Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Home remodeling design platform with 40M monthly users; visual inspiration marketplace connecting homeowners with contractors plus Houzz Pro business tools for design professionals.
Houzz is an online home remodeling and design platform connecting homeowners with interior designers, architects, contractors, and home furnishing retailers — providing a visual discovery experience (similar to Pinterest but home-focused), a professional marketplace for hiring home service providers, and an e-commerce marketplace for home products. Founded in 2009 by Adi Tatarko and Alon Cohen in Palo Alto, California, Houzz has raised approximately $600 million and has built a community of over 40 million monthly users with over 2.7 million home improvement professionals in its network.\n\nHouzz's platform serves multiple stakeholders simultaneously: homeowners browsing millions of professional home renovation photos for design inspiration (and discovering products used in those photos through its "Shop the Look" functionality), hiring professionals through Pro Listings, and purchasing furniture and decor from the Houzz Shop. Home professionals use Houzz Pro (a separate subscription product) for business management — client communication, project management, mood boards, and invoicing.\n\nIn 2025, Houzz competes with Pinterest (visual inspiration), Thumbtack (professional services marketplace), HomeAdvisor/Angi (contractor marketplace), and Wayfair (home furnishings) across its various platform functions. The company has shifted toward monetizing through Houzz Pro (professional subscriptions) rather than consumer advertising after market conditions affected advertising revenue. Houzz Pro has grown its subscriber base among kitchen and bath designers, general contractors, and interior designers who use it as a business management tool. The 2025 strategy focuses on growing Houzz Pro subscription revenue, improving the e-commerce marketplace conversion, and expanding into additional home professional verticals (landscape, outdoor living).
Construction payment rights and lien management software acquired by Procore; automates mechanics liens, preliminary notices, and lien waivers across all 50 US states, protecting contractors and subcontractors from non-payment in complex projects.
Levelset is a New Orleans-based construction payment software company acquired by Procore in 2021, providing mechanics lien management, preliminary notice automation, and payment rights protection tools for contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers in the construction industry. Founded in 2012 as zlien, the company built its product around the insight that lien rights—the legal tools that protect construction participants from non-payment—are chronically underutilized because the process of preserving them is complex, jurisdiction-specific, and deadline-driven. Levelset automates the preparation and delivery of preliminary notices, lien waivers, and mechanics liens across all 50 U.S. states, handling the jurisdictional variation that makes manual compliance extremely difficult for contractors working across multiple states.\n\nLevelset's platform covers the full payment cycle risk management workflow: from preliminary notice delivery at the start of a project through payment status tracking, lien waiver exchange, and mechanics lien filing when payments are disputed or delayed. The company also built a credit risk layer that provides payment history and credit data on general contractors and property owners, helping subcontractors assess payment risk before accepting project work. This financial intelligence capability, combined with payment rights automation, positions Levelset as a cash flow protection tool for the construction supply chain—a segment chronically affected by slow payment and project payment disputes.\n\nSince the Procore acquisition, Levelset has been integrated into the Procore construction management platform, enabling Procore users to access payment rights and lien management tools directly within their existing project management workflow. The combined offering strengthens Procore's value proposition for subcontractors, who have historically been less well served by construction project management platforms focused primarily on GC workflows. Levelset continues to operate as a standalone offering as well, serving contractors who do not use Procore.
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