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AI

How to evaluate vibe coding tools for your enterprise

July 25, 2025

Written By Mike Chirokas

I've listened to 80+ sales and product conversions with product, design, and engineering leaders in enterprises evaluating vibe coding solutions, interviewed dozens of developers using multiple vibe coding solutions, interviewed engineering optimization leaders evaluating AI coding solutions, watched 100s of users build experiences with our vibe coding solution, tried Bolt, Lovable, V0, Replit, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Claude Code, Fusion, and personally shipped vibe coded iterations to our own product.

I've concluded one thing:

The majority of teams today are vibe-evaluating vibe coding solutions and there's a far better way to do it.

This guide is intended to give product, engineering, and design leaders in enterprise organizations a clear understanding of the two types of vibe coding solutions, how vibe coding fits into your enterprise, the criteria you should look for when shortlisting your vibe coding solution, and how to POC a vibe coding solution. 

The two types of vibe coding solutions

In my opinion, "vibe coding" is the process of prompting AI to create code, visualizing the changes, and then iterating on those visualizations. This process continues until the outcome suits your liking.

There are two categories of vibe coding solutions and almost every enterprise will use both:

AI-powered code editors (IDEs)AI-powered visual development environments (VDEs)

Example offerings

GitHub Copilot, Cursor, and Claude Code

Fusion, Bolt, Lovable, Replit, and V0

Primary users

Developers

Non-developers (product managers, UX designers, etc.)

Interface

Code-first

Visual-first

Common enterprise tasks

Full-stack development

Front-end development and prototyping

The overarching theme we hear when product, engineering, and design leaders come to us is that they're looking for ways to increase productivity and velocity "across the entire software development lifecycle". As part of their mandate, they're considering every step from the initial idea to the design through the delivery of that feature.

In many cases, they've identified a few common workflows that take longer and more resources than they probably should in a world where you can literally speak features into existence.

We've outlined three of the most common workflows in the graphic below:

A "Before and After" workflow comparison for creating a new feature. The old process includes PRD creation, design, and handoffs. The new process simplifies it to prototyping and development using VDE- and IDE-powered workflows.
Workflow comparison for UX iteration or design system updates. The traditional flow includes multiple handoffs. The improved flow reduces it to visual building and code review, leveraging VDE and IDE tools.
Side-by-side comparison showing the shift from a traditional multi-step process (PRD, design, handoffs, development) to a streamlined approach of visual building and development using VDE and IDE workflows.

Quickly poke around social media and you'll see thousands of indie hackers and hobbyists leveraging vibe coding solutions to quickly spin up prototypes and web apps. While these apps are often impressively powerful, they don't often meet many of the requirements enterprise have or accomplish the types of things they need.

Here's one example: I recently concluded interviews with eight users in different organizations who use or have tried multiple AI-powered VDEs. In almost every case, they leveraged them for personal or hobby projects but almost none of them used them to accomplish tasks in their day jobs. They mentioned one of the major limiting factors was that the VDEs they tried didn't integrate with their organization's design system, code, and/or existing workflows.

To help you evaluate vibe coding solutions for your enterprise, I borrowed a framework I used at Forrester Research when I conducted benchmarks to help you identify the right criteria to look for to ensure the vibe coding solution you POC doesn't just work at the hobbyist level, it can scale for your entire organization to genuinely accelerate the entire software development lifecycle.

CategoryDescription & why it matters

Context providers

Context providers are the different integrations you can “plug in” to the AI to give it context. We’ve found that the most successful teams leveraging AI have shifted their efforts from “prompt engineering” to “context engineering”: finding ways to bring context from across their enterprise into AI so it can better understand what you want it to do to generate higher-quality results.

Ease of use

“Quality of generation” is a challenging feature to benchmark as it’s often the result of the context provided. As one proxy, we recommend evaluating “ease of use”. An example of poor “ease of use” is as one design leader mentioned getting stuck in “prompt hell going in circles to fix one small thing”. Many vibe coding solutions for hobbyists have done this well and it’s we believe enterprise vibe coding solutions should also deliver.

Developer experience

Even if you’re evaluating a VDE that will primarily be leveraged by non-developers, we still recommend evaluating the developer experience. If the objective is to accelerate the entire SDLC, developers should be able to easily integrate context and review, test, manage, and work with vibe coded experiences.

Security and scale

It’s not just about SOC compliance, SSO, and AI training exclusion, to scale a vibe coding solution across a global organization, we recommend evaluating the collaborative features, ability to setup and iterate org-wide templates, and RBAC

You can use the following scorecard to evaluate when shortlisting a vibe coding solution for your enterprise:

Download the template

We recommend a seven step approach to POCing a vibe coding solution for your enterprise:

StepTaskDetails / recommendation

1

Define the roles and category of vibe coding solution you want to start with

We recommend POCing:

  • IDEs with developers
  • VDEs with UX designers and Product Managers.

2

Define the workflows you want to optimize

We recommend POCing:

  • For developers: Generating a UI from scratch and generating a new feature from scratch
  • For UX designers and product managers: Generating a prototype from scratch and visually iterating the front-end of an existing feature/UI
  • For UX designers in a design system team: Visually iterating a code component in a component library, creating a new code component in a component library, visually adding new test cases to a Storybook

3

Set up your environment context for success

This should include:

  • Giving team members a starting point that includes your existing design system including code components, styles, etc.
  • If you’re leveraging Figma designs, use Figma designs that use auto-layout and design best practices
  • Including relevant MCPs. For example, if your Product Managers work in Jira, directly connect to Jira via an MCP

4

Educate your team on best practices for prompting

Best practices include:

  1. Using screenshots
  2. Mentioning components by name (if you know them)
  3. Selecting the exact portion of the experience you want to iterate
  4. Use Figma designs to provide context
  5. Leverage MCPs to save time downloading or copying and pasting large context
  6. Saving custom instructions for things that keep coming up

We wrote a blog with others entitled, 11 prompting tips for building UIs that don’t suck.

5

Use real repos (if possible)

We realize in the POC stage some organizations cannot connect their real repos to a vibe coding solution, but there’s something immensely powerful for a non-developer to be able to iterate a real codebase and see something they created show up in their customer’s/end user’s workflow

6

Setup a Slack/Teams/etc. channel and share video recordings of experiences

Whether the experience is good or bad, sharing video recordings of your team’s experience in-context can help others chime in with support, celebrate accomplishments, or gather feedback to bring to your vendor. This is a best practice we found when researching how engineering optimization leaders evaluate AI coding tools in our blog entitled, 3 Very Specific Tips from Engineering Leaders for Evaluating AI Coding Tools.

7

Quantify impact across time to market, resolved features/tickets, and efficiency across the whole team (even if you’re only POCing workflows for one role)

Some metrics we’ve seen include: PRs shipped by non-developers, ticket resolution time, lines of code generated, and developer/designer/PM efficiency. Note: even if you’re exclusively POCing workflows for product managers or UX designers, it’s possible that the majority of the productivity benefit could actually be in the development phase; be sure to measure accordingly.

At Builder, we provide an AI-powered visual development environment called Fusion. It's built for enterprise workflows from the ground up. We've helped some of the largest organizations in the globe figure out how they can leverage vibe coding in their workflows and we may be able to help you too. Reach out to get a personalized demo.

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