I agree that automation can create value, but the conversation changes completely when we move from small-scale workflow convenience to enterprise-critical operations. For small teams, local businesses, or narrowly defined processes, tools such as n8n, Zapier, Make, or similar platforms can be useful. They are fast to deploy, relatively inexpensive, and good for proofs of concept, departmental workflows, marketing automations, notification chains, or lightweight integrations. However, that is not the same as enterprise automation. Those of us who have spent decades in automation have already seen multiple generations of “easy” tools presented as strategic answers. The reality is that once you are operating Kubernetes clusters, hybrid IT estates, cloud-native services, complex integration layers, and business-critical processes with millions of concurrent users, the requirements are fundamentally different. At that level, scalability, resilience, governance, observability, security, auditability, latency control, and performance under load are not optional. They are the baseline. That is where many low-code automation platforms start to show their limits. They are often excellent for isolated use cases, but they are not designed to be the foundation of large-scale, mission-critical enterprise systems. A serious organization will not delegate core banking flows, real-time supply chain orchestration, large-scale citizen services, or revenue-critical transaction processing to tools built primarily for convenience and speed of assembly. They are not useless. They simply belong to a different category. They can work well for a WhatsApp-based customer interaction, a lead-routing workflow, a simple website launch, or a back-office notification process. But once the system has to support enterprise-grade throughput, strict SLAs, regulatory controls, and deep operational accountability, these tools are usually insufficient on their own. What I see across clients is not a lack of innovation, but a repeated confusion between tactical automation and strategic automation. The first can be solved with lightweight tools. The second requires engineering discipline, architecture, platform thinking, and solutions designed for performance and scale from day one.