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.
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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