## Key Takeaways

- **Relevance AI is a builder. Viktor is an AI employee.** One gives you a platform to design a team of agents; the other does the task when you ask.
- **Relevance shines when you want to architect a process.** Defined roles, tools, and handoffs that run the same way every time.
- **Viktor shines when you want to delegate in plain language.** You @mention it in Slack, describe the outcome, and review what comes back.
- **Setup is the dividing line.** With a builder, the power lives in the configuration you own. With an AI employee, the work lives in a sentence.
- **Both can act across tools.** The question is whether you want to design the wiring or skip it.
- **Viktor is review-first by default.** It drafts and waits for approval, which matters once an AI is touching real systems.

Relevance AI and Viktor both promise AI that does real work, so they end up on the same shortlist. They are built around different beliefs about how that work should get set up. Relevance believes you should design a workforce. Viktor believes you should be able to hand a task to a colleague and move on. Picking well is mostly about knowing which of those you actually want.

This is an honest comparison. Relevance AI is a capable platform with real depth. The useful question is not which is better, but which matches how your team wants to work.

## What is Relevance AI?

Relevance AI is a platform for building a workforce of AI agents. You define individual agents, give each one a role, tools, and instructions, and assemble them into multi-agent processes that hand work between each other. It is aimed at teams that want to architect repeatable, agentic operations and are comfortable specifying how each agent thinks and what it can touch.

The strength is control. If you want an SDR agent that qualifies leads, hands them to a research agent, which hands a brief to a writer agent, Relevance gives you the canvas to build exactly that. The work runs the way you designed it, every time.

The cost is the same as any builder: the design is your job, and so is the maintenance. A workforce you architect is a workforce you own.

## What is Viktor?

Viktor is an AI employee. It lives in Slack and Microsoft Teams, connects to 3,200+ tools, and does the task itself rather than giving you a place to build one:

- pulls live numbers from Stripe, HubSpot, Google Ads, and Linear and posts the report to your channel
- triages support tickets in Pylon, drafts the replies, and waits for approval
- runs recurring jobs on a schedule: weekly pipeline reviews, daily digests, monthly board packs
- updates the systems where work lives, from your CRM to your email to your project tracker

You do not configure Viktor into a role. You message it like a teammate and the task comes back done. If the category is new to you, [What is an AI coworker?](https://viktor.com/blog/what-is-an-ai-coworker) lays out the definition.

## How do they compare side by side?

| | Relevance AI | Viktor |
|---|---|---|
| Core model | Build a workforce of agents | Delegate a task to an AI employee |
| Where you work | The Relevance platform | Slack and Microsoft Teams |
| Setup | Define roles, tools, handoffs | Describe the outcome in a message |
| Who maintains it | You own the design | Nothing to wire or maintain |
| Acts across tools | Yes, as configured | Yes, across 3,200+ tools |
| Recurring work | Build it into a process | Native scheduled tasks |
| Review model | Configurable | Drafts first, you approve by default |

The rows that decide most evaluations are setup and maintenance. If you want to design how the work runs and keep that control, a builder is the right call. If you want the work gone without owning a system, that is AI employee territory.

## When is the builder the right call?

Choose Relevance AI when the process matters as much as the output. Some teams genuinely need a designed, repeatable agentic system: a defined pipeline where each step is specified, auditable, and runs identically at volume. If you have the appetite to architect that and the people to maintain it, a builder rewards the investment with control that a delegation model does not give you.

It is also the better fit when the work is a high-volume, well-understood process rather than a varied set of one-off asks. A builder turns a known process into an assembly line. That is real leverage when you have a known process.

## When should you choose Viktor?

Choose Viktor when the work you want gone is varied, cross-tool, and changes week to week. Real operational work rarely fits a single designed pipeline; it is "pull this, check that, draft the other thing, and tell me before you send it." The test we give teams:

1. Write down the three things you most want off your plate this week.
2. Ask whether they are the same shape every week, or different each time.
3. If they are different each time, you want an AI employee you can just ask, not a process you have to rebuild.

Anthropic's December 2024 engineering guide, [Building effective AI agents](https://www.anthropic.com/research/building-effective-agents), makes a related point worth borrowing: the most reliable systems are often the simplest, and added agentic complexity should earn its keep. A builder asks you to add that complexity up front. A coworker keeps it behind a plain-language request.

Here is what handing off a varied task looks like:

```prompt
@Viktor when a new ticket lands in Pylon tagged "billing," check the
customer's status in Stripe, draft a reply that answers their question,
and if it looks like a bug, open a Linear issue and link it. Show me the
draft and the issue before anything is sent.
```

One message, three tools, and an approval gate. You did not design an agent to do it. You asked.

## How does it act in your systems safely?

Once an AI is writing to Stripe, replying to customers, or opening tickets, the question stops being "how smart is it" and becomes "does it act without asking." Viktor's default is review-first: it drafts the reply, the report, or the update and waits for a human to approve before anything goes out, and you relax that per task as trust builds. With a builder, approval is something you configure into the process, which means it is only as reliable as the person who remembered to add it. We make the full argument in [Don't let your AI agent act without asking](https://viktor.com/blog/dont-let-ai-agent-act-without-asking).

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Is Viktor a replacement for Relevance AI?

For most teams that want to delegate rather than build, yes. If your goal is to design and own a multi-agent process, Relevance is built for that and Viktor is not trying to be a builder. They sit on opposite ends of the build-vs-delegate line.

### What is the main difference between Viktor and Relevance AI?

Setup. Relevance gives you a platform to architect a workforce of agents that you configure and maintain. Viktor gives you an AI employee in Slack you delegate to in plain language, with nothing to wire up.

### Does Viktor connect to the same tools?

Viktor connects to 3,200+ tools with real read and write access, including Stripe, HubSpot, Linear, Notion, Pylon, and Google Ads, so it can both pull data and take action across them.

### Which is better for a non-technical team?

Viktor, because there is nothing to build. You describe outcomes in a Slack message rather than defining agent roles and handoffs, so operations, sales, and support teams adopt it without engineering help.

### Can Relevance AI do cross-tool work?

Yes, when you configure agents with the right tools and handoffs. The difference is that the cross-tool behavior is something you design and own, rather than something you request on the spot.

### How should I decide between them?

Ask whether the work you want delegated is the same shape every week or different each time. Same shape favors a builder you can turn into a process. Different each time favors an AI employee you can simply ask.

---

**Viktor is an AI employee that lives in Slack, connects to 3,000+ integrations, and does real work for your team.** [Add Viktor to your workspace -- free to start →](https://viktor.com/?utm_source=blog&utm_medium=cta&utm_campaign=viktor-vs-relevance-ai)