The legal AI platform Alexi has launched what it is calling the most comprehensive AI workflow library on the market, designed to help law firms move beyond risky AI experimentation toward reliable, scalable automation of legal work. The Toronto-based company introduced the Workflow Library in September, describing it as a solution developed for firms that […]
The legal AI platform Alexi has launched what it is calling the most comprehensive AI workflow library on the market, designed to help law firms move beyond risky AI experimentation toward reliable, scalable automation of legal work.
The Toronto-based company introduced the Workflow Library in September, describing it as a solution developed for firms that are seeking to adopt AI to automate high-volume and high-value legal tasks while maintaining the quality, compliance, and consistency standards required in legal practice.
When Alexi initially launched the platform, it included 20 ready-to-use workflows spanning both transactional and litigation practice areas. The number of workflows has now grown to 74, with the company planning to continue to expand the available workflows over the coming months.
For transactional lawyers, the library includes workflows for contract review, ownership and entity analysis, diligence memos and risk assessments. Litigation teams can access workflows for drafting, transcript summarization, production analysis, and damage assessment.
You can see a full list of available workflows on Alexi’s website.
“The promise of AI is to enable law firms to deliver significantly more value to significantly more clients,” said Mark Doble, CEO of Alexi. “The Workflow Library is a critical part of making this a reality.”
Alexi says that features of its Workflow Library include:
- Automates repetitive, high-value tasks.
- Delivers reliable, client-ready outputs aligned with best practices and precedent.
- Embeds firm playbooks and institutional knowledge directly into repeatable processes.
- Deployable from day one, delivering measurable ROI immediately.
- Easily customizable to reflect each firm’s unique style, standards and workflows.
- Securely hosted in a private environment, keeping sensitive firm data fully protected.
“By correctly harnessing the power of foundational models, complex processes can be automated step by step, while maintaining control and oversight in the hands of professionals,” Doble said.
Interconnected Tasks
In a demonstration of the product, Doble and Arshi Ghorbani, Alexi’s director of sales, showed how workflows function as a series of interconnected tasks that users can execute with a single click.
For example, the “Summarize Key Terms” workflow for purchase-and-sale agreements automatically extracts and organizes critical information from uploaded documents, with the output available as a Word or PDF download or saved directly to a matter file. Once you run a workflow, you can use the chat to continue the analysis.
In another example, Ghorbani used the “Summarize A Case File” to create a detailed summary of the key information in a litigation matter, with all the factual information linked back to the documents from which the facts were derived, so the user can verify the accuracy.
Key features of Alexi’s Workflow Library are customization and transparency. Each workflow lets the user look “behind the scenes” — users can click on any workflow to see the complete series of steps and prompts behind it. This transparency serves a dual purpose: it builds trust by showing exactly what the AI is doing, and it provides a learning tool for firms that want to build their own workflows.
The platform includes a workflow builder designed for lawyers, not just technical staff. The lawyer is the one who has the knowledge of what goes into a workflow, Ghorbani said, so the tool is built to be accessible without requiring technical expertise. Users can test workflows as they build them and chain steps together, with each step able to pull from previous steps.
A key selling point for law firms is Alexi’s private cloud deployment model. In this architecture, anything a lawyer builds becomes the firm’s proprietary asset, rather than contributing to a shared multi-tenant environment that might benefit competitors.
“If a law firm is investing the time, they should be the ones to confidently own that asset,” Ghorbani said. “When you’re investing in a platform that’s in a multi-tenant environment, that is accretive to the vendor. But here it is accretive only to the customer.”
This approach is particularly relevant as firms increasingly view their custom AI workflows as valuable intellectual property. The private cloud model ensures that these workflow assets remain fully under the firm’s control.
A Strategic Expansion
The Workflow Library launch represents a significant strategic expansion for Alexi, which historically focused on litigation. The company is now positioning itself as a full-service platform for both litigation and transactional work, targeting larger mid-market and enterprise firms.
Alexi launched its private cloud offering earlier this year, but the workflow builder makes this deployment model especially relevant. The company has been working with some of the world’s largest firms to develop and refine the platform, it says.
The company is clearly betting that law firms are ready to move past simple chat interfaces toward more structured, repeatable automation — but only if they can do so while maintaining full control and transparency over the AI tools they’re deploying.
“Modern legal technology is not defined by efficiency, rather it’s defined by excellence,” said Doble. “And with Alexi, firms can now turn their best work into enduring systems that scale, and deliver more value to more clients, and build a true competitive advantage.”

