Welcome to #Disruptor50 in the age of AI — upending the classical definition of disruptive innovation with the era of “better, cheaper, faster” innovation on the way out. Instead, achieving disruptive innovation with AI requires massive piles of capital investment, inevitably leading to close partnership with the incumbent giants. A whopping 34 of the 50 companies on our 12th annual CNBC Disruptor 50 list claim that artificial intelligence is “critical” to their businesses. These include companies in industries ranging from cybersecurity to agriculture. Thirteen of the 2024 Disruptors call themselves “generative AI companies,” including five of the top ten on this year’s list.
CNBC Disruptors
Technology, Information and Media
CNBC’s annual Disruptor 50 list highlights private startups that are chasing some of the market’s biggest opportunities.
About us
CNBC’s 12th annual Disruptor 50 list highlights private companies upending the classic definition of disruption as AI leads new business models beyond the era of better, faster and cheaper innovation.
- Website
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cnbc.com/disruptors
External link for CNBC Disruptors
- Industry
- Technology, Information and Media
- Company size
- 10,001+ employees
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2013
Updates
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The companies on this year's CNBC #Disruptor50 list are upending the classical definition of disruptive innovation that shaped its creation more than a decade ago — companies like Anduril Industries, Chime, Einride, Exotec, Gecko Robotics, Relativity Space, Thrive Market, Zipline, Zūm and so many more. Following tomorrow's Olympic coverage, you can get a closer look into the ways these innovators are leveraging AI to remake the market and reshape the future. Tune in to our CNBC Special "AI & the Next Generation of Disruption" hosted by Julia Boorstin this Saturday at 6pm ET.
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Lineage, the largest temperature-controlled warehouse real estate investment trust (REIT) in the world, made its market debut today — the 94th CNBC #Disruptor50 company to do so in the list's 12 year history. “We started with one warehouse and we’ve done 116 acquisitions to turn Lineage into what it is today,” co-founder and co-executive chairman Adam Forste said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” Thursday morning before shares started trading. In the last year alone, Lineage has acquired Grupo Fuentes, Burris Logistics, Kennedy Transportation and Harnes. The Burris acquisition alone gave Lineage eight new facilities. “So many families who we’ve bought companies from rolled equity into Lineage as part of their transaction, so they’re celebrating here today with us as well,” Forste said, adding that the company’s namesake is derived from the network, or lineage, of family-owned warehouses that he and co-founder Kevin Marchetti have brought into the fold.
Lineage closes up more than 3% in market’s largest IPO of 2024
cnbc.com
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The boss of travel and expense management platform Navan told CNBC's Ryan Browne he’s preparing the #Disruptor50 company to get its business into shape for an eventual initial public offering this year, in another sign leaders of privately-held startups are getting more optimistic about their prospects in the public markets. Asked about when Navan would choose to go public, the firm’s CEO and co-founder Ariel Cohen said the company is close to reaching that milestone. “We can see the signals,” he said, adding that Navan has been adjusting its leadership structure and making changes to its board in a signal of maturity.
$9 billion travel tech firm Navan on track to hit profitability this year and 'not far' from IPO, CEO says
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Keeping food cold is a very large business, but the refrigeration technology behind it hasn’t experienced much change. Based in North Carolina’s Research Triangle, solid-state cooling company Phononic Inc pioneered semiconductor devices that cool and freeze products from frozen seafood to processed meat, snacks, and ice cream, covering a global cold chain supply and transport system, and large supermarket freezers — the company ranked No. 35 on the 12th annual CNBC #Disruptor50 list. As part of our coverage of this year's innovators, CEO Tony Atti, Ph.D. joined CNBC's Julia Boorstin to discuss how the company is using AI in its cooling chip technology.
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It’s a tumultuous time for pharmacies, which continue to struggle with labor and supply shortages. Last year, overburdened pharmacists walked out on their jobs at CVS and Walgreens to protest inadequate staffing and rising work requirements. Meanwhile, online pharmacies — run by online giants like Amazon — create competition. Alto Pharmacy, a full-service pharmacy backed by a digital platform, is among those looking to transform the sector — the company ranked No. 29 on the 12th annual CNBC #Disruptor50 list. As part of our coverage of this year's innovators, CEO Alicia Boler Davis joined CNBC's Kelly Evans to discuss how the company is innovating the digital pharmacy experience, how customers can save money with Alto and more.
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Congratulations Cityblock Health — ranked No. 50 on this year's #Disruptor50 list!
Honored to be named to the CNBC Disruptors 50 list for the 4th year in a row. Our CEO Toyin Ajayi caught up with Julia Boorstin earlier today: https://bit.ly/4dCrXrJ
2024 CNBC Disruptor 50: Cityblock CEO breaks down the business of health care
https://www.youtube.com/
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The night life of school buses is about to get more interesting. Zūm, which provides student transportation including #EV buses to 4,000 schools across the country, is partnering with the Oakland Unified School District to start selling power stored in EV batteries back to the California utility grid. The company ranked No. 31 on this year's CNBC #Disruptor50 list, which dropped yesterday. Oakland is the first school district in the U.S. to go fully electric with its buses and will now be the first to test the concept of V2G (vehicle to grid) bidirectional charging. In effect, instead of the one-way charge into the vehicle, the school buses will be able to send their battery power back to the grid through Zum charging infrastructure.
A half-million school buses across US could become EV battery powerhouse feeding energy back onto the grid
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Congratulations Dedrone — ranked No. 33 on this year's #Disruptor50 list!
We are honored to announce our 2nd consecutive recognition on CNBC's esteemed #Disruptor50 list, underscoring our AI/ML-driven airspace security’s pivotal role in advancing cutting-edge #counterdrone and drone-enablement dual-use solutions relied upon by public safety and national security entities worldwide. We extend our gratitude to CNBC Disruptors for this prestigious acknowledgment and offer heart-felt congratulations to fellow #innovators featured on this distinguished list. Read more below. #Airspacesecurity #Dedrone #CNBC #CNBCDisruptor50
These are the 2024 CNBC Disruptor 50 companies: See the full list of startups riding the AI wave
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CNBC Disruptors reposted this
The 2024 CNBC Disruptors 50 list was unveiled today, with OpenAI topping the list. Coming in at number two was AI-powered defense tech startup Anduril Industries at a valuation of $10 billion dollars. Anduril Industries CEO and Co-founder Brian Schimpf joined CNBC Overtime from their headquarters to discuss what sets them apart from their peers in the defense-tech space. “From our perspective, what has made us successful is we first and foremost focus on understanding our customers' problems… they don’t often understand what is possible to solve with technology today,” said Schimpf.