The marketing pages for this tool list 50 features. These 15 use cases are the ones that actually matter when you are using it day to day.
Here's something I learned the hard way: the best AI tool isn't the one with the most features. It's the one that explains what it's doing. When I first started coding with AI assistants, I'd get suggestions that looked correct but fell apart the moment I tested them. Claude was the first tool that walked me through the reasoning — not just the answer, but how it arrived there. That changed how I work.
For for agencies, the same rule applies. You want a tool that gives you a workflow, not just a result. Something you can repeat, debug, and improve over time — not a black box you have to trust.
Replit is developers and engineering teams writing production code. For scaling agency output, the typical workflow is:
For solo work:
Help me serve more clients without hiring for the next 30 minutes. I have these inputs: [paste]. Output: a clear, ready-to-use draft.
For team use:
I'm on a small team. We need to serve more clients without hiring. Suggest a workflow, the prompts we'd need, and how to measure success.
For client work:
Generate 3 different versions of [output] for client X. Each should be on-brand and ready to send after light editing.
Other tools in this space: Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Windsurf, Aider, Cody, Cline, Tabnine, Continue. Replit stands out for coding workflows. If your task is heavily writing functions-focused, it's a strong default. If you need broader coverage, look at the alternatives.