Within the past year, it's the rate of acceleration that has changed, she says, not the focus. "Particularly over the past three to six months … I think what we're seeing is the combination of the models getting smarter, the products getting better, and that really sort of generating a huge amount of value for businesses," she said.
It was just about three years ago that Anthropic launched its first product, and "really out of the gate, we said, 'We're prioritizing building for businesses for a variety of reasons,'" co-founder Daniela Amodei recalled.
What puts Anthropic at No. 1 is not just its growth, but its positioning: a focus on building powerful AI systems that enterprises trust. Its emphasis on safety and "constitutional AI," combined with rapid gains in model capability, has helped it emerge as one of the clearest challengers to OpenAI, while attracting major partners and customers looking for reliable, enterprise-grade AI.
With explosive growth — CEO Dario Amodei says revenue grew 80 times in the first quarter — Anthropic has had one of the fastest ramps in enterprise software history. In addition to its consumer-facing products, Claude Code has revolutionized software development and been embraced for its reliability and strong performance on complex tasks. The company is also in talks to raise even more capital at a sky-high valuation of as much as $900 billion .
This year's Disruptor 50 list , with Anthropic at No. 1 , followed by OpenAI , features companies that are using technology — primarily AI — to challenge existing industries and build new ones.
In a sign of how massive and powerful the tech ecosystem is, this year's list has a total valuation of $2.4 trillion, nearly $2 trillion of that from the top five companies on the list — and most of that from the top two, Anthropic and OpenAI. The list's implied valuation has grown by three times year over year. The amount of money that's been invested has scaled dramatically, too, with total funding into this year's 50 companies at $337 billion, two and a half times more than last year.
The fourteenth installment of the Disruptor 50 showcases the trends that are dominating the market and the increasing focus on AI across the economy. Forty-three of the 50 companies on this year's list say AI is critical to their business model. Enterprise tech is the largest category, with 20 companies on the list. We're also seeing AI applied to health, with five healthcare companies on the list and three biotechs. Fintech continues to be a key category, with six companies, including No. 5 Ramp, No. 16 Ripple, and No. 29 Revolut.
There are two new categories on this year's list. Vibe coding is making its debut with three companies: No. 37 Cursor, No. 39 Lovable, and No. 42 Replit, startups that have helped to revolutionize the ease of programming both for consumers and the enterprise. And this year is the first time that prediction markets are being recognized — with Kalshi and Polymarket, ranked at No. 43 and No. 48 respectively — as they've created new trading markets and challenged traditional gaming platforms.
Defense tech boom continues
Last year, defense tech giant Anduril topped the list. This year, the value of technology to the defense industry continues to grow. At No. 4, Anduril is already a leading modern defense contractor, combining cutting-edge technology and hardware to create autonomous systems for the military. Meanwhile, No. 40 Saronic focuses on maritime defense and is partnering with the Navy to provide AI-powered naval ships and drone vessels. And No. 49 Shield AI is focused on the skies, building autonomous aircraft and drones.
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