summree
Last updated 12 Jul 2026
tool

What AI builders are saying about Composio

Composio has been covered in 3 videos by 2 AI-focused creators tracked by summree, with a predominantly positive stance. The most recent coverage was yesterday.

Videos
3
Creators
2
Stance lean
Positive
Last covered
yesterday
Coverage

Coverage tracker

Mentions per month
1May1Jun1Jul
Stance distribution
Positive 3
DateChannelVideo
10 Jul 2026Greg IsenbergGrok 4.5 is a bigger deal than Fable 5
1 Jun 2026The Calum Johnson ShowAI Insider: The Simplest Way To Use Codex In Your Business, Content & Life (For Beginners)
12 May 2026Greg IsenbergThe $1M+ Solo AI Agent Business (Full Course)

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Creator Synthesis

What creators are saying about Composio

Composio as the authentication and integration layer for agent stacks

Across multiple videos, Composio is consistently named as the tool that handles authentication and connections to third-party services, removing the need to share passwords or build custom integrations from scratch. Mike, a backend engineer featured on The Calum Johnson Show, described Composio as a middleware layer that connects AI coding agents like OpenAI Codex to thousands of apps — including YouTube, Gmail, Notion, and cal.com — without exposing credentials. Nick from Orgo, appearing across two separate Greg Isenberg episodes, echoes this positioning precisely, listing Composio alongside Hermes and Orgo as a foundational piece of the recommended tech stack for running AI agent businesses.

This consistency across independent creators and publishing dates suggests that practitioners building real agent workflows have independently landed on Composio for the same narrow but critical job: handling the plumbing between an agent and the outside world. Neither creator frames it as an all-in-one platform; rather, both treat it as the reliable connective tissue that makes the rest of the stack functional.

The Calum Johnson Show·1 Jun 2026Greg Isenberg·12 May 2026Greg Isenberg·10 Jul 2026

Composio inside a recommended tech stack for solo AI agent businesses

Nick from Orgo, featured on Greg Isenberg's channel in both May and July 2026, outlines a specific and repeatable tech stack for builders who want to offer AI agent services commercially. In that stack — which also includes Hermes for agent orchestration, Orgo for cloud virtual machines, AgentMail for agent email identity, and Obsidian for structured memory — Composio occupies the authentication and app connector role. This stack is presented as the practical foundation for a business model charging clients a flat monthly fee for managed AI agents, with target industries spanning marketing agencies, law firms, insurance agencies, and real estate.

The fact that Nick references Composio in both the May full-course video and the July Grok 4.5 demonstration — listing integrations such as Google Docs, YouTube, X API, VidIQ MCP, and Linear — suggests it remains a stable fixture in his workflow rather than a one-off recommendation. For builders evaluating which tools to invest time in learning, this repeated, practical endorsement across different use cases carries more weight than a single mention.

Greg Isenberg·12 May 2026Greg Isenberg·10 Jul 2026

Simplicity and focused tooling over elaborate multi-agent complexity

A shared thread running through the coverage is a caution against over-engineering agent workflows. Mike on The Calum Johnson Show argues explicitly that most people fail with AI agents because they copy elaborate setups that look impressive but do not match their actual needs, and recommends starting with tasks that are either frequently repeated or involve aggregating scattered data. Nick from Orgo reinforces this from a commercial angle, noting that clients typically need far fewer agents than they expect — one to three well-configured agents with strong memory context delivers most of the value and keeps costs controlled.

Within this philosophy, Composio is positioned not as a complex platform to master but as a straightforward enabler: it handles the integration work so that builders can focus on configuring agents and writing clear instructions rather than wrestling with authentication or API plumbing. Both creators frame good tooling choices as the thing that keeps workflows practical and maintainable, rather than impressive on paper.

The Calum Johnson Show·1 Jun 2026Greg Isenberg·12 May 2026
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What does Composio actually do in an AI agent workflow?

Based on creator coverage, Composio acts as a middleware or integration layer that connects AI agents to third-party applications — such as Google Docs, Gmail, YouTube, Notion, and cal.com — without requiring builders to share passwords or build custom authentication from scratch. Mike on The Calum Johnson Show described it specifically as the tool that handles these connections when using OpenAI Codex, while Nick from Orgo lists it as the authentication and app connector component of his recommended agent stack.

Is Composio worth using if I am just starting out with AI agents?

Creators covering beginner-friendly agent setups do include Composio in their recommended tooling. Mike, a backend engineer featured on The Calum Johnson Show, singles it out as the key integration tool for beginners using OpenAI Codex, precisely because it removes the complexity of managing API credentials and custom connectors. The consistent advice across videos is to keep stacks simple, and Composio is presented as a way to achieve broad app connectivity without adding unnecessary complexity.

Which apps and services can Composio connect an agent to?

Across the videos reviewed, creators mention a range of services that Composio can connect agents to, including Google Docs, Gmail, YouTube, Notion, cal.com, X (formerly Twitter), Linear, and VidIQ MCP. Neither creator claims this is an exhaustive list; Mike describes it as connecting to thousands of third-party apps, though summree has only the examples mentioned in these videos to draw from.

How does Composio fit into a commercial AI agent business?

Nick from Orgo, who advocates for a model of selling managed AI agent services to businesses at a flat monthly fee, includes Composio as a core component of his recommended tech stack alongside tools for agent orchestration, cloud hosting, and memory management. In his framing, Composio handles the authentication and app connections that allow agents to interact with clients' existing tools and services, making it a foundational piece rather than an optional add-on for anyone running agents on behalf of paying clients.

Do I need coding skills to use Composio as part of an agent stack?

The videos reviewed do not address Composio's learning curve in isolation, but the broader context is encouraging for non-expert builders. Nick from Orgo notes that using one agent to set up another — via tools like Claude Code or Codex — removes the need for deep manual coding skills across the stack as a whole, and Composio is listed as part of that accessible setup. Mike similarly frames his recommended workflow, which includes Composio, as suitable for beginners.

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