Clio Introduces Vincent Studio



A new feature that allows law firms to create and manage AI workflows based on how their work is done

Clio, the global leader in legal AI technology, today announced the launch of Vincent Studio, a new feature available to large law firms and enterprise legal teams that allows organizations to tailor how Vincent is used across their business. Vincent Studio enables teams to embed their processes, expertise, and standards directly into AI-powered workflows, helping them scale institutional knowledge while maintaining consistency and governance.

As legal AI adoption continues to expand, firms are increasingly focused on how technology can support their existing ways of working. Many organizations struggle to apply generalized AI tools to complex and highly differentiated legal practices. Vincent Studio addresses this challenge by allowing firms to design workflows that reflect how work is actually performed inside the firm, capturing the accumulated judgment and experience that define its approach to legal service delivery.

“Law firms build value through the consistent application of judgment, experience, and process, but that knowledge is often difficult to scale across a growing organization,” said John Foreman, Chief Product Officer at Clio. “Firms need technology that strengthens how they work rather than introducing variability. Vincent Studio gives firms a practical way to embed their processes and standards directly into AI workflows, allowing their best ways of working to be applied consistently across teams. This helps firms expand the use of AI with confidence, improve quality and consistency in legal work, and maintain the level of oversight that enterprise legal practice requires.”

Vincent Studio replaces ad hoc prompting with structured, no-code workflows designed to support real legal and business processes. Through an intuitive builder interface, firms can create, refine, and manage workflows that guide users through complex work in a consistent and repeatable manner. Each workflow is composed of configurable components that define how work is performed and how outputs are generated, ensuring results align with firm standards regardless of who is using Vincent.

By structuring work in this way, Vincent Studio enables firms to formalize best practices and make them available across teams and offices. Lawyers at every level benefit from workflows that reflect firm-approved approaches, helping reduce variability in output while increasing confidence and efficiency. Over time, this approach allows institutional knowledge to remain within the firm and continue to build as workflows are refined and expanded.

Early adopters are already seeing the impact of Vincent Studio on innovation and client service.

“We are thrilled to be one of vLex’s thought partners in the development of Studio,” said Evan Shenkman, Chief Knowledge and Innovation Officer at Fisher Phillips. “Our attorneys have already seen enormous benefit from leveraging Vincent’s workflows to provide faster, better service to our clients, but the launch of Studio has dramatically expanded our firm’s ability to creatively innovate on Vincent.”

For enterprise legal teams, Vincent Studio supports broader adoption of AI by providing a clear framework for governance and quality control. Firms are able to apply AI in a way that aligns with internal expectations, supports risk management, and strengthens operational consistency. Vincent Studio reinforces how firms already operate and provides a foundation for scaling those approaches responsibly.

Vincent Studio has already been deployed with select enterprise customers through early access and beta programs, where it has supported the standardization of complex processes and enabled confident expansion of AI usage across teams. With this launch, Clio continues to evolve Vincent to meet the needs of enterprise legal organizations focused on long-term operational excellence and sustained competitive advantage.