Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Q4 2024 automation revenue up 15-16% YoY; 2025 H1 automation grew 15%; Red Hat contributed 3.5 percentage points of organic software growth; Red Hat annual run rate $6.5B (doubled since IBM acquisition); CAGR mid-teens over 5 years
Ansible is an open-source IT automation framework originally created by Michael DeHaan in 2012 and acquired by Red Hat in 2015, which was itself acquired by IBM in 2019. Ansible was built to solve a fundamental problem in IT operations: configuration management and infrastructure provisioning required specialized scripting knowledge, complex agent installations, and brittle, hard-to-audit procedural scripts. Ansible introduced an agentless, YAML-based declarative approach — Playbooks — that allowed IT teams to describe the desired state of their infrastructure in human-readable files, executable from any control node over SSH without requiring software installed on managed hosts.\n\nAnsible's automation framework handles configuration management, application deployment, cloud provisioning, network automation, and security compliance enforcement. The platform integrates with major cloud providers (AWS, Azure, GCP), virtualization platforms, networking vendors (Cisco, Juniper, Arista), and hundreds of enterprise applications through a library of community and certified Ansible Collections. Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform extends the open-source core with enterprise features including a web-based UI (Automation Controller, formerly Ansible Tower), automation analytics, content management, and enterprise support — the commercial layer IBM monetizes alongside the free open-source offering.\n\nAnsible has over 1 million deployments globally and is the infrastructure-as-code standard across enterprise IT, networking, and cloud operations teams. Red Hat reported automation revenue growth of 15 to 16% year over year in Q4 2024, driven by expanding Ansible Automation Platform adoption as enterprises accelerate infrastructure standardization and cloud migration. Its agentless architecture, vast integration library, and position as a trusted Red Hat/IBM enterprise product give Ansible a durable position in the IT automation market against competitors including Puppet, Chef, and Terraform.
SF composable CDP and reverse ETL at $1.2B valuation syncing data warehouse segments to 200+ tools including Salesforce, Braze, and Facebook Ads; $80M Series C Feb 2025 competing with Segment and Census for data activation infrastructure.
Hightouch is a San Francisco-based data activation and composable CDP (Customer Data Platform) platform — backed with approximately $220 million in total funding including an $80 million Series C in February 2025 at a $1.2 billion valuation (doubled from $615 million in 2023), with investors including Amplify, ICONIQ Growth, Y Combinator, and Bain Capital Ventures — providing data teams, growth marketers, and RevOps professionals with the reverse ETL infrastructure to sync customer data from Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, and Redshift data warehouses to 200+ business tools (Salesforce, Braze, HubSpot, Amplitude, Facebook Ads, Google Ads, Iterable) for marketing personalization, audience targeting, and operational workflow automation. Founded in 2020 by Tejas Manohar and Josh Curl, Hightouch pioneered the 'composable CDP' category — the approach of using the company's existing data warehouse as the customer data foundation rather than copying data into a separate CDP (Segment, mParticle, Lytics).
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