Stack AI is a capable enterprise agent platform, and — like osFoundry — it’s model-agnostic with strong governance. The clearest contrasts are in delivery model and pricing transparency. Here’s a factual look for a US business, with sources cited. (dgm implements osFoundry, a separate company’s platform — we are not osFoundry.)
At a glance
| osFoundry | Stack AI | |
|---|---|---|
| Core focus | Orchestration: agents, automations, apps | Enterprise no-code agent builder |
| Models | Bring your own, any provider | Model-agnostic (OpenAI/Anthropic/Google) |
| Security | Confirmed in assessment | SOC 2 II, HIPAA, GDPR; PII redaction |
| Pricing | Via dgm: $399 / $3,999/mo (public) | Not public; sales-led; free edition |
| SaaS consolidation | Designed to consolidate | 100+ integrations; agent builder |
What Stack AI is
Stack AI is an enterprise-grade no-code platform for building, deploying, and governing AI agents at scale, with a visual drag-and-drop builder, 100+ enterprise integrations (SharePoint, Salesforce, Workday, SAP), built-in RAG pipelines, PII redaction, guardrails, and role-based access control. Founded out of MIT and Y Combinator-backed, it pivoted from SMB to enterprise in 2024, which shapes both its feature set and its go-to-market.
osFoundry overlaps in building and running agents, but emphasizes broader orchestration plus the explicit goal of consolidating overlapping SaaS — delivered as an implemented system by dgm.
Models
Both are model-agnostic. Stack AI supports OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google models; osFoundry is likewise model-agnostic at the orchestration layer. Model flexibility is common ground — the contrasts are elsewhere.
Security and data
Stack AI publishes a strong posture for regulated industries: SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA, and GDPR compliance, with built-in PII redaction and guardrails. (Specific data-residency regions weren’t confirmed from a primary source, so verify those against your requirements.) With osFoundry, dgm confirms the equivalent controls against your requirements during the integration assessment, so the security review is explicit to your situation.
Pricing
Here’s a clear contrast. Since its enterprise pivot, Stack AI’s pricing is not publicly listed — it’s sales-led with custom contracts, though a free edition exists for exploration. Third-party estimates suggest five- to six-figure annual minimums, but these are unverified, so budget a sales cycle. dgm’s osFoundry engagement pricing is fixed and public instead: $399 assessment and $3,999/month integration, with no per-seat fees — no procurement guessing.
Enterprise builder vs implemented orchestration
Stack AI is a no-code builder your team uses to assemble and govern agents — strong if you have people to build and a procurement process for enterprise software. osFoundry, via dgm, is an implemented orchestration layer that also targets SaaS consolidation: dgm scopes, builds, integrates, and trains. If you’d rather have a working, consolidated system delivered with transparent cost than run an enterprise build-and-buy cycle, that’s the distinction.
Who each is best for
Stack AI is the stronger choice if you want an enterprise no-code agent platform with strong governance and you’re comfortable with sales-led procurement. osFoundry is the stronger choice if you want implemented orchestration and SaaS consolidation with transparent, fixed pricing.
Which should a US company choose?
If a governed enterprise no-code builder fits your team and process, Stack AI is a strong, model-agnostic option. If you want orchestration plus consolidation delivered with transparent cost, then osFoundry is the more direct fit. dgm assesses your goals, recommends the right path for a US business, and implements it end to end.