OpenAI's AgentKit Sparks a Bigger Question for Legal Tech

OpenAI's launch of AgentKit last week reignited debate across the AI industry about whether visual, node-based workflow builders represent the future of agent development or a pattern we should be moving beyond. In legal tech, where similar tools already exist, it raises a sharper question: is this really the interface lawyers need?

The familiar pattern

AgentKit’s Agent Builder uses a drag-and-drop interface with arrows and branching paths. It looks familiar to anyone who has used tools like Zapier or n8n. While OpenAI’s release targets developers, legal tech companies have been experimenting with comparable systems that let firms map processes visually, sometimes even through natural language.

The appeal is clear. Legal work is structured and repeatable, which makes it seem ideal for visual workflows. Yet we must ask whether this model truly serves lawyers.

The maintenance problem

Visual workflow tools often collapse under real-world complexity. The challenge lies not in the interface but in the engineering behind it: handling exceptions, managing state, fixing errors, and updating as needs evolve.

Even strong legal operations teams struggle here. There is a big difference between “this process can be mapped visually” and “lawyers should maintain these diagrams.” Making a workflow visual does not remove complexity; it shifts it to the person responsible for keeping it running.

Large firms can dedicate people to maintain such systems. Smaller teams cannot. For them, the workflow builder becomes a burden. Technically minded lawyers who enjoy automation exist, but they are rare. Designing for them risks leaving most lawyers behind.

What should we build instead?

Progress will not come from giving every lawyer a node editor. It will come from designing interfaces that mirror how lawyers actually work. Imagine checklist-style flows that focus on outcomes, where the system manages logic and routing automatically. No diagrams to decipher, no branching paths to debug.

At Aracor, we are building toward that model: agentic systems that manage the process, not just the document. Instead of asking lawyers to design or maintain workflows, Aracor’s platform continuously verifies deal documents, detects changes automatically, and updates analyses in real time. Intelligence lives inside the workflow, keeping diligence, negotiation, and compliance aligned across the deal cycle. It replaces static reviews with living processes, giving legal and deal teams clarity without added maintenance.

Lawyers still need transparency. They cannot operate inside black boxes. But transparency does not mean showing every wire and node. It means revealing what matters: what is happening, why it matters, and what effect it has.

The next wave

The future will not belong to visual builders but to systems that think and act within defined boundaries. Aracor’s agentic workflows already point there: executing deal processes end to end, monitoring updates, and maintaining analysis continuously. These agents focus on execution, not configuration, allowing lawyers to stay anchored in judgment while the system keeps every moving part in sync.

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