Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
World's largest probe card maker; ~$850M revenue. MEMS-based and cantilever probe cards are essential for wafer-level electrical test before dicing for advanced SoCs and memory.
FormFactor was founded in 1993 in Livermore, California and has grown into the world's largest manufacturer of probe cards—precision electromechanical assemblies that contact wafer-level die during semiconductor manufacturing to perform electrical parametric and functional tests before the wafer is diced. Probe cards are a consumable in semiconductor production: each card handles millions of probe contacts before being replaced, creating a recurring revenue model.\n\nFormFactor serves foundries (TSMC, Samsung), IDMs (Intel, Samsung, Micron), and memory manufacturers (Hynix, NAND makers) with MEMS-based probe cards for leading-edge SoC and logic testing, high-density cantilever cards for memory testing, and vertical probe cards for high-power devices. As chips shrink to 3nm and 2nm nodes with tighter pad pitches and as 3D chiplet architectures multiply the number of electrical connections to test, probe card complexity and average selling prices are increasing.\n\nFormFactor reported approximately $850 million in annual revenue and benefits from the same AI chip investment cycle as Teradyne: AI GPU wafers (NVIDIA H100/H200/B200) require advanced probe cards for wafer sort. The company also provides systems for failure analysis and materials characterization through its Systems division. FormFactor's strong market position in advanced logic probe cards makes it a direct proxy for leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing volume.
KLA Corp (KLAC) reported $9.9B revenue in FY2024. World's #1 semiconductor inspection and metrology equipment maker. ~16,000 employees. HQ: Milpitas, CA. Market cap ~$80B.
KLA Corporation is the world's leading provider of process control and semiconductor inspection and metrology equipment, headquartered in Milpitas, California. Founded in 1975 as KLA Instruments and merged with Tencor in 1997, KLA develops the equipment that semiconductor manufacturers use to detect defects and measure dimensions at atomic scales during chip fabrication. Without KLA's inspection tools, chipmakers cannot achieve nanometer-scale precision for advanced semiconductors. KLA reported revenues of $9.9B in fiscal year 2024 (ending June 2024).
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