Clio has introduced what it calls a new era of legal productivity with the launch of its Intelligent Legal Work Platform, an AI-powered ecosystem that connects every aspect of the business and practice of law.
Building on its acquisition of vLex and integration of Vincent AI, the platform represents a new category in legal technology, positioning Clio as the first provider to embed AI across the full legal workflow—from intake and matter management to drafting and research.
“With Clio Work, we’re launching a new era of legal productivity,” said Jack Newton, Clio’s CEO and Founder. “By integrating vLex’s world-class legal research library and Vincent AI directly into the Clio platform, we’re giving legal professionals one intelligent workspace to manage cases and execute AI-powered workflows, all without switching systems.”
The platform unifies Clio’s core products—Clio Manage, Clio Grow, Clio Draft, and its newest addition, Clio Work—under a single AI foundation. Together, they form what Clio describes as the industry’s first system of action, capable of anticipating next steps, executing routine work, and generating strategic insights grounded in verified legal data.
Clio Work serves as the centerpiece of this launch: an AI system that combines live matter data with vLex’s global legal library of over one billion documents to deliver context-aware research, reasoning, and case strategy. Unlike point solutions that summarize or speculate, Clio Work is designed to understand—linking facts, law, and strategy to help lawyers “think, write, and win” in one place.
Across the platform, new AI capabilities include:
- Manage AI, which automates administrative workflows such as billing, scheduling, and client updates.
- Grow AI, which accelerates client intake and conversion through automated screening and follow-ups.
- Draft AI, which generates and assembles complex legal documents in minutes.
According to Clio’s Legal Trends Report, firms embracing AI are growing revenue four times faster than headcount, reflecting a surge in productivity and profitability.
“Practice management was about efficiency. Intelligent legal work is about outcomes,” Newton said. “This is the biggest opportunity in the history of legal technology—to expand access to justice, improve lawyer well-being, and deliver better results for clients.”


