Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Marketing automation and CRM platform with $3B valuation; sophisticated email automation workflows for 180K SMB customers competing with Klaviyo and HubSpot for mid-market automation.
ActiveCampaign is a customer experience automation platform providing email marketing, marketing automation, CRM, and messaging for small and mid-sized businesses — combining sophisticated automation workflows with CRM to help businesses automate personalized customer journeys across email, SMS, and site messaging. Founded in 2003 by Jason VandeBoom in Chicago, Illinois, ActiveCampaign has raised approximately $360 million at a $3 billion valuation and serves over 180,000 customers in 170+ countries, primarily small businesses, creators, and growth-stage companies that need more sophisticated automation than basic email platforms but not the full complexity of enterprise marketing clouds.\n\nActiveCampaign's automation builder enables complex, multi-step customer journey automation: automatically sending a welcome sequence to new subscribers, tagging contacts based on email engagement behavior, triggering sales follow-ups when prospects visit pricing pages, and sending personalized recommendations based on purchase history. The built-in CRM enables sales teams to manage pipeline stages and trigger automated tasks and emails based on deal progress. SMS marketing, site messaging, and landing pages extend the platform beyond email.\n\nIn 2025, ActiveCampaign competes with Mailchimp (lower sophistication, simpler), Klaviyo (e-commerce focus), HubSpot (broader but more expensive), and Keap for marketing automation market share. The company's positioning in the "SMB + automation" tier differentiates it from both basic email tools and expensive enterprise marketing clouds. ActiveCampaign's Predictive Sending (AI that determines the best time to send emails to each contact) and predictive content personalization are key AI-differentiated features. The 2025 strategy focuses on deepening AI personalization across its automation workflows, growing e-commerce integrations (Shopify, WooCommerce), and expanding its customer experience platform into customer service workflows.
In talks to raise $2B at $50B valuation in Apr 2026 (Thrive, a16z, Nvidia). $2B+ ARR; revenue projected >$6B by EOY 2026. Used by 50%+ of Fortune 500.
Cursor is an AI-first code editor founded in 2022 by a small team of MIT researchers, built as a fork of Visual Studio Code with native large-language-model intelligence woven directly into the editing experience. Its mission is to make software engineers dramatically more productive by embedding AI reasoning into every layer of the IDE — from autocomplete to multi-file edits to natural-language code generation — rather than bolting AI on as an afterthought.\n\nThe platform centers on a VSCode-compatible editor that developers can adopt with zero workflow disruption, layering in features like Tab (predictive multi-line completion), Chat (context-aware in-editor assistant), and Composer (autonomous multi-file refactoring agent). Cursor reads and indexes entire codebases, allowing it to propose changes that span dozens of files coherently. It supports all major languages, integrates with existing extensions, and lets teams configure which underlying model — GPT-4o, Claude, or others — powers suggestions. Fortune 500 engineering teams adopt it alongside individual developers, and it is used by more than half of Fortune 500 companies.\n\nCursor reached $2 billion in annualized recurring revenue by early 2026 and raised at a $29.3 billion valuation, cementing its position as the dominant commercial AI coding tool. The company raised $2.3 billion in total funding and is widely regarded as the category-defining product in agentic IDE software, outpacing GitHub Copilot on developer mindshare metrics in multiple surveys.
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