/for-you is composio.dev's pitch to individual developers — the opposite end of the funnel from /enterprise. Same product, different reader. The page is built around a few interactive set pieces; the rest is connective tissue. Each set piece below is the actual component running live.
The hero opens with 'Make your AGENTS do more' — except 'agents' rotates. Every two seconds it cycles through the agents Composio's users actually wire up: Claude, Codex, Notion AI, Openclaw. Comes back to the generic word at the end of the loop. Tells anyone who built with one of those tools that this page is talking to them.
The product's surface area is its single biggest selling point — Composio connects to roughly a thousand SaaS apps. Listing them is boring. The globe is fast: an auto-rotating sphere with toolkit cards that swap in and out as they hit the back. Click a card and it pauses on that toolkit. The 40 names below come from the live fallback list; with an API key it pulls the actual top-50 by usage.
The next section is the case for using Composio at all. Tasks fly down rails — 'Draft weekly update' to Linear+Slack, 'Schedule 1:1s' to Calendar, 'Pull Figma comments' to Figma — pass through one of three agents (Claude, Codex, Notion AI), get routed by Composio, and rip past to the right edge with a beam chasing them. The Composio logo at the centre is a Heatmap shader, brightening as more tasks pass through.
Most agent platforms assume you have one Gmail. Real users have a work account, a personal account, sometimes a third. The diagram on this section shows the routing — Composio sits at the gateway, the agent talks to one logical Gmail, and Composio decides which underlying account to actually call based on context.