Adidas Group reported record revenues for 2025 and forecast continued strong sales and profit growth in the coming years, according to the company's official statement. The brand attributed the performance to a disciplined focus on core product categories and expanding market share in key segments.
The move centers on tightening the product catalog around high-performing categories—running, football, and lifestyle footwear—and reducing SKU sprawl across secondary lines. Adidas consolidated marketing spend behind fewer product franchises, deepened inventory commitment to those lines, and aligned retail partnerships around core assortments. The company did not dilute messaging with experimental launches or chase short-term novelty. It committed capital and creative to a narrower front.
This works because focus converts brand equity into per-SKU velocity. When a physical-product brand spreads budget across dozens of lines, each SKU receives fractional support and shelf presence fragments. Retailers stock what moves. A brand that concentrates spend behind three categories instead of twelve gives each line the weight to command placement, repeat orders, and sustained retailer confidence. Media efficiency improves—each campaign dollar compounds across fewer products. Customer consideration simplifies—fewer choices, clearer reasons to buy. Adidas leveraged scale, but the mechanism scales down: clarity wins shelf space, and shelf space drives revenue.
For a smaller physical-product brand, the steal is deliberate category pruning and concentrated firepower. Audit your catalog and isolate the two or three product types that account for the majority of revenue or repeat orders. Kill or pause the rest for six months. Redirect all paid media, email, and content into those core lines. If you run $2,000 monthly in Meta ads across eight SKUs, collapse that to $2,000 behind two SKUs and watch cost-per-acquisition tighten. Update your homepage hero and product navigation to feature only core categories. Email your retail or wholesale contacts a one-page line sheet showing only the core assortment, with lead times and minimum order quantities clearly marked. Make it easy for a buyer to say yes to a smaller, confident bet. When a retailer sees a brand that knows what it sells, they stock it. When they stock it consistently, it moves. When it moves, they reorder.
The broader pattern is that product proliferation is a tax on velocity. Every additional SKU dilutes attention, fragments inventory capital, and complicates the buy decision. Adidas proved that even at global scale, contraction can drive expansion. For a one-person brand or a small team, the math is even more forgiving. Cutting half your catalog does not cut half your revenue—it often grows it, because the remaining products finally get the support they need to win at retail and direct. The next move is a six-month moratorium on new product development and a single-minded push behind what already converts.