Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
SF AI freight broker automation platform with 12.5x revenue growth; YC W23 $16M Craft Ventures Series A automating shipper order intake and carrier booking for Echo, MODE, and Arrive Logistics competing with Parade for logistics AI.
Vooma is a San Francisco-based AI freight broker automation platform — backed by Y Combinator (W23) with $16 million+ raised including a $13 million Series A in December 2024 led by Craft Ventures with seed investment from Index Ventures and angels from Motive, Project44, Ryder, and Uber Freight — deploying AI agents that fully automate freight broker back-office operations: shipper order intake (processing load requests from email, phone, and EDI without human brokers), carrier procurement (contacting, negotiating, and booking carriers for freight lanes), and load tracking (proactive status updates to shippers throughout delivery). Founded in 2023 by Jesse Buckingham (ex-CEO of ASG LogisTech) and Mike Carter (founding engineer at Kodiak Robotics, autonomous trucking), Vooma serves top logistics providers including Echo Global Logistics, MODE Transportation, Arrive Logistics, and NFI Industries, achieving 12.5x revenue growth and 32x transaction volume growth since launch.
Amazon.com's parcel delivery operation; 6.3B US deliveries in 2024 (28.2% market share), surpassed UPS and FedEx individually, rivals USPS, same-day Prime delivery, DSP program competing with UPS and FedEx.
Amazon Logistics is the package delivery and last-mile distribution operation of Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) — built from 2014 to the present as an internal logistics capability that has grown into a full-scale competitive parcel delivery network now rivaling the established carriers it was designed to supplement. In 2024, Amazon Logistics processed 6.3 billion US delivery orders — representing 28.2% of all US package shipments and 6.78% year-over-year volume growth — establishing Amazon as the second-largest US parcel carrier by volume, trailing only USPS (31% market share) and surpassing UPS and FedEx individually. Amazon Logistics operates through a tiered infrastructure: Amazon Air (40+ cargo aircraft delivering packages between sort centers overnight), Regional Sort Centers (high-throughput sortation facilities distributing packages to delivery stations), Delivery Stations (last-mile facilities where packages are loaded into vans for neighborhood delivery), and Delivery Service Partner (DSP) program (100,000+ independent contractors operating branded Amazon delivery vans under franchise-like agreements). Amazon also operates its Flex program (individual gig drivers delivering packages in personal vehicles), drone delivery (Prime Air, authorized in limited markets), and Amazon Hub Locker (self-service package pickup locations). The Amazon Logistics network is designed around same-day and next-day delivery promises that differentiate Amazon Prime from competitor e-commerce experiences.
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