"We don't have to care which LLM is going to win the race," declared Jan Oberhauser, CEO of n8n, in a recent interview with Sequoia Capital's George Robson and Pat Grady. This philosophy encapsulates the strategic pivot that transformed n8n from a robust workflow automation tool into an indispensable AI orchestration layer, quadrupling its revenue in eight months—a feat that previously took six years.
Oberhauser spoke with Robson and Grady about n8n’s journey, highlighting the critical juncture when the AI wave hit and the company faced a stark choice: become irrelevant or become indispensable. Rather than simply embedding AI features, n8n made the prescient decision to empower users to connect *any* Large Language Model (LLM) to *any* application, thereby becoming an essential part of the AI value chain. This "connect everything to anything" ethos positions n8n as a universal translator in an increasingly fragmented AI ecosystem, allowing builders to leverage the best tools for their specific use cases without fear of vendor lock-in.
A cornerstone of n8n's accelerated growth has been its counter-intuitive marketing strategy. The company deliberately moved away from traditional lead generation to focus intensely on community adoption. This bottom-up approach, fostering a vibrant open-source community, proved instrumental in gaining widespread usage and invaluable feedback.
"We have this amazing community, we have this amazing bottom-up adoption, so instead of actually kind of forcing something that's not really true to us, we just really focus on what was already working," Oberhauser explained. This commitment to empowering individual builders at the grassroots level has proven to be the key to eventually capturing enterprise customers at the top. The company's open-source license, while not OSI-approved, is transparent about allowing free use and self-hosting while restricting commercialization of n8n's core code, fostering trust and a fair ecosystem. This openness contrasts sharply with competitors who later altered their licenses, alienating their communities.
Oberhauser envisions n8n becoming the "Excel of AI," the default tool people instinctively reach for when building anything AI-related. This ambition is rooted in the belief that horizontal platforms, offering broad connectivity and flexibility, will ultimately triumph over specialized, vertical AI applications. N8n's success demonstrates that in the rapidly evolving AI landscape, providing a foundational layer that adapts to constant change and empowers diverse users is a powerful strategy for sustainable growth.

