Two distinct audience neighborhoods pull on Adidas — one anchored in outdoor and athletic apparel, the other in general and premium fashion — and the gap between them defines the brand's structural position.
The shape is two-peak. The North Face sits at the top of the neighbor set (0.76), the only other Outdoor and Athletic Apparel brand in the top 10, and it represents one pole: audiences shaped by performance and active-lifestyle gear. The second peak forms around general apparel and accessories: Ralph Lauren (0.74), Michael Kors (0.72), Coach (0.72), and Lacoste (0.69) cluster together as a premium-to-aspirational fashion group. Between those two poles sits Janie and Jack (0.72), a children's apparel brand — the only one in the top 10 — whose presence suggests a family-oriented segment threading through both clusters. The category-level composition of the top 10 is almost entirely Apparel, with Outdoor & Athletic Apparel (0.70) as a segment-level aggregate reinforcing the first peak and Lucky Brand (0.69) and Kate Spade (0.69) extending the fashion cluster toward casual and women's lines.
What the two-peak shape reveals is an audience that doesn't resolve cleanly into either athletic or fashion — it bridges both, which is a structurally distinct position from brands whose neighbors cluster tightly in one subcategory.