Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Seattle YC W20 AI perishable order automation for Kroger, Walmart, Dollar General (national partnership Jan 2024); $58M total ($41M General Catalyst Series B 2021) quadrupling profit margins and cutting food waste 32% competing with Afresh.
Shelf Engine is a Seattle, Washington-based AI-powered grocery order automation platform — backed by Y Combinator (W20) with $58 million in total funding including a $41 million Series B in March 2021 led by General Catalyst with GGV Capital and Foundation Capital — providing grocery retailers with an automated ordering system that uses AI demand forecasting to determine the optimal quantity of perishable products (bakery, produce, deli, prepared foods) to order daily from suppliers, quadrupling retailer profit margins on perishable categories while reducing food waste by up to 32%. Founded in 2015 and serving leading grocers including Kroger and Walmart at thousands of locations, Shelf Engine partnered with Dollar General for national expansion in January 2024, demonstrating the platform's applicability beyond traditional grocery into dollar and convenience store perishable programs.
Convoy was the digital freight marketplace that reached $3.8B valuation before shutting down in October 2023; assets were acquired by Flexport as the US trucking industry's digital transformation continues.
Convoy was a Seattle-based digital freight network that operated an automated matching platform connecting shippers with trucking carriers, aiming to bring Uber-style efficiency to the highly fragmented US trucking industry. Founded in 2015 by Dan Lewis and Grant Goodale, Convoy raised over $900M from investors including Google, Jeff Bezos, and T. Rowe Price, reaching a peak valuation of $3.8 billion as it grew to handle hundreds of thousands of loads per month across a network of hundreds of thousands of trucks.
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