Viktor is not a bot. Viktor is an employee. When I speak to Viktor, I do not worry about code, I do not worry about spelling, I do not worry about a lot of things. Viktor does not have a certain number of hours worked, and Viktor does not have vacation requests.
Viktor does, however, have the ability to make a vision come true. When you are designing something you can only explain, this assistant serves as a webmaster, creative director, and all-around vision maker.
To date, Viktor has built seven member facing platforms, ten other ancillary sites, and two web apps. The capabilities are incredible and so are the possibilities.
As with any AI, there are some growing pains. There are moments it misreads a command and you have to course correct. But once you get past those, the product and the results outweigh the issues by a lot.
The only way I can really tell you what Viktor can do for you is to say try it. You get $100 in free credits, plus you could get $50 off your first purchase. That's about as generous a start as any company will give you, and if you need the link, here it is: https://ref.viktor.com/mike-williams
Happy Viktoring. I hope it helps build your vision, save you time, or just makes your life easier.
viktor.com
Hey Product Hunt, Fryd here, one of the founders.
We spent three years on a stubborn bet: build an AI that does the work, not one more assistant that drafts something and waits for you to finish it. It worked. Viktor has been doing real jobs for 30,000+ companies inside Slack, and in the last 10 weeks it crossed a $15M run rate. Today it moves to where most of the working world actually is: Microsoft Teams.
Viktor is an autonomous AI employee. You @mention it in a channel and it does the thing end to end: closes the books overnight, reconciles the payouts and flags the one that is wrong, screens applicants and books the calls, builds the board deck from six tools that do not talk to each other. It connects to 3,200+ integrations, so it works across your whole stack, not just Microsoft's.
What we care about:
- It ships finished work, not suggestions.
- It asks before anything irreversible, and pushes back when you are about to make a mistake.
- No per-seat tax. Start with $100 in credits, no card.
We will be in the comments all day. Tell us where it impresses you and where it falls short, we read every word. The question I am most curious about: what would you hand Viktor first?
Get started: viktor.com
@mention @fwiatrowski I love it!! such a game changer in Slack directly.
Having to reconnect in Claude all the time, outdated APIs etc made it a pain to use...
I LOVE not having to log into Stripe manually all the time as well. Game changer!!
Thanks for the amazing work
Wispr Flow
I get pitched AI tools constantly and rarely put my name on one. I'm hunting Viktor because I've watched it do real work, not demos.
I lead growth at Wispr Flow and advise Viktor, so I've seen it up close for months. Most AI products hand you a draft and wait for you to finish it. Viktor takes the whole job and comes back done. You brief it like a sharp new hire, in plain language, and it goes and does it.
The Teams launch is the part I'd flag. Teams has 320M+ monthly users to Slack's ~80M. Both are full of people doing real work, but the bigger share of it runs on Microsoft, and that's who Viktor couldn't reach until today.
What earned my trust: it ships finished work, and it stops to ask before anything it can't undo. Go hand it the job you've been avoiding.
Congrats to Fryderyk and the team. This one earned the hunt.
The Teams angle makes sense for distribution - that's where the work already happens. But I'm skeptical about "autonomous AI employee" claims when the reality is usually a lot of human review happening in the background. The real test is error recovery - when Viktor closes the books and gets a reconciliation wrong, how does it flag that vs. silently proceeding? That failure mode is what keeps most finance teams from trusting autonomous agents with anything that touches the ledger. $15M ARR is a real signal though. Would love to understand more about what the 30k companies are actually letting it do end to end without human sign-off.
viktor.com
@galdayan Fair skepticism — honestly the "autonomous employee" framing invites it. Here's how we actually think about it. We didn't try to remove the human, we designed around them. Anything irreversible — touching money, sending externally, or writing to a system of record — goes out as an approval draft first: Viktor shows the exact action, its reasoning, and the data it used, and a person clicks approve. That's the default for ledger-touching work, not a fallback. On the failure mode you're pointing at — silently proceeding on a bad reconciliation — that's the one we treat as unacceptable. Viktor is built to surface uncertainty instead of papering over it. If a number won't verify or a match doesn't tie out, it stops and flags the discrepancy rather than guessing to look complete. "I couldn't reconcile these three transactions, here's why" is a successful outcome for us, not a failed one. What runs truly end-to-end without sign-off is the low-blast-radius work: monitoring, research, drafting, data pulls, internal reporting, inbox triage. The closer it gets to the ledger, the more we keep a human on the approve button — on purpose. Happy to go deeper on the reconciliation flow if it's useful.
3200 integrations plus weeks of unattended runtime inside microsoft teams is enterprise level blast radius if even one of those connections gets misused. "asks before anything irreversible" is one sentence holding a lot of weight when the agent touches this much of the stack
viktor.com
@abdullah_bin_asad That's why you can programmatically and deterministically gate all actions behind approval flow (+ you get to choose which integrations you connect)
viktor.com
@abdullah_bin_asad Viktor is autonomous but equipped with permissions settings and approvals!
viktor.com
Hi everyone, I do growth at Viktor.
Slightly funny thing about launching our Microsoft Teams version here: Product Hunt is the most early-adopter room on the internet, and the reason we built for Teams is to leave that room. Most of the working world is not in a Slack workspace ranking AI tools. They are in Teams doing the accounting, running ops, answering customers. Viktor is for them now too.
Here is the thing that reframed it for me. You do not prompt-engineer Viktor. You brief him.
Plain language, the way you would brief a sharp new hire. No clever syntax, no blank box daring you to be smart. You describe the outcome and he comes back with the finished thing, not a draft to clean up.
That is also why Teams matters. The people who never wanted to learn "prompting" are exactly the people who get the most out of an employee they can just talk to.
Same Viktor, same 3,000+ tools, now living where your company already works. Brief him, see what comes back.
Would love your honest reactions, especially the unflattering ones.
Viktor is the one agent I've tried that actually works reliably. It doesn't wander off track or get stuck in an infinite loop. It does the stuff you'd think it does based on what you can connect to it, but I've even had Viktor project manage (without a connected PM tool - just letting it use Slack) and it figured out how to follow up well - just the right amount of annoying that makes a great project manager - and it messaged people to clear roadblocks. Well worth the price!
viktor.com
@russbroomell just one of the many hats Viktor can wear!