Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
KRX: 005930 Samsung Electronics at ~$228B revenue 2024 with record Q1 2025; world's largest memory chip maker and 720M OLED panels competing with TSMC, SK Hynix, and Apple across semiconductor, display, and mobile markets.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. is a Suwon, South Korea-based global technology conglomerate — listed on the Korea Stock Exchange (KRX: 005930) and the world's largest manufacturer of memory semiconductors (DRAM, NAND flash), display panels (OLED and LCD), and smartphones — generating KRW 300.9 trillion (~$228 billion USD) in revenue in fiscal year 2024, with Q1 2025 revenue of KRW 79.14 trillion (an all-time quarterly record), driven by semiconductor division revenue of $96.9 billion (48% of total revenue), Galaxy S25 smartphone sales, and 720 million OLED panels shipped in 2024. The flagship subsidiary of the Samsung Group chaebol (founded by Lee Byung-chul in 1938), Samsung Electronics operates across semiconductors (memory, logic chips, foundry services), displays (flexible OLED, quantum dot), consumer electronics (TVs, appliances), and mobile (Galaxy smartphones, tablets, wearables).
San Jose power management semiconductors (NASDAQ: MPWR) Q3 2025 revenue $737.2M (+18.9% YoY); Enterprise Data $191.5M (+33% QoQ) powering NVIDIA/Google/AMD AI GPU clusters, competing with Texas Instruments and Analog Devices.
Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. (MPS) is a San Jose, California-based analog and mixed-signal semiconductor company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: MPWR) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — designing high-performance power management integrated circuits for computing, cloud infrastructure, storage, automotive, industrial, and consumer applications through approximately 3,800 employees worldwide. In Q3 2025, Monolithic Power Systems reported revenue of $737.2 million (+10.9% sequentially, +18.9% year-over-year), with the Enterprise Data segment (AI server power management) reaching $191.5 million (+33% from Q2 2025) driven by strong demand for power management solutions in next-generation AI platforms from NVIDIA, Google, and AMD. CEO Michael Hsing founded MPS in 1997 and has led the company's growth from a consumer LED driver manufacturer to an AI infrastructure power management leader — with MPS power ICs now embedded in NVIDIA H100, H200, and GB200 GPU clusters as the voltage regulators that convert rack power supply voltage to the precise low-voltage, high-current supply that GPU cores require during AI training inference. MPS's proprietary Intelli-Phase multiphase power architecture delivers 99%+ efficiency for high-density AI compute power delivery — a competitive differentiation that directly affects data center PUE (power usage effectiveness) at scale.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.