Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
AI-powered endpoint security with $800M revenue; autonomous threat response and rollback on the Singularity Platform competing with CrowdStrike after CrowdStrike's 2024 global outage.
SentinelOne is a cybersecurity company providing AI-powered endpoint detection and response (EDR), extended detection and response (XDR), cloud security, and identity security through its Singularity Platform — using machine learning to detect and autonomously respond to malware, ransomware, and advanced threats in real time without requiring human intervention. Listed on NYSE (NYSE: S) and headquartered in Mountain View, California, SentinelOne generates approximately $800 million in annual revenue and competes with CrowdStrike for the enterprise endpoint security market.\n\nSentinelOne's Singularity Platform differentiates through autonomous response capability — when a threat is detected, the platform can automatically isolate infected machines, terminate malicious processes, roll back files to pre-attack states, and remediate damage without requiring a security analyst to approve each action. This "autonomous" response model reduces the threat dwell time and damage from fast-moving ransomware attacks that can encrypt thousands of files in minutes. The cloud-native architecture uses the Singularity Data Lake to correlate telemetry across endpoints, cloud workloads, and identities for unified threat detection.\n\nIn 2025, SentinelOne competes primarily with CrowdStrike Falcon for enterprise EDR/XDR market share — the two companies have become the dominant modern endpoint security vendors, having displaced legacy antivirus from McAfee and Symantec. The July 2024 CrowdStrike Falcon content update outage (which caused millions of Windows machines to crash) created a significant opportunity for SentinelOne, which accelerated customer acquisition in the months following. SentinelOne's 2025 strategy focuses on growing Purple AI (its generative AI security analyst that provides natural language threat investigation), expanding cloud workload protection, and growing identity security through its Singularity Identity product.
Developer security platform with $7.4B valuation; dependency, code, and container vulnerability scanning in CI/CD pipelines competing with GitHub Advanced Security and Checkmarx.
Snyk is a developer security platform that integrates security testing directly into the developer workflow — scanning code, open-source dependencies, container images, and infrastructure-as-code for vulnerabilities and providing fix suggestions that developers can apply without leaving their IDE or CI/CD pipeline. Founded in 2015 by Guy Podjarny, Danny Grander, and Assaf Hefetz in London, Snyk has raised approximately $1.2 billion at a $7.4 billion valuation and serves over 2,700 customers including Google, Twilio, and New Relic who want to shift security testing left into development rather than waiting for security teams to scan at release.\n\nSnyk's platform covers four product areas: Snyk Open Source (identifying vulnerable open-source packages in package.json, pom.xml, requirements.txt), Snyk Code (SAST static analysis of first-party code for security flaws), Snyk Container (scanning Docker images and base images for OS-level vulnerabilities), and Snyk IaC (scanning Terraform, CloudFormation, and Kubernetes configs for misconfigured security policies). The developer-friendly UX — browser extensions, IDE plugins, GitHub PR integration, Slack alerts — keeps security feedback in the developer's existing workflow rather than requiring a separate security portal.\n\nIn 2025, Snyk competes with Checkmarx, Veracode, GitHub Advanced Security (GitHub's built-in security scanning), SonarQube (code quality with security), and Semgrep for application security testing. The developer security (DevSecOps) market is growing as security breaches from vulnerable dependencies (Log4Shell, Spring4Shell) have forced organizations to invest in systematic dependency scanning. Snyk's developer-first approach differentiates it from traditional AppSec tools that security teams operate separately from engineering. The 2025 strategy focuses on AI-assisted vulnerability remediation (automatically suggesting and applying security fixes), expanding enterprise CISO-level reporting, and deepening platform integrations.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.