AI tools catalog
3 tool cards: use cases, strengths and weaknesses, pricing, alternatives.
A visual automation platform (formerly Integromat). The most convenient for those who want to see the pipeline 'with their own eyes' without code.
Best for: Non-technical teams, marketing pipelines, medium-complexity scenarios.
Strengths
- A very clear visual editor
- Thousands of ready-made modules
- A good price per operation
Weaknesses
- Less flexible than n8n
- Cloud-only
Pricing: Free tier with limits; paid plans·Difficulty: Beginner·Alternatives: n8n, zapier
The oldest no-code automator. A huge number of integrations out of the box, built-in AI actions.
Best for: Simple 'when X — do Y' scenarios, fast SaaS integration.
Strengths
- A huge number of integrations
- AI Actions without code
- A very friendly UX
Weaknesses
- Expensive for a large volume of tasks
- Less flexibility in complex scenarios
Pricing: Free tier; paid plans by task count·Difficulty: Beginner·Alternatives: make, n8n
A self-hostable automation platform with a visual editor. The most flexible of the 'no-code' tools — it lets you insert code, use LLM nodes, and connect anything via HTTP.
Best for: Complex automations where flexibility and control over the infrastructure matter.
Strengths
- Self-host (privacy)
- Flexible code nodes
- Ready-made AI nodes for various providers
- A large library of integrations
Weaknesses
- Requires an understanding of requests/JSON
- The cloud version is more expensive than Make
Pricing: Self-host is free; Cloud is paid·Difficulty: Intermediate·Alternatives: make, zapier