50 Smartest Companies 2017
Our editors picked the 50 companies that are smartest about how they combine innovative technology with an effective business model. Some are new companies and startups, while others have continued to reinvent themselves.
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Why
Continues to tweak its chips, originally developed for gaming, to help develop breakthrough technologies like deep learning and autonomous driving.Company Details$3 billion:
spending on R&D to create its new data-center chip - 2
Why
Changing the economics of space travel with its successful landing and recycling of rockets to be recycled for multiple tripsCompany Details10 percent:
price discount being considered for customers who agree to fly their payloads on reused rockets - 3
Why
Creating an AI-powered store of the future with Amazon Go while expanding intelligent voice assistant Alexa into phones, cars, and more.Company Details12,000:
number of programs that software developers have published for Alexa - 4
Why
Vindicated this year when the U.S. FDA granted permission to tell customers whether their DNA puts them at higher risk for some diseases.Company Details1 million plus:
number of customers who have consented to have their genetic information used for scientific research - 5
Why
Continues to dominate research into AI while expanding innovation in phone systems, virtual reality, and self-driving cars.Company Details40 percent:
amount of energy the company says it saves applying machine-learning algorithms from its DeepMind subsidiary to cooling its data center. - 6
Why
Its voice assistant technology is the Siri of China, and its real-time portable translator puts AI to remarkable use, overcoming dialect, slang, and background noise to translate between Chinese and a dozen other languages with surprising accuracy.Company Details70 percent:
iFlytek’s share of China’s market in voice-based technologies - 7
Why
Nearing FDA approval of its experimental immunotherapy that uses a patient’s own blood cells to combat cancer.Company Details39 percent:
proportion of study participants very sick with lymphoma who showed no sign of the disease six months after a single treatment with Kite’s therapy - 8
Why
Turning its insanely popular chat platform WeChat into a virtual operating system featuring mini programs.Company Details50 percent:
proportion of WeChat’s 770 million daily users who are on the service at least 90 minutes a day - 9
Why
The biotech company has a strong drug pipeline and track record treating eye and other diseases, and it’s testing treatments for rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, and pain.Company Details500,000:
number of U.K. volunteers whose genetic data it is helping sequence - 10
Why
Its blindness treatment could be the first gene therapy approved in the U.S. to treat an inherited disease.Company Details1 in 30,000:
estimated number of individuals affected by the disease, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy - 11
Why
Pioneering new uses of face recognition technology, from fraud investigation to “smile to pay.”Company Details106:
maximum number of points on a person’s face that its technology tracks - 12
Why
Making advances in cadmium telluride cells; building three of the five largest solar projects in the U.S.Company Details$2.9 billion:
estimated 2017 revenue - 13
Why
Acquisitions in computer vision and AI show it’s serious about adapting to new technology.Company Details46 percent:
portion of revenues derived from areas beyond PC chips - 14
Why
Its solid-state version of lidar is cheaper and more compact than conventional versions of a technology essential to autonomous driving.Company Details$250:
price of its S3 Lidar sensors for autonomous vehicles - 15
Why
Overtook General Electric to become the biggest U.S. installer of new wind power last year and is investing in energy storage.Company Details14:
consecutive number of profitable quarters - 16
Why
Minting money selling its popular mobile phones and laptops while adding impressive names to its AI research team and promising to do more manufacturing in the U.S.Company Details$257 billion:
cash on its balance sheet, more than the entire market value of General Electric - 17
Why
In a first, the FDA has approved its immunotherapy Keytruda to treat cancers on the basis of the tumor’s genetic characteristics, not its location in the body.Company Details$39 billion:
estimated 2017 revenue, buoyed by sales of Keytruda - 18
Why
Its novel 3-D printing process makes it possible to fabricate parts out of a wide variety of plastics.Company Details100,000:
number of pairs of shoes Adidas will print by the end of 2018 using Carbon technology - 19
Why
With nearly $100 million from VC firms, GE, Alphabet, and others, this startup is focused on cheap, fast 3-D printing of metal parts.Company Details$120,000:
cost of its first product, to begin shipping in September - 20
Why
RNA drug approved for a rare disease, spinal muscular atrophyCompany Details36 plus:
number of its RNA-targeted drugs in development - 21
Why
Its technology can write and rewrite its own code, algorithms that will accelerate machine learning.Company Details100 times:
its technology’s efficiency advantage over other machine-learning methods - 22
Why
After a drop in sales last fall, unveiled a new machine, NovaSeq, that will be capable of sequencing 48 entire human genomes in two and a half days—and could one day push the cost of genome sequencing down to $100.Company Details$850,000:
price of the cheaper of its two NovaSeq models - 23
Why
Despite controversies over fake news, live streaming video, and discriminatory advertising, and poor sales of its Oculus VR headset, it continues to work on interesting applications of AI and VR, and its Instagram business is singing.Company Details20:
number of natural-language data sets built into the company’s AI research tool, ParlAI. - 24
Why
Has found a business model for online education by working with corporations to make course material relevant to jobs; now connecting companies to students and graduates, too.Company Details15:
number of “nanodegrees” the company offers in skills for selected jobs - 25
Why
Has continued to innovate in consumer drones and begun expanding into drones for enterprise as well.Company Details50 percent:
estimated North American market share - 26
Why
Runs the largest online market in Latin America and is expanding to mobile point-of-sale transactions. Its MercadoPago online payment tool lets users deposit cash into their accounts.Company Details182 million:
number of registered users, a 20 percent increase over the previous year - 27
Why
Its fast-growing cloud business has reduced the software giant’s reliance on PC sales. Its expanding team of quantum computing experts hopes to develop commercially viable products to compete with efforts by Google and IBM.Company Details$15 billion:
projected annual revenue for its commercial cloud business - 28
Why
Though a startup, it’s got its own fab in the Bay Area and an ambitious approach to quantum computing that combines hardware and software, focusing on design that can be easily commercialized.Company Details$64 million:
venture funding raised by the company in the past year - 29
Why
Combining strengths of humans and robots into exoskeleton suits in a bid to help people and machines work together.Company DetailsImmersive teleoperation:
the type of technology the company makes, in which a human controls a robot via a wearable device - 30
Why
Evangelists of data-driven medicine are sorting through DNA sequences with AI algorithms to accelerate diagnosis in oncology, cardiology, and more.Company Details106,000:
number of patients tested to date - 31
Why
Autopilot accidents, car maintenance problems, and concerns about its solar strategy and ability to produce enough cars have hurt, but cofounder Elon Musk continues to take big bets. Battery cell production has begun at his giant Nevada “gigafactory.”Company Details400,000 plus:
number of preorders for its lower-cost Model 3 - 32
Why
Twelve years and $200 million in the making, its inexpensive, portable genetic analyzer has been successfully tested from Antarctica to space and shows promising for on-the-spot diagnostic testing, germ monitoring, and more.Company Details882,000 letters:
record length of a single DNA strand read continuously by one of its machines - 33
Why
Acknowledging the direction of Chinese manufacturing by shifting from low-cost human labor to add extensive robotics to its factories.Company Details60,000:
number of jobs automation eliminated at a single Chinese factory - 34
Why
Its pay-as-you-go solar power model works well in its African target market, and the company is expanding sales with local communications leader Safaricom.Company Details500,000:
number of homes connected as of this spring - 35
Why
Headed by an academic from Carnegie Mellon University, the company is still in startup mode but has been garnering attention since last August, when it won the Pentagon’s DARPA contest with a bot designed to autonomously spot, test, and fix software security flaws.Company Details14:
number of previously undiscovered vulnerabilities in networking devices the company’s tools have found - 36
Why
Benefiting from the consolidation of India’s competitive e-commerce sector, including $500 million investment from eBay.Company Details$11.6 billion:
company’s current valuation, the highest for any Indian e-commerce startup - 37
Why
Leading gene-therapy company focuses on engineered T cells that recognize and kill cancer and other conditions. Its treatment for sickle-cell disease appears promising.Company Details66 percent:
increase in stock price over the past year - 38
Why
Commercial production at its robot-heavy factory in Ansbach, Germany, is to begin this year, producing locally and on demand. A second factory has been announced in Atlanta.Company Details300 million:
number of pairs of shoes Adidas makes each year, largely in Asia - 39
Why
Exploring new technologies like blockchain and cloud AI while continuing work on important long-term challenges like quantum computing.Company Details400:
number of customers the company has worked with on blockchain applications - 40
Why
Moving to incorporate AI into its businesses as it focuses on technological innovation in wind and renewable energy, data-driven services, and other business lines.Company Details60,000:
number of jet engines GE says will be connected to the Internet by 2020 - 41
Why
Quickly expanding the artificial intelligence in its Alibaba Cloud platform, including industry-specific products, and launching a global electronic trade platform to build its business with small and medium-size companies around the world.Company Details57 percent:
Alibaba’s share of Chinese online commerce - 42
Why
Despite some executive turnover and a tough year financially, the company has interesting prospects in virtual reality and access to China’s enthusiastic VR users.Company Details1,500:
number of pieces of content outside developers have created for its VR system, Vive - 43
Why
Its software helps companies including banks and insurers use AI to do back-office clerical tasks.Company Details189:
number of deals the company signed in 2016, more than four times its 2015 number - 44
Why
The online platform has consolidated all its consumer Web services—shopping, travel, food delivery, real estate sales, car rentals—under one name, Jumia.Company Details500,000:
number of African companies that use Jumia’s platform - 45
Why
Launched by well-regarded researchers and funded with venture capital backed by Chinese and U.S. pharmaceutical companies, it will sequence anyone’s genome for just $1,000 and interpret it, too. In 2017, it started offering to sequence newborns in China.Company Details1,250:
number of conditions, risks, and traits it will tell parents about in their newborns - 46
Why
Delivering the first run of its short-haul all-electric truck this year while working on vehicle connectivity and autonomous driving for cars.Company Details200 kilometers:
range of its lithium-battery-powered eTruck - 47
Why
Looking to push AI-generated tools, such as an algorithm designed to summarize documents, to its massive user base.Company Details20 percent:
market share in customer relationship software - 48
Why
Though its glasses have not been a runaway hit, Snap was strategically smart to recast itself as a camera company. It’s entertaining users with face-altering filters and pioneering the use of machine vision and augmented reality for socializing.Company Details3 billion:
number of snaps users create each day - 49
Why
Its Alipay business, dominant in China, is moving into new markets with investments in India, Korea, and elsewhere. It’s now exploring AI as a means of underwriting lending, and blockchain to record customers’ charitable donations.Company Details450 million:
number of annual active users - 50
Why
Despite the high-profile loss this year of its well-regarded head of AI, Andrew Ng, the company is doing important work in the field, including leading China’s National Engineering Lab of Deep Learning Technology and Application.Company Details1,300:
number of employees dedicated to working on AI