Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
$3.5M annual revenue 2025; $86.1M total funding (Series C Oct 2023); deployed in 60+ countries; acquired Regen adding 130K acres; 134 employees; precision agriculture market $8.7B 2024; subscription-based model
CropX was founded in 2014 in Tel Aviv, Israel, with the mission of helping farmers improve crop yields and reduce resource consumption through precision agriculture technology. The company developed soil sensing hardware and analytics software that translate subsurface soil data into actionable irrigation and nutrient management recommendations, enabling farms of any size to optimize inputs based on actual field conditions rather than generalized agronomic guidelines.\n\nCropX's platform combines wireless soil sensors that measure moisture, temperature, and electrical conductivity at multiple depths with a cloud-based analytics engine that integrates weather data, satellite imagery, and farm management records. Recommendations are delivered via a mobile app, enabling farm managers to make data-driven irrigation decisions in real time. The 2023 acquisition of Regen added 130,000 acres of managed farmland to its platform and expanded its capabilities in carbon and regenerative agriculture. CropX is deployed in 60+ countries across a diverse range of crops and farm types.\n\nCropX has raised $86.1M in total funding, including a Series C in October 2023, and has grown to serve 20,000+ customers with a team of 134 employees. The company's international deployment footprint — spanning North America, Europe, Australia, and emerging agricultural markets — reflects the universal applicability of data-driven soil management. CropX sits at the intersection of precision agriculture, water conservation, and sustainable farming, three of the highest-priority investment themes in global food systems.
Consumer goods company with $6B revenue; Arm & Hammer, OxiClean, Trojan, and Waterpik portfolio targeting mid-tier value-oriented consumers competing with P&G and Colgate-Palmolive.
Church & Dwight is a consumer packaged goods company producing personal care, household, and specialty products across well-known brands including Arm & Hammer (baking soda-based cleaning and dental products), OxiClean (laundry stain remover), Trojan condoms, Vitafusion gummies vitamins, Waterpik water flosser, Batiste dry shampoo, and Zicam cold remedies. Listed on NYSE (NYSE: CHD) and headquartered in Ewing, New Jersey, Church & Dwight generates approximately $6 billion in annual revenue and has demonstrated consistent organic growth through its "power brand" portfolio management strategy.\n\nChurch & Dwight's brand portfolio spans multiple consumer need categories: Arm & Hammer (baking soda as a platform for toothpaste, cat litter, laundry detergent, and odor eliminator), personal care (Waterpik, Batiste dry shampoo, XTRA laundry), vitamins (Vitafusion and L'il Critters gummy vitamins), sexual health (Trojan, Natalist fertility), and household products (OxiClean, Kaboom). The Arm & Hammer baking soda brand's versatility across multiple product categories creates unique brand leverage.\n\nIn 2025, Church & Dwight has been one of the more consistent performers in consumer staples — the company targets value-oriented consumers in mid-tier price positions (above private label, below premium brands) across its categories. It competes with Procter & Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive, and Henkel for household and personal care market share. The company's 2025 strategy focuses on expanding its international distribution (historically US-focused, with international growth potential for brands like Batiste and Waterpik), growing Vitafusion in the wellness supplement category, and pursuing selective brand acquisitions in premium personal care niches.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.