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.














@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.
How is this different from OpenClaw?
getviktor.com
@asovix111 Love OpenClaw - Peter Steinberger built something really cool. But they solve different problems.
OpenClaw is an open-source, self-hosted personal AI agent. You run it on your own machine, bring your own API keys, and configure it yourself. It's great for developers and power users who want full control and don't mind getting hands-on with the setup.
Viktor is a managed AI coworker built for business teams. No self-hosting, no API keys, no technical setup. You install the Slack (or Teams) app and start talking to it. It's designed so your marketing, ops, and sales teams can use it on day one without touching a terminal.
The bigger difference is what they're optimized for. OpenClaw leans personal productivity and developer workflows - smart home control, personal inbox, local file management. Viktor is built for team-level business operations - running ad campaigns, monitoring revenue, managing CRM workflows, pulling cross-platform reports, and proactively flagging things across your whole tool stack.
Think of it as: OpenClaw is a brilliant personal assistant you build yourself. Viktor is a coworker your whole team shares who shows up ready to work.
Any plans to have a Discord version?
getviktor.com
@erkinalp next up is Viktor for Microsoft Teams. Discord could be next!
getviktor.com
Viktor submitted a PR while one of our engineers was on vacation. It read the codebase, found the issue, wrote the fix, opened the PR with a proper description. The engineer approved it from his phone. That was a Wednesday
@darthwade true, the proactive part caught me off guard. I expected to always have to ask it for things. Instead it started noticing patterns on its own and flagging stuff before I even knew about it (approving a PR from your phone while on vacation is wild though)
This is really amazing. How did you even get 3000 integrations connected! That speed of execution is awesome
getviktor.com
@thaw_lin_oo We worked on a list of ~50 most popular ones which we manually integrated (took quite some effort, especially doing the app reviews), but to have a wider coverage, we also integrated deeply with Pipedream and now Composio, who already built integrations and tools for a large list of apps.
@peter_albert2 I really appreciate the deep-dive effort on it cuz I know how much time it takes to build that kind of stack. On the other hand, thanks for sharing those tools for integration. These will help me a lot in my future buildings!
getviktor.com
We had an error spike. Viktor read the logs, cross-referenced with recent PRs, identified the likely cause, linked the relevant code, and opened a Linear issue with full context. By the time anyone saw the alert, half the work was already done.
Wispr Flow
@bwilytsch Just the ability to grab Slack context + drop things into Linear is a game-changer for me, definitely resonates.
I've been testing out Viktor for the last few weeks and it's awesome. It's able to give me daily insights to what competitors are doing and who they're working with. Plus I love how proactive it is at telling us what automations should be built
getviktor.com
@thejohnapolinar The competitive intel is one of my favorites too.
Especially when it starts cross-referencing what competitors are doing with what we're spending on ads.
The proactive piece is what keeps surprising people. It goes through your workflows, spots something worth automating, and comes to you: "I noticed you do X every week, want me to take over?" That's the moment most users tell us they really got it.
What integrations are you running it on top of?