Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Home goods brand resurrected as online-only retailer after 2023 bankruptcy; acquired by Overstock.com which rebranded as Bed Bath & Beyond to leverage the brand's high consumer recognition.
Bed Bath & Beyond was one of the largest US home goods retail chains — operating 900+ stores offering bedding, bath linens, kitchen appliances, home décor, and organizational products, known for its ubiquitous 20%-off coupons and big-box store format. Founded in 1971 in Springfield, New Jersey by Warren Eisenberg and Leonard Feinstein, Bed Bath & Beyond filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April 2023 and liquidated its physical stores — a collapse attributed to years of missed e-commerce investment, over-leveraged share buybacks, and competition from Amazon, Target, and Walmart.\n\nAfter Bed Bath & Beyond's physical store bankruptcy and liquidation, the brand and intellectual property were acquired by Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK), which relaunched Bed Bath & Beyond as an online-only retailer. Overstock.com rebranded itself as Bed Bath & Beyond in August 2023, leveraging the acquired brand's high consumer recognition and search volume while operating as a pure e-commerce business without the fixed cost burden of physical retail. The repositioning represents a common pattern of e-commerce players acquiring brand equity from failed physical retailers.\n\nIn 2025, the rebranded Bed Bath & Beyond (online) competes with Wayfair, Williams-Sonoma.com, Target, and Amazon Home for online home goods e-commerce market share. The brand carries significant consumer recognition — despite the bankruptcy, millions of American consumers are familiar with Bed Bath & Beyond as a home goods destination, making it a valuable acquisition for an e-commerce operator at a fraction of building brand recognition from scratch. The 2025 strategy under Overstock's ownership focuses on leveraging the brand's SEO value and recognition to drive online traffic, building an assortment of home goods that matches consumer expectations, and competing on price and selection rather than the physical retail experience the brand was known for.
Q3 2025 $1.63B revenue (+25.1% YoY); 156K locations powered globally; $2.0B+ ARR (+30% YoY); $159.1B GPV FY2024 (+26% YoY); 97.36% customers from US; restaurant POS leader
Toast was founded in 2011 in Boston with the mission of building an all-in-one technology platform purpose-built for the restaurant industry. Unlike generic point-of-sale vendors that adapted retail software for food service, Toast designed its hardware, software, and payments stack from the ground up around restaurant workflows — table management, kitchen display systems, online ordering, payroll, and inventory unified in a single cloud platform.\n\nToast's product suite covers the full restaurant operating stack: POS terminals and handheld order devices, kitchen display screens, Toast Go handhelds for tableside payments, online ordering and delivery integrations, catering management, payroll and scheduling, and xtraCHEF for back-of-house food cost analytics. The platform serves independent restaurants, multi-location chains, quick-service concepts, and enterprise groups. Its open API allows integrations with hundreds of third-party tools, and the Toast for Enterprise tier serves national brands with centralized menu and reporting management.\n\nAs of Q3 2025, Toast reported $1.63 billion in quarterly revenue, up 25.1% year-over-year, with annualized recurring revenue exceeding $2 billion and gross payment volume of $159.1 billion for fiscal 2024. The company serves more than 156,000 restaurant locations globally and trades on the NYSE under the ticker TOST. Toast's vertical focus and deep restaurant-specific functionality give it a durable competitive moat against horizontal POS vendors.
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