Lindy is a well-loved, SMB-friendly agent builder — and, like osFoundry, it’s model-agnostic. The contrasts are in audience, delivery model, and how cost behaves. Here’s a factual look for a US business, with sources cited. (dgm implements osFoundry, a separate company’s platform — we are not osFoundry.)
At a glance
| osFoundry | Lindy AI | |
|---|---|---|
| Core focus | Orchestration: agents, automations, apps | No-code “AI employee” builder (+ voice) |
| Models | Bring your own, any provider | Model-agnostic |
| Audience | SMB to enterprise (implemented) | SMB / small teams (self-serve) |
| Pricing | Via dgm: $399 / $3,999/mo | Credit-based; Free → ~$299/mo Business |
| SaaS consolidation | Designed to consolidate | 5,000+ integrations; agent builder |
What Lindy is
Lindy is a no-code “AI employee”/agent builder for business automation — email, scheduling, calls, and multi-step workflows — with 5,000+ app integrations, 50+ templates, a “Computer Use” capability for sites without APIs, and the Gaia voice agent for low-latency phone work. It’s highly rated for ease of use, and its sweet spot is small teams and SMBs.
osFoundry overlaps in running agents, but emphasizes broader orchestration plus the explicit goal of consolidating overlapping SaaS — delivered as an implemented system by dgm rather than a self-serve, SMB tool.
Models
Both are model-agnostic. Lindy’s founder explicitly emphasizes model agnosticity (credit cost varies by the model used); osFoundry is likewise model-agnostic at the orchestration layer. Model flexibility is common ground.
Security and data
Lindy offers enterprise features on its top tier — HIPAA/BAA, SSO, SCIM, and audit logs — though specific data-residency details weren’t found in available sources, so verify those if they matter to you. With osFoundry, dgm confirms data-residency and the equivalent controls against your requirements during the integration assessment, which is the safer route for a business with strict requirements.
Pricing
Lindy is credit-based: a free tier plus paid plans up to a Business tier around $299/month. Two things to know — credits don’t roll over, and agents pause when credits are exhausted, which can interrupt workflows mid-cycle. For predictable, always-on automation that’s a real consideration. dgm’s osFoundry engagement pricing is fixed and public instead: $399 assessment and $3,999/month integration, with no per-seat fees and no credit cliffs.
SMB self-serve vs implemented orchestration
Lindy is a self-serve, SMB-oriented builder — fast to start, strong on voice, ideal for a small team that wants to wire up agents themselves. osFoundry, via dgm, is an implemented orchestration layer aimed at consolidating tools and running always-on workflows without credit interruptions. If you’re a small team that wants to build quickly, Lindy is appealing; if you want orchestration and consolidation delivered with steady cost, osFoundry fits better.
Who each is best for
Lindy is the stronger choice if you’re a small team or SMB wanting a fast, self-serve agent builder with strong voice capabilities. osFoundry is the stronger choice if you want implemented orchestration and SaaS consolidation with predictable cost and no credit cliffs.
Which should a US company choose?
If you’re an SMB that values speed, ease, and voice, Lindy is a strong, model-agnostic option. If you want orchestration plus consolidation delivered for you, then osFoundry is the more direct fit. dgm assesses your goals, recommends the right path for a US business, and implements it end to end.