Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Serverless GPU cloud platform for AI/ML workload deployment; $1M ARR with 5-person team competing with Modal Labs and Replicate for developer-friendly AI inference infrastructure.
Beam is an AI-native cloud platform providing serverless infrastructure for deploying and scaling AI and machine learning workloads — enabling ML engineers and developers to run GPU-accelerated inference, fine-tuning, and batch processing jobs without managing underlying cloud infrastructure, with automated scaling from zero to peak load and back. Founded in 2021 in New York City by Luke Lombardi and Eli Mernit, Beam raised $4 million from investors including Tiger Global Management and Uncorrelated Ventures, reaching $1 million in revenue by December 2024 with a 5-person team.\n\nBeam's platform abstracts the infrastructure complexity of running AI workloads on GPU clusters — developers define their compute requirements (GPU type, memory, runtime), write Python functions, and deploy them as serverless endpoints without configuring Kubernetes clusters, managing GPU drivers, or handling auto-scaling manually. The platform handles cold-start optimization for AI models, persistent storage for model weights, and cost management through intelligent scaling. This serverless GPU model is particularly valuable for AI applications with variable traffic patterns where paying for always-on GPU capacity wastes money.\n\nIn 2025, Beam competes in the AI infrastructure market with Modal Labs, Replicate, Banana (ML inference), and cloud providers' own managed ML services (AWS SageMaker, Google Vertex AI, Azure ML) for serverless AI compute. The market for specialized AI inference infrastructure has grown rapidly as the number of teams deploying AI models to production has expanded dramatically. Beam's lean team and capital efficiency ($1M ARR with 5 people and $4M raised) position it as a high-efficiency operator in this space. The 2025 strategy focuses on expanding GPU availability across regions, adding more pre-optimized inference runtimes for popular model architectures (Llama, Stable Diffusion, Whisper), and growing developer adoption through improved tooling and documentation.
Global payments infrastructure founded by Patrick and John Collison (YC W10); $1.4T payments volume in 2024; $18B+ revenue; $106.7B valuation as of Sept 2025; powers everything from startups to Fortune 500 companies with developer-first API design.
Stripe is a global payments infrastructure company founded in 2010 by Irish brothers Patrick and John Collison, headquartered in San Francisco, California and Dublin, Ireland. Stripe was born from the insight that accepting payments online was unnecessarily complex for developers, and that a well-designed API could unlock an entire generation of internet businesses. The company went through Y Combinator's Winter 2010 batch and grew to become the defining payments infrastructure layer of the modern internet economy, processing payments for businesses in virtually every industry worldwide.\n\nStripe's platform provides payment processing, fraud prevention via Stripe Radar, subscription billing, revenue recognition, banking-as-a-service through Stripe Treasury, corporate card issuance, identity verification, and tax compliance tools. It serves a spectrum from early-stage startups to publicly traded enterprises including Amazon, Google, Salesforce, and Shopify. Stripe's developer-first philosophy — comprehensive documentation, SDKs in every major language, and a sandbox testing environment — created an ecosystem of millions of businesses built entirely on its infrastructure.\n\nStripe processed $1.4 trillion in total payment volume in 2024 and generates over $18 billion in annual revenue, with a valuation of $106.7 billion as of September 2025. The company has remained private longer than most comparably sized technology companies, giving it flexibility to invest in long-term product expansion. An April 2024 partnership with Apple Pay extended Stripe's reach further into mobile and in-store commerce. Stripe competes with Adyen, Braintree (PayPal), and Square, but its developer ecosystem depth and global infrastructure make it the default payments platform for a generation of technology companies.
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