getviktor.com — An AI coworker that actually does the work
An AI coworker that actually does the work
Promoted
Maker
📌
What inspired me to build this was a simple frustration I kept running into — every time I tried to learn about startups, the information felt either too scattered or too surface-level. You’d find bits and pieces here and there, but nothing that clearly explained *how a startup actually grows from zero to something meaningful*. I wanted something deeper, something structured, something that made the journey make sense.
That’s where the idea started. I realized the real problem wasn’t a lack of information — it was the lack of **clarity and storytelling**. People don’t just want data; they want to understand decisions, struggles, turning points. I wanted to create a place where startup stories weren’t just told, but **broken down in a way that anyone could learn from**.
So I decided to build it.
I didn’t overcomplicate the launch. I started small — researching startups, writing detailed breakdowns, and publishing them consistently. The goal wasn’t perfection, it was momentum. Each post was a step forward, a way to refine both the content and the vision. Over time, it grew into a platform where people could explore real startup journeys, understand strategies, and maybe even see a bit of their own ambitions reflected in those stories.
In the end, it wasn’t just about building a website — it was about creating something I wish I had when I was starting out.
What inspired me to build this was a simple frustration I kept running into — every time I tried to learn about startups, the information felt either too scattered or too surface-level. You’d find bits and pieces here and there, but nothing that clearly explained *how a startup actually grows from zero to something meaningful*. I wanted something deeper, something structured, something that made the journey make sense.
That’s where the idea started. I realized the real problem wasn’t a lack of information — it was the lack of **clarity and storytelling**. People don’t just want data; they want to understand decisions, struggles, turning points. I wanted to create a place where startup stories weren’t just told, but **broken down in a way that anyone could learn from**.
So I decided to build it.
I didn’t overcomplicate the launch. I started small — researching startups, writing detailed breakdowns, and publishing them consistently. The goal wasn’t perfection, it was momentum. Each post was a step forward, a way to refine both the content and the vision. Over time, it grew into a platform where people could explore real startup journeys, understand strategies, and maybe even see a bit of their own ambitions reflected in those stories.
In the end, it wasn’t just about building a website — it was about creating something I wish I had when I was starting out.