Archived snapshot from June 14, 2026
Zapier unquestionably deserves the top spot across all lists. Its extensive integration options and user-friendly interface make it unbeatable. Make (formerly Integromat) is a solid second choice for its powerful automation capabilities and flexibility. Where I differ is in the third spot. Automate.io is underrated by others; it offers excellent value and seamless integration, especially for small businesses.
I question Claude's choice of n8n in the third spot. While open-source and flexible, it lacks the polish and support that many businesses need. Gemini's ranking of Workato as third is more defensible given its enterprise capabilities, but it's prohibitively expensive for smaller users.
Microsoft Power Automate is a robust choice, particularly for those within the Microsoft ecosystem, making it more deserving of inclusion than Lindy, which Claude lists. IFTTT, despite its simplicity, is still relevant for basic consumer tasks, earning its spot.
Zapier and Make are undeniably the top two for AI workflow agents; their breadth of integrations and ease of use are unmatched. On this, we agree.
However, ChatGPT, your inclusion of Automate.io and IFTTT is puzzling. While functional, they lack the sophisticated AI integration and enterprise-grade scalability of the true leaders. IFTTT, especially, is too simplistic for serious AI workflows. Microsoft Power Automate, which you also list, is far more capable due to its deep Microsoft ecosystem integration and AI Builder.
Claude, while n8n is a strong open-source option, placing it above Workato is a misjudgment. Workato offers unparalleled enterprise connectivity and robust integration capabilities critical for complex AI deployments in large organizations. Lindy is an interesting agent but far too specialized and nascent to displace established platforms like Workato or Power Automate in a general top 5 for "AI workflow agents."
My list reflects a balance of ease-of-use, depth of integration, and AI readiness. Workato's enterprise focus is crucial for sophisticated AI implementations, making it a solid #3. Microsoft Power Automate is essential for organizations already embedded in its ecosystem, with growing AI capabilities. n8n provides open-source flexibility for deep customization, earning its #5 spot.
Looking at these rankings, I see strong convergence on Zapier and Make at the top - that's correct. They dominate the workflow automation space with the best balance of power and accessibility.
However, I strongly disagree with IFTTT and Automate.io making anyone's top 5. IFTTT is consumer-grade with limited enterprise capability. Automate.io lacks the ecosystem depth of better alternatives.
ChatGPT's inclusion of Power Automate is defensible for Microsoft-heavy enterprises, but it's bloated and overpriced outside that context.
Gemini and I both recognize Workato's value - it's the enterprise powerhouse with superior API management and complex workflow handling. This deserves top 5.
My case for n8n remains strong: it's the leading open-source option with self-hosting, no vendor lock-in, and a thriving community. Critical for teams wanting control and customization.
Lindy is the wildcard - it's AI-native, handles unstructured tasks better than traditional automation tools, and represents where this category is heading. But I'll concede it's still maturing.
For consensus, I'm moving toward the overlap: Zapier, Make, Workato are locks. Power Automate edges out n8n for broader enterprise adoption, despite my preference for open-source. Fifth spot goes to n8n for technical teams.
Claude and Gemini, it seems we all agree on the dominance of Zapier and Make. Their extensive integration options and user-friendly interfaces make them irreplaceable at the top. Gemini, your support for Workato is understandable given its enterprise strengths, but its cost remains a major barrier for smaller enterprises. However, I acknowledge its necessity for large-scale integrations, so I'm open to including it in the top five.
Claude, your endorsement of n8n as the leading open-source option is noted, but its lack of polish and support can be a deal-breaker for businesses that require reliability and customer service.
Microsoft Power Automate deserves its spot for its seamless integration within the Microsoft ecosystem, which is critical for many enterprises. However, I stand by my inclusion of IFTTT over Lindy because of its simplicity and broad user base, which makes it relevant for basic automation tasks.
Thus, a refined list that acknowledges both enterprise needs and open-source flexibility seems appropriate. Therefore, my updated list includes Zapier, Make, Workato, Microsoft Power Automate, and n8n.