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Community Manager

Work from home Full-time role Hiring

Viktor is the AI coworker. It lives in Slack and Microsoft Teams, connects to thousands of tools, and does real work for real companies: finance, marketing, ops, engineering. We're building the product that replaces half the SaaS stack with a single teammate. The team is small. The scope is not. The Short Version Thousands of people use Viktor every day, and a lot of them are in our community Slack right now, asking questions, sharing workflows, hitting walls. You own that room, and every other place Viktor's community lives: Reddit, Trustpilot, G2, wherever the conversation goes next. You turn quiet lurkers into power users, and power users into the voices who sell Viktor for us. You also sit at the center of the company, pulling support, engineering, and product together so the community's needs actually get met. When the community is alive, people stay. When it goes quiet, they churn. You're the person who keeps it alive. What's Actually Going On Here Viktor is growing fast. The product creates a flood of “how do I...”, “can it...”, “look what I built” energy, and right now nobody owns the channel where that energy lives. It's reactive, ad hoc, and the best customer stories never make it back to the team. That's the seat. First community hire, no community team above you, no playbook to inherit. You decide what this function becomes. What You'll Actually Do

  • Run the community Slack. Own the room day to day. Answer fast, route the hard stuff, seed conversation, make sure no question dies unanswered. Set the norms, the channels, the culture.
  • Coordinate across the company. You sit between customer support, engineering, and product, and you manage those stakeholders. Route issues to the right owner, chase fixes to done, push the community's needs into the roadmap, and make sure the loop actually closes instead of dying in a thread.
  • Organize events and fuel grassroots movements. Founder AMAs, build-alongs, office hours, power-user roundtables, launches, run end to end. And the bottom-up stuff: local meetups, community-run challenges, and champions who want to host their own thing. You give grassroots momentum a backbone and the tools to grow.
  • Own the wider community footprint. Viktor's community isn't just Slack. You'll moderate our Reddit presence (a subreddit we'll launch), and own our review surfaces, Trustpilot, G2, and the rest. Run the campaigns that turn happy users into public proof at scale, and keep the rating climbing.
  • Activate people. Get signups into the community, lurkers into participants, participants into champions. Onboarding flows, welcome sequences, prompts, challenges, recognition, whatever moves people up the ladder.
  • Relay feedback to the team. You're the early-warning system. The bug everyone hits, the feature everyone asks for, the wall everyone slams into. You spot the pattern, write it up, and put it in front of the right people so it gets acted on.
  • Build the champion layer. Find the people already evangelizing Viktor and give them a reason to do more: ambassador program, early access, spotlights, swag, referrals.
  • Turn the community into content and proof. The best workflows, stories, and quotes become case studies, social posts, and launch fuel, with growth and marketing.

The Bar This role is judged on a living, growing, engaged community, not post count. “I replied to everyone” isn't the bar. “More people are getting more value from Viktor this month than last, the team knows exactly what customers need because of me, and our public reputation is climbing” is. How You'll Know It's Working

  • 30 days. You know the room cold. Response times are tight, the dead channels are gone, and you've shipped the first version of onboarding for new members. The team is already seeing feedback summaries from you weekly.
  • 60 days. Active members are climbing, you've run your first event with real turnout, a champion/ambassador layer is forming, and review volume on G2 and Trustpilot is up. Support, engineering, and product are moving against patterns you surfaced.
  • 90 days. The community is a growth and retention engine. Events run on a cadence, grassroots momentum is building, our public ratings are climbing, customer stories flow into marketing, and “the community” is something prospects hear about as a reason to choose Viktor.

Who You Are

  • You've run a community before, a Slack/Discord/forum/subreddit for a product, ideally B2B SaaS, dev tools, or AI, and you can show what it looked like before you and after.
  • Genuinely social online. You start conversations, you make people feel seen, you're funny in a thread. This can't be faked.
  • A coordinator who gets things done across teams. You can manage stakeholders in support, engineering, and product, hold them to commitments, and close loops without a manager pushing you. You're the connective tissue, not a bottleneck.
  • Operator, not just a vibes person. You run events, build onboarding flows, track engagement, and close the loop. You ship.
  • Technically curious. You can hold your own with technical users, read a workflow, and understand what Viktor actually does. AI-native.
  • A sharp writer. Clear, warm, fast. Short messages that land.
  • Comfortable in chaos. Small team, full ownership, no playbook. You decide and move.

Even Better If

  • You've stood up a community function from zero, or been close to the first hire.
  • You've moderated a subreddit or forum, or run review-gen campaigns on G2, Trustpilot, or Capterra that moved the rating.
  • You've run an ambassador or champion program that moved a real metric.
  • You've grown grassroots, community-led events: meetups, user groups, or member-hosted sessions.
  • You've turned community moments into content that traveled: case studies, threads, videos.
  • You've worked with technical buyers and builders (devs, ops, marketers).

Why This Role Is Different

  • You own a surface customers depend on, not a content calendar. The community is a real growth and retention lever, and it's yours end to end.
  • You're the customer voice inside the company. You sit between support, engineering, and product, and the founders read your feedback summaries. Roadmap decisions reference your notes.
  • The work is public. The community, the events, the Reddit threads, the reviews, it all goes out under your name as much as the company's.

How we work Small team, high trust, low process. Decisions are made by owners, not committees. You will ship your first week. You will talk to users your first day. We don't do alignment meetings or stakeholder syncs. We build things, see if they work, and iterate. Everyone here owns something real. Not a task. A surface of the company that customers depend on. When it breaks, you fix it. When it wins, everyone knows whose work it was. We use Viktor to build Viktor. You'll see what you're working on in action every day. Why Viktor This is a rare window. The product works. The market is pulling. The team is small enough that what you do next week will be live in production next week. That doesn't last forever. Right now, it's still true.

Compensation

Competitive salary and the kind of ownership that only exists at this stage. We're in Munich, New York, and Warsaw. Onsite preferred. The best work happens when you're in the room. Apply To This Job

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