest Venture Partners.\n\nRitual reported more than $250 million in gross revenue in 2024, fueled by its flagship Essential for Women multivitamins and an expanding product line covering prenatal vitamins, protein powders, and children's supplements. In 2025, Ritual launched a line of multivitamin formulas at Walmart, marking a major pivot toward mass retail alongside its longstanding DTC subscription model.\n\nFounder Katerina Schneider has become a vocal advocate for supplement industry reform, testifying before Congress in early 2025 to push for stronger FDA oversight of nutritional supplements. This advocacy reinforces the brand's transparency positioning and distinguishes Ritual in a category where quality control is often opaque. The brand appeals to millennial and Gen Z consumers who prioritize ingredient traceability and science-backed formulation.
Parent Unilever 2024: Turnover €60.8B (+1.9%) | Personal Care: €13.6B (+5.2% organic sales growth) | Dove: ~40% of Personal Care, high-single digit growth | Key launches: whole-body deodorant, serum shower collection | Op Profit +12.6% to €11.
Dove is a personal care brand created by Unilever in 1957, originally launched with its breakthrough Beauty Bar — a soap formulated with one-quarter moisturizing cream that was gentler on skin than conventional soap. Headquartered within Unilever's global personal care division, Dove's core product philosophy has always centered on real skin science: formulations that cleanse without stripping natural moisture, backed by clinical testing and dermatologist validation. This functional differentiation, combined with decades of brand investment, has made Dove one of Unilever's largest and most recognized consumer brands globally.\n\nDove's product portfolio spans bar soaps, body washes, antiperspirants, deodorants, lotions, hair care, and facial skincare, sold across more than 150 countries. The brand launched its "Real Beauty" campaign in 2004 — one of the most studied marketing campaigns in advertising history — which positioned Dove as an advocate for authentic self-image rather than idealized beauty standards. This purpose-driven positioning created emotional brand equity that differentiated Dove in a crowded personal care market and set a template for purpose-led consumer brands. Dove contributes approximately 40% of Unilever's Personal Care division revenue.\n\nDove delivered high-single-digit revenue growth within Unilever's portfolio, contributing to the parent company's overall performance against a backdrop of consumer value-seeking and private label competition. Unilever's scale in manufacturing, procurement, and global retail distribution provides Dove with structural advantages in reaching consumers across both developed and emerging markets. As personal care consumers increasingly prioritize efficacy, skin health, and brand values alongside price, Dove's combination of science-backed formulations and authentic brand identity keeps it at the top of a highly competitive category.
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