Four of the six top US banks pay for Sourcegraph Cody. That's enterprise money flowing to AI code assistants that actually work.
Cody plugs into all major code hosts and editors. No tool switching required. No new workflows to learn. It handles the largest files across any codebase size — crucial when you're dealing with enterprise-scale projects that choke other tools.
Teams create shared prompts for the entire organization. A senior backend engineer working on microservices architecture builds prompts for database optimization patterns. Every developer on the team uses those same standards. Code gets written 2x faster while staying consistent.
Engineers save roughly 5-6 hours per week.
Recent plan changes mean the pricing structure isn't as clear as it once was.
Data isolation runs deeper than most competitors. Zero retention policies and full audit logs satisfy enterprise security requirements. Fifteen US government agencies trust it with their code. That says something about the security implementation.
Cody goes beyond individual productivity boosts. Other AI assistants help developers write code faster. They don't solve the enterprise problem of maintaining quality across hundreds of developers. Shared prompts mean your junior developers follow the same patterns as your senior architects. Seven of the ten top public technology companies use Sourcegraph for exactly this reason.