How Ray-Ban maker EssilorLuxottica’s all-pervasive €112 billion empire has disrupted and dominated how we see the world

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Europe is home to some of the world’s most iconic companies. Many started small to quell a single person’s curiosity before exploding into a global phenomenon. As a new resident, big, successful European brands have piqued my interest. What’s their story? How did they transform into the giants they are today? How have they sustained their legacy over time? Those are some of the questions I explore in this new series.


EssilorLuxottica is a colossus shaping the vision of billions around the world. Yet its veritable presence hides in plain sight, underscoring that there’s so much more to it than meets the eye.

Its labels are everywhere—from Ray-Ban Aviators and Oakley’s sporty sunglasses to progressive lenses that improve vision at different distances.

But it’s tricky to pigeonhole EssilorLuxottica into being a master of just one or a few things. It makes functional eyeglasses for daily wear, backs scientists addressing the biggest challenges hampering vision, and sells high-end branded eyewear—all at once.

The Franco-Italian company has built up its business—and, therefore, clout—to touch every part of eyewear, of which it controls 25% of the market, according to Euromonitor International. The company didn’t hit this scale of influence by accident, but built it over more than a century with an elaborate tapestry of deals.

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EssilorLuxottica’s methods have proved immensely successful: It reported €26.5 billion in revenue last year and has a market capitalization of €112 billion ($128 billion). It’s also a member of the CAC 40, the stock index that tracks the largest Paris-listed companies, including LVMH and Michelin. The company’s roots go back to 1849, when Essilor was founded as a cooperative association for eyewear craftsmen in Paris. Essilor became associated with scientific know-how, pioneering breakthroughs like the Varilux lenses designed for presbyopia, a condition affecting the vision of objects up close, affecting nearly 80% of those over the age of 55.

Luxottica, meanwhile, was founded in 1961 by Leonardo Del Vecchio, the brains behind the company’s ascent.

He set up a humble workshop in Agordo, Italy, to make components for the optical industry. But Del Vecchio’s ambitions soon outstripped the confines of Italy or Europe. He tapped every opportunity to expand into the eyewear industry’s value chain, which could grow Luxottica into an international giant.

Luxottica was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1990 (and in Milan in 2000), a rare step at the time for a niche Italian company. Luxottica’s ambition was such that when it was eyeing retail chain LensCrafters for purchase, its Ohio-based owner, U.S. Shoe, was five times as large as the Italian company. Still, Luxottica bought U.S. Shoe in 1995, only to sell off all but the one component of its business that would grow Luxottica’s retail presence in America, thus making it the first manufacturer to enter the optical retail realm.