Compare / Yelp vs Dandy
YELP
Yelp gave every person with an internet connection the power to destroy a restaurant with a one-star review — …
DANDY
The dental lab industry — the people who actually make your crowns, veneers, and implants — was stuck in the 1…
AT A GLANCE
FUNDING HISTORY
Yelp
Dandy
BUSINESS MODEL
Yelp
Local advertising. Yelp is free for consumers and free for businesses to claim their listing.
Revenue comes from selling advertising products to local businesses — sponsored listings that appear at the top of search results, enhanced profiles with photos and call-to-action buttons, and Yelp Ads that target users searching for relevant businesses. Approximately 95% of revenue comes from local advertising, making Yelp essentially an ad platform for small businesses.
The company also earns from Yelp Reservations, Yelp Waitlist, and transaction-based fees on food orders. Revenue is recurring — businesses pay monthly for advertising packages — but churn is high because small businesses often cancel when they don't see immediate ROI.
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
Yelp
Jeremy Stoppelman got sick after eating at a restaurant and wanted to find a doctor recommendation online. There was nothing useful.
He and Russel Simmons — both former PayPal employees — started Yelp in 2004, originally as an email-based referral system where you'd email friends asking for recommendations. That didn't work.
But they noticed that the reviews people wrote as part of the referral process were the actual valuable content. They pivoted to a review platform where anyone could write reviews of local businesses — restaurants, dentists, plumbers, mechanics, anything.
The social element was key: reviewers had profiles, could be friends, and the best reviewers became "Yelp Elite" with status and perks. By 2008, Yelp had turned reviewing restaurants into a hobby, a social activity, and for some people, an identity.
Google reportedly offered $500 million to acquire Yelp in 2009. Stoppelman turned it down and took the company public in 2012.
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
Yelp
User-generated content created a flywheel: more reviews attracted more consumers, which attracted more businesses, which attracted more reviewers. Yelp Elite Squad gamified reviewing, turning prolific reviewers into evangelists who hosted events and recruited new users.
SEO dominance — Yelp pages rank highly on Google for local business searches, driving organic traffic that costs nothing to acquire. City-by-city launch strategy with community managers in each market building local reviewer communities.
Advertising sales team calling local businesses directly — a labor-intensive but effective model for monetizing the platform. Mobile app became critical as smartphones made "find a restaurant near me" a constant use case.
Expansion into services (plumbers, contractors, mechanics) beyond restaurants to increase addressable market.
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
Yelp
Google is the existential threat. Google Maps reviews have overtaken Yelp in volume and are embedded directly in search results, intercepting users before they ever reach Yelp.
Stock performance has been mediocre — shares are roughly flat over the past five years while the broader market doubled. The business model depends on selling advertising to small businesses, which are notoriously difficult and expensive to sell to (high churn, small budgets, skeptical owners).
Yelp has been accused of manipulating reviews to pressure businesses into advertising — allegations the company denies but which have damaged its reputation. Review fraud (fake positive reviews, competitor sabotage reviews) is a constant battle.
And the broader shift to social media for recommendations (Instagram, TikTok, Reddit) is eroding Yelp's relevance with younger users.
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
Yelp
Business listings and reviews — 265+ million reviews across every local business category. Yelp for Restaurants — reservations, waitlist management, and ordering integrated into business pages.
Yelp Ads — advertising platform letting businesses target users by category, location, and intent. Yelp for Business Owners — dashboard for responding to reviews, tracking page views, and managing business info.
Yelp Elite Squad — gamified community of prolific reviewers who get invited to exclusive events. Yelp Guest Manager — restaurant management tool combining waitlist, reservations, and table management.
Yelp Knowledge Program — data licensing to power local search across third-party platforms.
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
Yelp
Pre-IPO investors included Bessemer Venture Partners, Max Levchin, and Peter Thiel's Founders Fund. Yelp went public on the NYSE in March 2012.
Dandy
Investors include Bessemer Venture Partners, IVP, DST Global, and IA Ventures. Series C in 2023 valued the company at approximately $1.8 billion.