Connect apps, automate routine tasks, and build workflows without developers. From simple triggers to complex scenarios.
10 tools in this category
Zapier now makes more sense as an AI orchestration platform than a simple integration service. Zaps, Tables, Forms, Zapier MCP, plus Agents and Chatbots all sit in one product for teams that want workflows, structured data, and AI actions without maintaining their own automation stack.
Gumloop is a no-code builder for AI automations and agents. Teams stitch together LLM steps, scraping, browser actions, APIs, and spreadsheets into working flows without standing up a heavy orchestration stack.
Make is a visual-first automation platform where the whole scenario lives on one canvas and pricing is now built around credits. It works best once simple trigger-action recipes stop being enough and you need branching, routing, Grid-level visibility, or AI agents connected to the rest of the workflow. Teams usually choose it when they want to automate real work without losing sight of how the process runs.
n8n is an automation platform for teams that want both a visual editor and real infrastructure control. The current product story leans hard into unlimited users, unlimited workflows, and pricing by workflow executions instead of charging for every step. It fits teams that want to start quickly in the cloud or move serious automations onto their own VPS once no-code alone stops being enough.
VectorShift is an AI apps and workflow automation platform that combines a no-code interface with an SDK. Teams use it to build pipelines, knowledge bases, assistants, and embedded interfaces, then wire that into internal processes without hand-building the whole LLM and VectorDB layer.
OpenKIWI is a self-hosted agentic automation system with a web UI for models, agents, workflow building, and scheduled heartbeats. It is not a machine-translation evaluation library, but a full open-source stack for running AI agents inside your own environment. It fits teams that want security-first containers, multi-model setup, Telegram or WhatsApp channels, and a transparent agent loop without depending on someone else's SaaS.
An open-source platform for building autonomous AI agents that run locally, use real tools, and publish their own dashboards. Agents can operate across channels like Slack, Telegram, and terminal, maintaining context and memory.
Best forTeams seeking self-hosted, autonomous AI agents for internal workflows, Developers wanting open-source agent infrastructure with local execution
Manaflow's public surface no longer looks like an AI workflow automation SaaS. Right now it presents itself as an open-source applied AI lab, and the main homepage points to cmux - a native macOS terminal for coding agents with vertical tabs, notification rings, split panes, an in-app browser, and a socket API. Looking at the current public site honestly, cmux is the real product face of Manaflow today.
HowOne is a creator-first platform that turns a conversation into a live agentic app with UI, logic, backend pieces, and deployment. The public site is aimed less at enterprise automation and more at app templates, remix workflows, EvoAgentX under the hood, and fast solo-founder MVP launches with subscriptions and usage-based billing already wired in.
On the public web, VisioPilot no longer looks like a live product. As of March 2026, visiopilot.com redirects to a GoDaddy parked / for sale page, so the older claims about visual automation and pricing can no longer be verified.