We detected 213 companies using LucidLink. The most common industry is Advertising Services (14%) and the most common company size is 51-200 employees (25%). We find new customers by monitoring new entries and modifications to company DNS records.
Note: We only track companies that subscribe/churn from the Enterprise version of LucidLink
Source: Analysis of Linkedin bios of 213 companies that use LucidLink
I noticed that LucidLink customers fall into two distinct clusters. The first and largest group works in media, entertainment, and creative production. These companies make video content, advertising campaigns, animation, audiobooks, streaming media, and digital experiences. They include massive entertainment providers like Netflix, Disney, and Amazon alongside specialized production houses, advertising agencies, and animation studios. The second cluster consists of professional services firms in architecture, design, and consulting that also produce large visual assets.
The company sizes vary dramatically, from 10-person boutique studios to Fortune 500 enterprises with over ,000 employees. However, the sweet spot appears to be mid-market companies with 50-500 employees who have moved beyond startup phase but haven't lost their creative edge. Many show signs of recent growth, expansion into new markets, or private equity backing. Even the massive corporations using LucidLink tend to be ones still describing themselves with startup energy about innovation and creativity.
🔧 What other technologies do LucidLink customers also use?
Source: Analysis of tech stacks from 213 companies that use LucidLink
Commonly Paired Technologies
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Shows how much more likely LucidLink customers are to use each tool compared to the general population. For example, 287x means customers are 287 times more likely to use that tool.
I noticed that LucidLink users operate in highly specialized, knowledge-intensive environments where they're managing complex workflows and investing heavily in both their people and their data infrastructure. The combination of user research tools, workplace management software, AI platforms, and learning management systems tells me these are sophisticated organizations dealing with distributed teams working on collaborative, content-heavy projects.
The pairing of LucidLink with UserTesting is particularly revealing. Companies need both when creative or technical teams are iterating rapidly on digital products and need seamless file sharing for large design files, videos, or prototypes. Similarly, the correlation with ElevenLabs Enterprise suggests these organizations are working with media-rich content, likely video production or creative agencies that need both cloud file access and AI-powered audio tools. The presence of Monte Carlo Data alongside LucidLink points to companies with serious data governance needs, probably ones managing large datasets across distributed teams where file integrity and quality monitoring are critical.
My analysis shows these companies are likely in growth or mature stages, not early startups. The investment in tools like Docebo for learning management and OfficeSpace Software for workplace coordination indicates they've moved past scrappy beginnings and are building sustainable operational infrastructure. They're probably hybrid organizations with 100-500 employees who need to coordinate across locations. The presence of Decagon AI for customer support automation suggests they're dealing with enough customer volume to warrant AI assistance but still value quality interactions.
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