Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
UK nanopore sequencing pioneer with portable MinION device; £223M FY2025 revenue (+24% constant currency). Clinical revenues up 60% as sequencing moves to point-of-care.
Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) was spun out of the University of Oxford in 2005, commercializing a radically different sequencing approach: passing DNA strands through biological nanopore proteins embedded in a membrane and detecting characteristic ionic current changes to call bases in real time. This enables ultra-long reads (megabase scale), direct RNA sequencing, and epigenetic base modification detection without prior amplification.\n\nONT's product range spans from the palm-sized MinION (the world's first portable DNA sequencer) to the high-throughput PromethION 2 Solo and PromethION 48 platforms. These instruments have enabled field sequencing for infectious disease outbreak response (COVID-19, mpox, Ebola), real-time clinical microbiology, plant pathogen surveillance, and cancer genomics. The company reported £223 million in FY2025 revenue, representing 24% constant-currency growth, with clinical revenues up 60% and biopharma revenues up 30%.\n\nONT is publicly listed on the London Stock Exchange and holds approximately £300 million in cash. While accuracy has historically lagged Illumina and PacBio, successive chemistry improvements and the Kit14 chemistry have closed the gap for many applications. The company is expanding its presence in clinical diagnostics, with regulatory filings underway in key markets, and remains the benchmark for portable, real-time, and long-read sequencing.
Roche subsidiary and founding biotech; invented the biologics industry with recombinant DNA. Blockbuster oncology franchise includes Herceptin, Avastin, Rituxan, and Tecentriq.
Genentech was founded in 1976 in South San Francisco by Herbert Boyer and Robert Swanson, becoming the first company to produce human insulin using recombinant DNA technology and essentially launching the modern biotechnology industry. Acquired by Roche in 2009 for $46.8 billion, Genentech continues to operate with significant R&D autonomy as the US hub for Roche's pharmaceutical innovation.\n\nThe company is best known for pioneering cancer biologics, developing Herceptin (trastuzumab) for HER2-positive breast cancer, Avastin (bevacizumab) for multiple cancers, Rituxan (rituximab) for lymphoma, and Tecentriq (atezolizumab) for PD-L1 immunotherapy. Its discovery engine spans oncology, neuroscience, ophthalmology, and immunology with a robust early-stage pipeline leveraging AI-assisted target identification.\n\nGenentech generates tens of billions in annual revenue through Roche's Pharmaceuticals Division and remains one of the most productive biotech research sites in the world, consistently ranked among top employers in life sciences. The South San Francisco campus employs over 13,000 scientists, clinicians, and engineers, anchoring the Bay Area as a global biotech hub.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.