Compare / UiPath vs Dandy
AT A GLANCE
FUNDING HISTORY
UiPath
Dandy
BUSINESS MODEL
UiPath
UiPath sells software licenses and cloud subscriptions for its automation platform. Pricing is based on the number of software robots (called "attended" and "unattended" robots) deployed plus platform fees for orchestration and management tools.
The land-and-expand model works well. A company might start with 5 robots automating invoice processing, then expand to 50 robots handling HR onboarding, then 500 robots across the entire organization.
Revenue per customer grows as automation spreads through departments.
Annual recurring revenue exceeded $1.5 billion in fiscal year 2025. The shift from on-premise licenses to cloud subscriptions has been a major focus, with cloud ARR growing faster than overall revenue.
Professional services and training (UiPath Academy) generate additional revenue.
Dandy
Vertical SaaS plus manufacturing. Dandy provides dental practices with intraoral scanners (often subsidized or free to eliminate the switching cost), cloud-based software for managing cases, and its own network of digital dental labs that manufacture the final restorations.
Dentists pay per case — each crown, bridge, veneer, or implant restoration is priced individually. The margin comes from manufacturing efficiency: digital workflows are faster, more precise, and require less manual labor than traditional hand-sculpted methods.
As volume grows, Dandy's labs get more efficient and per-unit costs drop. It's the classic razor-and-blades model — give away the scanner, make money on every restoration.
HOW THEY STARTED
UiPath
Daniel Dines grew up in communist Romania and taught himself to code as a teenager. After working at Microsoft in Seattle for several years, he returned to Bucharest in 2005 and started a small software company called DeskOver with Marius Tîrcă.
Their initial product was an SDK — a software library that let developers build automation scripts for Windows applications.
For nearly a decade, DeskOver (later renamed UiPath) survived as a tiny bootstrapped company selling development tools. Dines ran the operation from a small apartment in Bucharest with a handful of employees.
Revenue was modest — enough to keep the lights on but not enough to grow. The company was unknown outside a niche developer community.
The pivot came around 2013-2015 when Dines noticed that large enterprises were spending billions on outsourcing repetitive digital tasks — copying data from one system to another, processing invoices, updating spreadsheets. He repositioned UiPath from a developer tool into an enterprise RPA platform: software "robots" that could mimic human actions on a computer screen.
Click this button. Copy that field.
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The timing was perfect — every large company had thousands of employees doing exactly this kind of work.
Dandy
Henry Stott was a repeat entrepreneur who had previously co-founded a tech company in the UK. When he looked at the dental industry, he saw a $15 billion lab market that was shockingly analog.
Here's how it worked: a dentist jams a tray of gooey putty into your mouth, waits for it to harden, mails the physical mold to a dental lab, where a technician hand-sculpts your crown out of ceramic. Turnaround: 2 to 3 weeks.
Error rate: high. Patient experience: miserable.
The technology to do this digitally had existed for years — 3D intraoral scanners, CAD/CAM software, CNC milling machines — but nobody had stitched it into a seamless end-to-end platform for the average dental practice. Stott started Dandy in 2020 to be that platform.
Provide the scanner, build the software, run the lab — and make it so easy that any dentist can switch from analog to digital without changing how they practice.
HOW THEY GREW
UiPath
UiPath grew through a community-first strategy. UiPath Academy offered free training and certification, creating hundreds of thousands of developers who knew the platform before their employers bought it.
When those developers advocated for UiPath internally, the sales team had warm leads.
The free Community Edition let individual developers and small teams use UiPath at no cost. This bottoms-up adoption mirrored the playbook of Slack and Atlassian — get individual users hooked, then sell enterprise licenses to the organization.
Partners and system integrators drove enterprise deals. Deloitte, Accenture, EY, and PwC all built RPA practices around UiPath, recommending it to their enterprise clients.
These consulting firms had existing relationships with every Fortune 500 CIO, and they directed automation budgets toward UiPath.
Dandy
Land-and-expand with dental practices. Dandy gives practices the scanner for free or at heavy discount, which eliminates the biggest barrier to switching from analog.
Once a practice starts submitting digital scans, they become recurring revenue — every patient who needs a crown is a Dandy order. Sales team targets mid-size practices (3 to 10 dentists) that are high-volume but haven't invested in digital yet.
Referral programs where existing dentists recommend Dandy to colleagues. Geographic density strategy — build lab capacity in a region, then saturate practices nearby to optimize logistics and turnaround times.
Content marketing educating dentists on why digital is better, faster, and more profitable than analog workflows.
THE HARD PART
UiPath
AI threatens to leapfrog RPA entirely. Traditional RPA automates repetitive, rule-based tasks by mimicking human clicks.
But generative AI and large language models can understand context, handle exceptions, and process unstructured data — potentially replacing the need for screen-scraping robots. If AI agents can directly interact with APIs and databases, the "robot that clicks buttons" approach may become obsolete.
Competition from Microsoft is the most dangerous threat. Microsoft Power Automate is bundled into Microsoft 365, which virtually every enterprise already pays for.
Offering "good enough" automation for free inside a suite companies already use is devastating for a standalone RPA vendor charging premium prices.
Growth has decelerated. After explosive growth during COVID (when every company rushed to automate), UiPath's revenue growth slowed significantly.
The stock dropped over 80% from its all-time high. CEO Daniel Dines stepped back as CEO in 2023 (Rob Enslin took over, then left, and Dines returned in 2024), creating leadership instability at a critical moment.
Dandy
Dental practices are notoriously resistant to change — many dentists have used the same lab for 20 years and switching feels risky. The scanner hardware is expensive to subsidize at scale, creating a capital-intensive land grab.
Quality control across distributed manufacturing is hard — a crown that doesn't fit means a remake, an unhappy patient, and a dentist who might switch back to their old lab. Competition from established digital players like Align Technology and legacy lab companies investing in their own digital capabilities.
The dental industry is fragmented — 200,000+ practices in the US, mostly small businesses, which means enterprise-style sales don't work. Each practice is its own decision maker with its own habits.
THE PRODUCTS
UiPath
UiPath Studio — the development environment where automation workflows are designed using a visual drag-and-drop interface. No coding required for basic automations.
UiPath Robots — the software agents that execute automated workflows, either alongside human workers (attended) or independently (unattended) on virtual machines. UiPath Orchestrator — the centralized management platform for deploying, monitoring, scheduling, and scaling thousands of robots across an organization.
UiPath Autopilot — an AI-powered assistant that uses generative AI to help users build automations through natural language descriptions. UiPath Document Understanding — AI models that extract data from unstructured documents like invoices, contracts, and forms.
Dandy
Dandy Scanner — provided to dental practices, captures a full 3D digital impression of the patient's mouth in minutes. No more putty molds.
Cloud-based case management platform where dentists submit scans, approve designs, and track orders. AI-powered restoration design that generates crown and veneer designs automatically from 3D scans, reducing turnaround from weeks to days.
Digital dental lab network with automated CNC milling and 3D printing for manufacturing restorations. Shade matching technology using AI to color-match restorations to surrounding teeth.
Integration with practice management software so cases flow seamlessly from scan to delivery.
WHO BACKED THEM
UiPath
Accel led the Series A in 2017 — the first major venture investment after a decade of bootstrapping. CapitalG (Alphabet's growth fund), Sequoia Capital, and IVP participated in later rounds.
Dragoneer, Tiger Global, Alkeon Capital, and Coatue Management invested in the 2019-2021 growth rounds. The April 2021 IPO raised $1.3 billion at a $36 billion valuation.
Dandy
Investors include Bessemer Venture Partners, IVP, DST Global, and IA Ventures. Series C in 2023 valued the company at approximately $1.8 billion.