Agentforce Vibes – what can it do?
Agentforce Vibes is a new Salesforce AI-assisted tool that helps design and build complex Salesforce applications with minimal manual effort. It operates in two modes: Plan, which drafts the data model and automation plan for review, and Act, which builds and deploys metadata and automations upon approval. This demo walk-through shows how Agentforce Vibes helped build a full recruitment app within an hour, including custom objects, flows, approval processes, dynamic Lightning record pages, and email templates — mostly declarative and code-free. Despite hitting token limits that caused some deployment issues, the tool significantly accelerates building scalable solutions, making it well worth exploring for Salesforce admins and developers willing to experiment.
- Use Agentforce Vibes Plan mode to design and approve Salesforce data models and automation.
- Leverage Act mode in Agentforce Vibes to automate metadata deployment and Flow creation.
- Build complex apps declaratively with minimal Apex, using Flows, dynamic record pages, and permission sets.
- Monitor token limits in Developer Orgs to avoid partial deployment and related errors.
- Experiment in pre-release or sandbox orgs to validate AI-generated architecture and automation safely.
When writing an article about the latest Salesforce Spring ’26 features last week, I noticed an Agentforce Vibes option on the setup menu in the new pre-release developer org I had created. Being curious, I just had to jump in and take a look. Setting up Agentforce Vibes I accepted the Terms and Conditions – knowing this was relatively new and could still be a bit buggy. I was just experimenting anyway and I was doing it safely in a developer org completely isolated from any “real” Salesforce environment. Note: Agentforce Vibes was formerly known as Code Builder. (of course, a name change makes it better) It took a few minutes to set things up: I had to click Install a few times to add some new extensions: When all the extensions finished installing, I chose the resource panel icon (cloud) because it looked interesting. This has lots of useful resources to help get started.