---
title: "n8n, Hermes, or OpenClaw? Pick Your First AgentRoost Project"
description: "n8n, Hermes, or OpenClaw — which AgentRoost framework fits your first project? A plain-English decision guide with real examples and AI credits included."
canonical: https://agentroost.app/en/blog/n8n-hermes-or-openclaw-pick-first-project
date: 2026-05-11T20:00:00Z
---

[Canonical URL](https://agentroost.app/en/blog/n8n-hermes-or-openclaw-pick-first-project)

AgentRoost gives you three frameworks on day one. That choice can feel paralyzing if you've never run any of them before. This guide skips the feature lists and cuts straight to the question that matters: **what do you actually want to build?**

Answer that, and the right framework picks itself.

---

## The one-minute mental model

| If you want to… | Use |
|---|---|
| Connect multiple apps and automate multi-step workflows visually | **n8n** |
| An always-on assistant that remembers context, runs on a schedule, and can proactively reach you | **Hermes** |
| A private, chat-first personal assistant you talk to via Telegram | **OpenClaw** |

Every framework ships with **AI/LLM credits already included** — no OpenAI key, no Anthropic key, nothing to wire up. That's the same for all three, so the decision really does come down to fit, not cost.

---

## n8n: for people who think in workflows

**n8n** is a visual workflow builder with 400+ integrations. You connect nodes on a canvas: a trigger on the left, transformations in the middle, an action on the right. A workflow that watches for a Stripe payment, enriches the customer data with an HTTP call, summarises it with an AI node, and posts to Slack is about 20 minutes of drag-and-drop.

**What you get on AgentRoost:** your own single-tenant n8n instance at `https://<your-id>.agentroost.app`. It is your editor, your credentials vault, your execution log. You own all the data and the workflows. This is not a shared cloud — it's n8n the way self-hosting was always supposed to feel, without the VPS setup, SSL certificates, or midnight `docker compose up` debugging.

**The AI angle:** the n8n AI Agent node and LLM nodes connect to the included credit pool. Drop the node into any workflow, pick a model, and it works immediately — no API key field to fill in.

### n8n is the right choice if:

- You're automating something that touches several external services (CRM, email, database, spreadsheet, webhook).
- You want to *see* the flow — conditional branches, loops, error handling — on a canvas.
- You need webhooks that external services can POST to (every instance gets a public HTTPS URL).
- You want to export your workflows as JSON and move them anywhere later.

### A quick example: "summarize new GitHub issues into Slack"

1. **GitHub Trigger** node — fires on `issues.opened`.
2. **AI / LLM node** — prompt: `"Summarize this issue in two sentences: {{ $json.body }}"`. Pick any model from the dropdown. Credits already loaded.
3. **Slack node** — posts the summary to `#triage`.

Three nodes, one workflow, zero API-key setup. That's the n8n on AgentRoost experience.

---

## Hermes: for people who want an assistant that works while they sleep

**Hermes** is an always-on AI assistant framework. It's not a visual workflow canvas — it's closer to a persistent process that lives on your AgentRoost workspace, remembers what it learned yesterday, and can be triggered by a schedule, a Telegram message, or an incoming webhook.

Where n8n thinks in *flows*, Hermes thinks in *context*. It accumulates knowledge across runs. It can wake itself up at 07:00 every morning, check your inbox or a data source, reason about what changed, and send you a Telegram summary — all without you lifting a finger.

**Setup:** you pick Hermes, name the agent, and connect Telegram in one click through the AgentRoost manager bot. From that point the agent has a private Telegram bot (just yours) and a running process. AI credits are included, models are switchable anytime.

### Hermes is the right choice if:

- You want something that proactively *reaches out* to you — a daily briefing, a monitoring alert, a research digest.
- Long-running context matters. The agent should remember that last Tuesday you said "focus on competitor X" and carry that forward.
- Scheduled intelligence: run a task at a specific time, recurring, without you sending a message first.
- You're building an internal assistant for a small team where the Telegram interface is enough.

### A quick example: "daily competitor price monitor"

- Every morning at 08:00, Hermes fetches a target URL, diffs the pricing page against the version it stored yesterday, generates a one-paragraph analysis, and sends it to your Telegram.
- No workflow canvas — you describe the task, configure the schedule, and the agent handles the rest with context it builds over time.

---

## OpenClaw: for people who want a private chat companion

**OpenClaw** is the most focused of the three. It is a personal AI assistant you access through a private Telegram bot. No Docker, no YAML, no configuration files to edit. You type, it replies. Files and conversation state persist across sessions.

Think of it as a private, self-owned assistant where your messages never touch a shared platform, and the conversation history lives on your AgentRoost workspace rather than someone else's product database.

**Setup:** same one-click Telegram flow as Hermes — sign up, pick OpenClaw, `/start` the bot. Under two minutes.

### OpenClaw is the right choice if:

- You primarily want a chat interface, not a workflow or a scheduled job.
- Privacy matters — you want your conversations on infrastructure you control, not a shared SaaS assistant.
- You're replacing a personal ChatGPT habit with something that remembers your style, files, and context across days.
- You want to share a bot with a small team without everyone logging into the same web UI.

---

## Side-by-side: what actually differs

| | **n8n** | **Hermes** | **OpenClaw** |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interface | Visual canvas (web editor) | Telegram + schedule | Telegram |
| Primary trigger | Webhook / schedule / app event | Schedule / Telegram / webhook | Telegram message |
| Persists context across runs | Per-workflow (via DB nodes) | Yes, natively | Yes, natively |
| Integrations | 400+ built-in nodes | Via code/tools | Via code/tools |
| Best for | Multi-app automation | Proactive assistant | Chat companion |
| AI credits | Included | Included | Included |

One thing that is **the same** across all three: the AI nodes work out of the box. Competitors — n8n Cloud, Zapier, Make, Elestio, Sliplane — require you to bring your own OpenAI or Anthropic key and pay for those calls separately. On AgentRoost the credits are bundled into your $19.99/mo subscription. The framework cost, the server, and a pool of AI usage all roll into one number.

---

## How to get started on AgentRoost

The path is identical for all three frameworks:

1. **Sign up** at [agentroost.app](/en/agents) — email/password, or one-click with Google, Microsoft, or Discord.
2. **Pick your framework** — n8n, Hermes, or OpenClaw — on the agents page.
3. **Name your workspace.** For n8n: your private editor opens at `https://<your-id>.agentroost.app`. For Hermes/OpenClaw: open the AgentRoost manager bot on Telegram and `/start` your agent.
4. **Build.** AI credits are already loaded. No API key, no credit card for OpenAI, no second dashboard.

Plans start at $19.99/mo, billed monthly, cancel anytime, 14-day money-back guarantee. [Compare plans](/en/pricing) if you want to see what Plus and Pro add (more compute, more included credits).

---

## Still not sure?

A practical tie-breaker:

- **Do you want to draw a flow between apps?** → n8n.
- **Do you want something to happen automatically on a schedule, without you sending a message?** → Hermes.
- **Do you want to *talk* to an AI that knows your files and history?** → OpenClaw.

You can run more than one framework on your account — they're separate workspaces. Most users start with one, see it working in a few minutes, and add a second when the first use case is solid. The point is: **pick the one that matches the thing you want to build this week**, not the most impressive-sounding name.

All three are ready when you are. [Get started](/en/agents).
