Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Enterprise software giant with $55B revenue; Oracle Database dominance plus OCI cloud infrastructure growth from AI workload contracts competing with AWS, SAP, and Workday.
Oracle Corporation is one of the world's largest enterprise software and cloud infrastructure companies, producing database software (Oracle Database, MySQL), cloud applications (Oracle Fusion ERP, HCM, SCM, CX), cloud infrastructure (OCI - Oracle Cloud Infrastructure), and industry-specific cloud solutions for healthcare (Cerner), retail, utilities, and financial services. Listed on NYSE (NYSE: ORCL) and headquartered in Austin, Texas (moved from Redwood City in 2020), Oracle generates approximately $55 billion in annual revenue and is led by co-founder Larry Ellison (who serves as Chairman and CTO) and CEO Safra Catz.\n\nOracle's business spans several large segments: Cloud Services and License Support (Oracle Cloud applications and database subscriptions — the largest and highest-margin segment), Cloud License and On-Premise License (new software licenses), and Hardware (Oracle Engineered Systems including Exadata database machines). The Oracle Database is the world's most widely used enterprise relational database, installed in virtually every major corporation globally. Oracle Fusion Cloud is the company's SaaS ERP, HCM, and CRM suite competing with SAP and Workday for enterprise cloud adoption.\n\nIn 2025, Oracle is experiencing significant growth from its OCI cloud infrastructure business — the company has built extensive GPU capacity for AI training workloads and signed large AI cloud contracts (including a massive contract with xAI for Grok model training). Oracle's strategic partnership with Microsoft Azure (Oracle databases available natively in Azure data centers) and its National Security Cloud (dedicated cloud for US government) have created new growth vectors. Oracle competes with SAP, Workday, and Salesforce for enterprise applications, and with AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud for cloud infrastructure.
Columbus IN power technology (NYSE: CMI) at record $34.1B 2024 revenue, net income $3.9B; diesel + hydrogen + electric power solutions, Jennifer Rumsey first female CEO, Accelera EV segment competing with Caterpillar.
Cummins Inc. is a Columbus, Indiana-based power technology manufacturer — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: CMI) as an S&P 500 Industrials component — designing, manufacturing, and distributing diesel, natural gas, electrified power, and hydrogen power solutions for commercial trucks, buses, construction and mining equipment, generators, rail, and marine applications through approximately 73,000 employees in 190 countries and territories. In fiscal year 2024, Cummins reported record full-year revenues of $34.1 billion (flat versus 2023), record net income of $3.9 billion ($28.37 diluted EPS), and record EBITDA of $6.3 billion — an exceptional performance given a significant decline in heavy-duty truck build rates in North America, demonstrating the benefit of geographic diversification and product breadth across power segments. Results included gains from the 2023 separation of Atmus Filtration Technologies (NYSE: ATMU) as an independent public company. CEO Jennifer Rumsey — the first female CEO of a major engine company in US history, who assumed leadership in 2022 — leads Cummins' strategic evolution through its Destination Zero strategy: achieving near-zero carbon emissions from Cummins products by 2050 through a portfolio of diesel, natural gas, hydrogen internal combustion engine, hydrogen fuel cell, and battery electric power solutions that allows customers to decarbonize at their own pace based on fuel availability, infrastructure, and economics. Cummins' Accelera (electrification) business unit develops battery systems, fuel cell modules, and e-axles for the zero-emission commercial vehicle transition.
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