Your AI tools answer questions. Viktor does the work. It lives in Slack, connects to 3,000+ tools across your entire stack, and acts on its own. It watches how your team works, spots problems before anyone notices, and proposes automations built around how your company actually works, before anyone asks. It manages campaigns, builds apps, delivers reports, and writes code. And it runs for weeks without losing context, learning your company deeper every day. Not a chatbot. A coworker.














Copperlane
This is a rlly interesting... Curious what kinds of tasks teams are seeing Viktor take over first in practice?
@athanzhang there's a lot!
I'm gonna answer in 2 parts - overview of Viktor's usage per company size + overall examples.
1. Teams in the sizes of 2-10 people = Viktor becomes a multiple-hat-wearing coworker that supercharges the company -> unlocks limitations resulting from "we don't have enough people to handle these things". You're looking at a company with 2-10 employees operating like a company with 11-50 employees! Example:
- "Cold outreach he wouldn't have resources to do otherwise."
2. Teams in the sizes of 11-50 or 50-200 = they tend to enjoy a dual-benefit of Viktor:
- Viktor is a personal "superman suit" for each employee individually
- Viktor becomes specialized in use per department, e.g. CS uses Viktor and so does Sales, but their specific implementations are case-specific.
- Viktor remains cross-functional, allowing each employee to "break out" of their job titles. For example, all of a sudden anyone at your company can code.
3. Bigger teams use Viktor in so many ways that I couldn't even pinpoint it - instead, here are some cool examples
- "Daily roll-up (tasks, expenses, PPC alerts), Notion dashboard automation, organizing messy data into sheets/trackers"
- "teammate that does things, replaced Make.com automations, email monitoring & summaries, API polling for shipments/inventory, PDF report generation"
- "Daily intel on suppliers/competitors, built insurance spreadsheets (disability coverage calc), building renewal premium calculator"
- "Email handling - morning Slack summary + drafted replies (saves 30-45 min daily)"
- "Marketing strategy: brand separation, channel strategy, content plan for 3 audiences. 2-hour collaborative working session."
Tell me if you have more specific questions! 🙌
Elon Musk Book Summary
any discount for PH members? this looks very promising.
@fanis_poulinakis hmm… talk to me in DMs, maybe we can work something out 😇
Elon Musk Book Summary
@thefilips thanks - Dmed you X
That’s an intense backdrop for a launch. How do you control what Viktor is allowed to do on its own?
@vik_sh Generally we found viktor to be smart enough to make good decisions. But you can always for each integration decide which tools viktor should be allowed to run on its own or which require strict approval (enforced programatically of course, not just prompting).
I'm indifferent towards Slack but I guess I'll see how @getviktor.com makes a difference for my team. Anyway we could get that $50 down to $1 for new users for the 1st month? haha
getviktor.com
@john_oliver11 exciting! there are ways to earn credits once you start using Viktor.
@fwiatrowski I used Viktor to cut my lead filtering and reach out down from 1 hour to 5 minutes. Viktor will take a spreadsheet, use some metrics, do calculations, filter best leads, goes out and enriches data by doing research on the leads website, Pings me on what to follow up on (as there is a manual step). Once I reply, inserts lead into GHL into a Cold email automation that uses custom data in the email to personalize outreach, then watches for opens and clicks... and alerts me via text message and email when a lead is hot for phone contact.
Viktor will even tell me who I need to follow up on or give a bump to.
Took about 2 hours to set up and train. Gave up on the claw for sheer productivity.
getviktor.com
@christopher_browningcc that’s sick. Viktor for GTM. Curious which tools you connected to make this workflow work end to end?
@toni_olendzki GHL, Apollo, Zerobounce, PPCadlab, Google Sheets, Gamma.app
getviktor.com
Hey, I work on growth at Zeta Labs. Here's what surprised us most.
AI tools have terrible day-1 retention. Nearly all of them. Users sign up, try it once, leave. We spent months assuming this was a product quality problem.
It wasn't. It was the blank prompt box.
Someone opens a new AI tool, sees an empty text field asking "How can I help you?" and freezes. They type something generic. Get a generic response. Decide the product isn't for them. The product was fine. The entry point was broken.
Viktor flips this. It doesn't wait for you to figure out what to ask. It joins your Slack, reads what's happening, and messages you first.
"I noticed your team's been going back and forth on X. Want me to handle it?"
Your first experience isn't inventing a prompt. It's saying yes or no.
That one design decision moved our activation numbers more than any feature we shipped.
And "chat with AI" is the wrong model for work. A good coworker doesn't sit in a corner waiting for instructions. They pay attention and come to you with context. That's what Viktor is.
Happy to go deep on anything: how we built the proactive engine, growth experiments that failed, whatever. Ask below.
Antoni
Have used Jace.ai from the Zeta team extensively for a year now and love it! Testing Viktor for few days and will definitely implement it further to tackle our customer support and help with GTM.
getviktor.com
@jan_dziewonskiThat's awesome, thanks for sticking with us since our work on Jace! Support and outreach are a great combo for it. Once you get Viktor integrated, try asking it to review your system and suggest optimizations - kind of like having your own bug bounty program running in the background.
Hit us up if you need anything