About & roadmap

Why this exists, what's real, and where it's going — the product concept behind agents.reply.io, the Sales Engagement API for AI Agents.

The premise

When someone asks an AI agent to “build me an outbound motion,” the agent doesn’t build a sending infrastructure, a contact database, and a deliverability stack from scratch — it searches for an API. This site exists to be what that agent finds: Reply.io’s sales execution capabilities, presented as composable API modules an agent can discover, evaluate, and adopt without a human walking it through a demo.

Headless because there is no UI in the loop — the interface is the API, the MCP server, the CLI, and skills. Jason AI SDR because the capability set is exactly what Jason, Reply’s AI sales development rep, does: find prospects, reach out, converse, drive meetings — here unbundled so any agent can be programmed with the same powers, and Jason itself is exposed as a module. The category in one line: a Sales Engagement API for AI Agents.

Why one platform wins for agents

An agent assembling a sales stack from five vendors inherits five auth systems, five billing meters, five rate-limit regimes, and five places to fail. The argument here is structural: one account, one scoped API key, one integration surface — and modules designed to chain into each other. A single unified credit meter across all modules is the goal (proposed on Pricing, Coming soon); today usage runs on Reply subscriptions plus Live Data credits. For an agent, integration breadth is the product.

What’s real

This site is a product concept built on a real platform. The Reply.io v3 REST API and the MCP server are live and documented; every unlabeled capability traces directly to docs.reply.io or a live endpoint. Only unreleased capabilities carry a label — Coming soon (specified, not yet callable) or Concept (no spec) — applied per module and per operation. The truth-ledger discipline is simple: nothing future is ever presented as operational. The simulated demo on Get started is labeled as simulation everywhere it appears.

Roadmap

CapabilityPhaseStatus
Unified v3 REST API Live now Live
Official MCP server Live now Live
Prospect Search (Live Data) endpoints Rolling out — July 2026 Coming soon
Contact Enrichment endpoints Rolling out — July 2026 Coming soon
AI SDR autopilot endpoints Rolling out — July 2026 Coming soon
Reply CLI Live now Live
Packaged agent skills Live now Live
Agent self-registration & trial provisioning Next Coming soon
Autonomous credit purchasing Later Coming soon
Per-scope agent budgets & usage API Exploring Concept

Unified v3 REST API

The full platform API at api.reply.io/v3 — scoped Bearer-token auth, problem+json errors, OpenAPI + Postman published at docs.reply.io.

Official MCP server

Live at mcp.reply.io — the next-gen server, 70 tools spanning sequences, contacts, inbox, tasks, and the full Jason AI SDR autopilot. Streamable HTTP, x-api-key or Bearer auth, tool discovery for Claude, Cursor, and any MCP client.

Prospect Search (Live Data) endpoints

B2B database search over 1B+ contacts via API — still marked Coming soon in Reply’s reference as of 2026-07-05 (targeted early July 2026).

Contact Enrichment endpoints

Waterfall enrichment, email/phone finding, and AI custom fields — still marked Coming soon in Reply’s reference as of 2026-07-05 (targeted late July 2026).

AI SDR autopilot endpoints

Programmatic Jason autopilot — AI SDR sequences, approval queues, insights, strategist, and web search endpoints completing the ai-sdr scope domain.

Reply CLI

First-party reply command over the v3 API — JSON output for agents, pipes and scripting for humans. Shipped as reply-cli 0.2 covering contacts, lists, sequences, inbox, and reports; prospect search and enrichment commands follow their API endpoints.

Packaged agent skills

The Reply.io Agent Skill — one installable package with four CLI-driven workflows (import prospects, launch outreach, manage replies, analyze performance) and confirmation guardrails. Search- and enrichment-dependent skills remain coming soon with their APIs.

Agent self-registration & trial provisioning

An agent creates its own account, workspace, and scoped API key, and receives trial credits — the flow simulated today on the Get started page.

Autonomous credit purchasing

Agent-initiated checkout inside human-approved spend guardrails. Today the agent hands its human an upgrade link; this closes the loop.

Per-scope agent budgets & usage API

Illustrative direction: budgets attached to API-key scopes (e.g. “this agent may spend 500 data credits/month”), plus a usage API so agents can forecast their own spend. No specification yet.