Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Cloud-native BI platform with spreadsheet interface pushing live queries to Snowflake/BigQuery; no data extract limitations enabling billion-row exploration without SQL knowledge.
Sigma Computing is a cloud-native business intelligence (BI) and data analytics platform that enables business users to explore, analyze, and visualize data using a familiar spreadsheet-like interface directly connected to cloud data warehouses (Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, Redshift) — without requiring SQL knowledge or IT-managed extracts. Founded in 2016 by Rob Woollen and Jason Frantz and headquartered in San Francisco, Sigma has raised over $300 million and targets business analysts and data-savvy business users who are frustrated with the limitations of traditional BI tools.\n\nSigma's technical architecture is its key differentiator — rather than extracting data into an internal cache or limiting analysis to pre-built dashboards, Sigma pushes queries directly into the customer's cloud data warehouse in real time. This means analyses always reflect live data, can scale to billions of rows, and leverage the full computation power of Snowflake or BigQuery rather than being limited by BI tool infrastructure. The spreadsheet interface allows users familiar with Excel to explore data with pivot-table-like flexibility without knowing SQL.\n\nIn 2025, Sigma competes with Tableau (Salesforce), Looker (Google), Power BI (Microsoft), and Thoughtspot for business intelligence and self-service analytics market share. The cloud data warehouse-native BI category has expanded significantly as Snowflake and Databricks have become the dominant enterprise analytics data stores. Sigma's 2025 strategy emphasizes its Snowflake partnership (co-selling and deep Snowflake Native App integration), expanding data application development capabilities (where Sigma can build interactive data apps for external distribution), and growing its enterprise customer base by addressing the "last mile" data access problem where business users need self-service access beyond what BI teams can provision.
San Francisco CA semantic layer and headless BI platform; raised $100M+; API-first data access layer that sits between warehouses and any BI or AI consumer.
Cube is a semantic layer and headless business intelligence platform founded in 2019 and headquartered in San Francisco, California. The company was founded by Artyom Keydunov and Pavel Tiunov to solve the problem of metric proliferation in data-driven organizations: when every BI tool, internal application, and data consumer defines its own metrics independently, companies end up with different answers to the same business question depending on where they look. Cube provides a single semantic layer — a governed data model layer — that defines all business metrics and dimensions once, then serves them consistently to any downstream consumer via REST, GraphQL, or SQL APIs.\n\nCube raised $100 million across multiple funding rounds from investors including Bain Capital Ventures, Decibel Partners, and 468 Capital. Its platform is built on an open-source core (Cube.js) with hundreds of thousands of community users and deployments. The commercial Cube Cloud product adds managed infrastructure, a development environment, testing tools, query caching for performance optimization, and access controls. Cube's API-first, headless architecture allows it to serve metrics to traditional BI tools, embedded analytics applications, internal data apps, and increasingly AI assistants and large language model (LLM)-powered analytics tools.\n\nCube's caching and pre-aggregation engine is a significant technical capability: it automatically builds materialized aggregates from frequently run queries and serves them from a high-performance cache layer, dramatically reducing warehouse query latency and costs for dashboards and embedded analytics applications. This performance layer makes Cube a practical choice for public-facing embedded analytics where end users expect sub-second response times that direct warehouse queries cannot reliably deliver.
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