Both - developers on a free plan using own RSS for sites without one and business people (mainly startups) building their products on top of Apifier.
Typical use is an aggregator that needs common API for all partners who are not able to provide it. So they have running API on Apifier in an hour. It might break once in a while - than you have to update your crawler (not that often if you use internal AJAX calls).
I see, so there's not much value beyond startups and bootstrappers.
I feel like it's a hard sell to enterprises. Scraping is viewed inferior to an API so it makes sense for enterprises to just pay the target website for access to the data.
Typical use is an aggregator that needs common API for all partners who are not able to provide it. So they have running API on Apifier in an hour. It might break once in a while - than you have to update your crawler (not that often if you use internal AJAX calls).