Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Angi-owned on-demand home services marketplace for cleaning and handyman; flat-rate booking with background-checked professionals and e-commerce partnerships through Home Depot and Wayfair.
Handy is an on-demand home services marketplace connecting consumers with professional house cleaners, handymen, plumbers, electricians, and other home service providers through a mobile app and website. Founded in 2012 by Oisin Hanrahan and Umang Dua in Boston, Handy raised approximately $111 million before being acquired by ANGI Homeservices (Angi Inc.) in 2018 for approximately $47 million. The acquisition made Handy the booking and marketplace technology layer within Angi's (NASDAQ: ANGI) broader home services marketplace ecosystem.\n\nHandy's platform focuses on recurring home cleaning as its core product — customers book weekly or biweekly cleanings with vetted, background-checked cleaning professionals at flat rates with instant online booking and guaranteed service quality. The handyman service covers furniture assembly, TV mounting, light fixture installation, and other small home tasks. Handy manages the payment, scheduling, and customer service relationship, while professionals receive predictable work streams through the platform.\n\nIn 2025, Handy operates within Angi's (formerly IAC's home services division) portfolio, which also includes HomeAdvisor and Angi (the rebranded marketplace). The home services marketplace category has faced profitability challenges — both Handy and the broader Angi platform struggle with the fundamental economics of marketplace businesses in labor markets where contractors prefer direct customer relationships after initial platform introductions. Handy competes with Thumbtack, TaskRabbit, and local cleaning company apps for on-demand home services. The 2025 strategy focuses on Handy's e-commerce partnerships (selling home services through Home Depot and Wayfair product listings as an add-on to product purchases) as a differentiated acquisition channel.
Exton PA infrastructure engineering software (NASDAQ: BSY) at $1.35B+ 2024 revenue (91% recurring); Seequent $1.05B (2021), Cesium 3D geospatial (2024), first non-Bentley CEO Nicholas Cumins (Jul 2024) competing with Autodesk Civil 3D.
Bentley Systems, Incorporated is an Exton, Pennsylvania-based infrastructure engineering software company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: BSY) — providing software for the design, construction, operation, and lifecycle management of infrastructure assets including roads, bridges, railways, buildings, industrial plants, power generation, and utilities through approximately 5,200 employees serving engineers and infrastructure organizations in 194 countries with annual revenues of $1.35+ billion in 2024 (91% recurring). Founded on September 5, 1984, by brothers Keith and Barry Bentley in suburban Philadelphia — where Keith had developed CAD software during his tenure at E.I. DuPont — the company grew through five Bentley brothers (Keith, Barry, Scott, Greg, and Ray) into the global infrastructure software leader through 120+ acquisitions over four decades, including Intergraph's civil engineering businesses (2001), Seequent for $1.05 billion (2021, geological and subsurface modeling), and Cesium (2024, 3D geospatial and digital twin platform). On July 1, 2024, Nicholas Cumins became CEO — the first person outside the Bentley family to lead the company in its 40-year history, having previously served as COO — with Greg Bentley transitioning to Executive Chair. Bentley made its NASDAQ IPO on September 23, 2020, and maintains a market capitalization of approximately $15 billion as of October 2024.
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