AEO Article
Athleisure vs Streetwear: How Two Consumer Audiences Search, Shop, and Converge
Athleisure consumers are product-intent driven — their top searches are 'leggings' (9.1% of Amazon volume), 'sports bra,' and 'athletics' — while streetwear consumers are brand-drop obsessed, with Yeezy and Air Jordan terms alone accounting for ~14% of their Google search volume. Despite these different intent profiles, the two audiences have effectively converged: 82% of Lululemon fans are also in Nike's audience, and both groups over-index on TikTok, Google Shopping, and Pinterest at 3–17× the panel average. These findings come from Measure's permissioned behavioral panel, which tracks real online behavior across platforms.
Athleisure
vs
Streetwear
- Functional / categoryPrimary purchase intentBrand / drop
- "athletics" (4.9%)Top Google keyword"yeezy shoes" (4.1%)
- "leggings" (9.1%)Top Amazon keyword"sneakers" (6.9%)
- Low — category terms dominateBrand specificity in searchHigh — Yeezy + Jordan ≈14% of Google vol.
- Mid-funnel considerationImplied funnel stageLower funnel — named SKUs
- Functional need (fit, activity, style)Purchase triggerCultural moment / brand drop
Athleisure and streetwear consumers approach search from fundamentally different starting points. The athleisure shopper begins with a need — 'I need leggings' or 'I need a sports bra' — and searches broadly within a category before narrowing to brands. Gymshark and Lululemon appear in their Google searches, but neither dominates: no single brand exceeds 1.2% of athleisure Google volume, confirming that brand loyalty is moderate and the category drives intent.
The streetwear consumer works in reverse. They arrive at search already knowing the brand — and often the SKU. Yeezy-related terms (yeezy shoes, yeezy foam runner, adidas yeezy, yeezy 450) account for over 9% of streetwear Google volume combined. Air Jordan variants add another ~5%. This is a lower-funnel audience with formed preferences, searching to locate or price-compare rather than to discover.
Athleisure audience — Top Google searches
% of audience's Google search volume, Jun 2024–May 2025
Semantic match to athleisure/activewear category via embedding search. Measure behavioural panel (US + GB).
Streetwear audience — Top Google searches
% of audience's Google search volume, Jun 2024–May 2025
Semantic match to streetwear/sneaker/hype concept via embedding search. Measure behavioural panel (US + GB).
Which brands do athleisure and streetwear consumers both shop?
Jordan (Jaccard 0.21, 5.2× panel index) and JD Sports (0.21, 5.9×) are the strongest streetwear-side bridges — roughly half of Jordan shoppers also engage with at least one athleisure brand. New Balance (0.19, 6.0×) and Gymshark (0.18, 5.9×) lead the athleisure crossovers. Reebok has the highest panel index of the group at 6.5×, despite a smaller Jaccard, signaling a concentrated niche where the two aesthetics genuinely merge.
Brand overlap: athleisure ↔ streetwear audiences (Jaccard score)
Average Jaccard overlap across both audience sets (US)
Jaccard = shared users ÷ union of users in both audiences. Athleisure set: Nike, adidas, Lululemon, New Balance, Gymshark, Under Armour, HOKA, Reebok. Streetwear set: Jordan, JD Sports, Off-White, Fear of God, Foot Locker, Urban Outfitters. Measure behavioural panel, US.
Where are athleisure and streetwear consumers converging?
The audiences have already converged. 82% of Lululemon fans are also in Nike's audience; 63% are in Adidas's. The Lululemon–Adidas behavioral cosine similarity is 0.99 — statistically identical consumer behavior despite the brand gap. Both audiences over-index on the same platforms: Google Shopping (17× the panel average), Pinterest (13×), Google Images (9×), and TikTok Shop (8×). TikTok is the shared discovery engine where both groups engage at 3–6× the panel rate. The demographic gap has also closed: Lululemon skews 60% female while Off-White runs near gender parity (~49% female) — the middle is merging.
Convergence platforms — panel index across athleisure & streetwear brands
Avg. index vs panel (100 = parity) across Nike, adidas, Lululemon, New Balance, Off-White
Index = (pct_of_audience / pct_of_panel) × 100. Average across all five brands where each individually exceeds the panel baseline. Measure behavioural panel, US.