Runway
AI video generation and editing platform for creative professionals
Our take
Where Runway fits in an AI agent stack
We would not call Runway a universal answer, but it clearly has a place in this market. Across the directory, it shows up repeatedly in high-value automation work. That usually means builders are trusting it with a meaningful slice of the workflow rather than treating it as a throwaway experiment.
What I like is that it keeps showing up in real operating environments, not just in tutorial content. When a tool resurfaces across multiple strategies, that is usually a stronger signal than any feature page or marketing claim.
The main caveat is fit. Runway looks best when the team knows whether it wants speed, control, or reach. Based on the directory, the usage mix leans toward mixed-skill teams, and the most common pairings with other stack tools suggest that operators are rarely using it alone. We would frame it as one layer in a working stack, not the whole strategy by itself.
Best for
- Teams building high-leverage workflows where the tool needs to do real work inside the process
- Operators who want a practical tool that already shows up in real deployments on the site
- Builders who want to learn by adapting real case-study patterns rather than reading product marketing
Not ideal if
- Teams looking for Runway to replace every other system in the stack
- Operators who do not yet have a clear workflow, owner, or business goal behind the automation
- Anyone expecting the tool choice alone to create ROI without good process design around it
Why we think builders keep coming back to Runway
We usually pay attention when a tool keeps appearing in live strategies instead of just comparison content. Runway has that pattern here, which is why I think it deserves a stronger page than a simple feature summary.
Watch-out: Runway still needs a clear role in the stack. If the workflow is vague, the tool will not rescue it by itself.
Top Strategies Using Runway
No strategies yet — new case studies added weekly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Runway actually do in these AI agent stacks?
Runway usually handles one important layer of the system rather than the entire business workflow. On this site, it most often appears in real deployments where the operator needs the stack to do something useful, repeatable, and measurable.
Who is Runway best for?
Teams building high-leverage workflows where the tool needs to do real work inside the process Operators who want a practical tool that already shows up in real deployments on the site Builders who want to learn by adapting real case-study patterns rather than reading product marketing
When is Runway probably the wrong choice?
Teams looking for Runway to replace every other system in the stack Operators who do not yet have a clear workflow, owner, or business goal behind the automation Anyone expecting the tool choice alone to create ROI without good process design around it
How are builders pairing Runway with other tools?
Most teams here are not using Runway in isolation. The stronger examples pair it with supporting tools for routing, storage, messaging, or execution.
Is Runway beginner friendly or more advanced?
The usage pattern on BuiltWithAgents leans mixed-skill. I would not judge the tool only by its UI; the real question is whether the workflow around it is simple or operationally complex.
What kinds of businesses are using Runway?
We see Runway used across multiple business contexts on the site, which usually points to a more durable use case than a one-off demo.
How should I evaluate whether Runway is worth it for me?
I would start by reading the case studies on this page and asking a simple question: does Runway solve the bottleneck, or is it just adjacent to it? If the tool is helping the workflow move faster, close more leads, save more time, or reduce operational drag, that is the signal that matters.
Example Use Cases
AI agent workflows
The clearest fit we see for Runway is inside ai agent systems where speed and reliability matter more than novelty.
service business operating systems
Several examples on the site point to Runway being useful when teams in service business want to turn a good manual process into something repeatable and easier to scale.
Stack glue for real deployments
I would look at Runway most seriously when it needs to sit alongside other tools and own one important part of the workflow well, rather than pretending to do everything.
Common Stack Pairings
Related tools will appear here as more strategies are published.