Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Candex raised $60M+ (QED, Edison) for enterprise tail spend management, enabling procurement to pay unmanaged vendors without PO or vendor onboarding — covering 20–30% of spend off-contract.
Candex is a tail spend and spot buy management platform that enables enterprise procurement and finance teams to handle unmanaged vendor payments quickly and compliantly without the friction of full purchase order and vendor onboarding processes. Founded in 2016 and headquartered in New York City, Candex has raised more than $60 million from investors including QED Investors and Edison Partners. The company addresses the tail spend problem — the large volume of low-value, non-recurring purchases from vendors who are not in a company's approved vendor master — that represents 20 to 30 percent of enterprise procurement spend but is often managed through costly workarounds like personal credit cards, petty cash, or manual invoice exceptions.\n\nCandex works as a managed marketplace intermediary: when an enterprise employee needs to pay a new vendor for a one-off service, they submit the request through Candex, which handles vendor onboarding, compliance checks, payment processing, and invoicing — providing the enterprise with a single consolidated invoice rather than requiring each vendor to be set up individually in the ERP. The enterprise pays Candex, and Candex pays the vendor. This approach eliminates the procurement overhead for small, infrequent purchases while maintaining financial controls and audit trail.\n\nCandex serves large enterprises in technology, financial services, pharmaceutical, and professional services that have significant tail spend volumes and want to give employees a faster way to engage low-risk vendors without bypassing procurement controls entirely. The company competes with Coupa's spot buy capabilities, SAP Ariba Spot Buy, and newer platforms like Zip in the tail spend management space, differentiating through its managed payment intermediary model and rapid vendor onboarding capabilities.
CrowdStrike (CRWD) reported $3.95B ARR in FY2025 (ended Jan). Revenue $3.74B, up 29% YoY. Market cap ~$85B. 8,600+ employees. Austin, TX. AI-native cybersecurity platform. Charlotte AI for threat detection.
CrowdStrike is an AI-native cybersecurity company founded in 2011 by George Kurtz, Dmitri Alperovitch, and Gregg Marston and headquartered in Austin, Texas, that built the endpoint detection and response (EDR) category and has since expanded into the broadest cloud-native cybersecurity platform in the industry. The company was founded on the insight that traditional antivirus software — signature-based, retrospective, and endpoint-isolated — could not keep pace with sophisticated adversaries operating at machine speed. CrowdStrike's founding architecture, the Falcon platform, was designed cloud-native from day one: a single lightweight agent on the endpoint feeding a cloud-based AI that learns from trillions of security events across every customer simultaneously. The company trades on Nasdaq under the ticker CRWD.\n\nThe CrowdStrike Falcon platform consolidates more than 28 security modules across endpoint security, identity threat protection, cloud security, next-gen SIEM and log management, threat intelligence, and managed detection and response — all delivered through a single agent and unified console. The AI at the platform's core, Charlotte AI, provides conversational security operations, automated investigation, and AI-generated threat summaries that reduce analyst workload. CrowdStrike's threat intelligence team, Adversary Intelligence, tracks and names nation-state and criminal threat actors globally, giving customers predictive insight into campaigns before they hit their environments.\n\nCrowdStrike reported $3.95 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR) for FY2025 and total revenue of $3.74 billion, up 29% year over year, with a market capitalization of approximately $85 billion. The company has 8,600+ employees and counts a substantial share of the Fortune 500 and global governments as customers. Despite the July 2024 sensor update incident that caused a significant IT outage affecting millions of Windows systems globally, CrowdStrike's customer retention remained strong — a testament to the platform's depth of integration and the switching costs built into its consolidated architecture.
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