Vektorgeist
Platform where AI operators publish profiles, verify agents, trade digital assets, and find work
Gallery
About Vektorgeist
Vektorgeist is a platform built for people who operate AI agents professionally. It combines a profile and portfolio system, a marketplace for digital assets, a jobs board, and a verification layer that gives agents signed identities. If you're running autonomous agents and want a place to showcase what they do, trade software, or connect with others doing the same work, this is where that activity is meant to happen.
The core idea is that AI operators need a home base. Right now, if you build and run agents, you might have a GitHub repo, a Twitter presence, scattered project demos, and no unified way to present what you've built. Vektorgeist lets you publish a profile that ties it all together. You can showcase your work, describe the agents you run, and build a portfolio that potential clients or collaborators can actually find.
The verification system is what sets it apart from a generic portfolio site. Operators can obtain verifiable, signed identities for their agents with trust tiers that indicate reliability. This matters in a space where anyone can claim their bot does something impressive. If an agent is verified, there's a record attached to it. If it isn't, that's visible too. For people hiring or buying from operators, this provides a signal that's missing from most of the ecosystem.
The marketplace lets you trade software and digital assets directly within the platform. If you've built a tool, a prompt library, a dataset, or anything else another operator might want, you can list it here. The jobs board works in both directions. Operators post what they're available for, and people looking to hire can browse and reach out. It's a two sided market for the kind of work that doesn't fit cleanly into traditional freelance platforms.
There are also workspace tools for managing projects. You can create group workspaces for collaboration or use personal dashboards to keep track of your own work. The social layer provides a space for conversation within the community, so it functions as a network rather than just a directory.
The blog on the site covers topics like local first architecture, agent context design, and offline AI execution, which gives a sense of the technical depth the platform is built for. This isn't aimed at casual users experimenting with chatbots. It's for operators who run agents as a serious practice and want infrastructure that matches.
Pricing details aren't published on the landing page, which suggests the platform may still be finding its model or offering free access during an early phase. The founders are listed as Floukie and Holohydra. For support, there's an email at support@vektorgeist.com. If you operate agents and want a dedicated space to build a reputation and find work, this is one of the few platforms trying to serve that specific need.
Key Features
- Operator and agent profile publishing
- Verifiable signed agent identities
- Marketplace for software and digital assets
- Jobs board for hiring and getting hired
- Group and personal workspaces
- Community social layer
Pros & Cons
What we like
- Dedicated space for AI operators rather than generic freelancing
- Agent verification adds trust signals missing elsewhere
- Combines portfolio, marketplace, and jobs in one place
- Community focused on technically serious practitioners
Room for improvement
- Pricing model not yet published
- Newer platform with a smaller user base
- Narrow focus limits appeal outside the agent operator niche
- Value depends on community growth and activity
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Vektorgeist?
What does agent verification mean?
Is Vektorgeist free?
Who is Vektorgeist for?
Best For
Featured in
Alternatives to Vektorgeist
View all
AgentSocial
A social network where the accounts are AI agents you connect over MCP

Almanac
A hosted, source-cited wiki that turns your files into context your AI agents can use

Shypmenta
AI agent that deploys and manages your app across cloud platforms
n8n
Fair-code workflow automation with 400+ integrations
Reviews (6)
Decent with some rough edges
Have been running Vektorgeist for a while, here is where I land. The core workflow is smooth once you are set up. Mostly using it for getting agent identities verified for client trust. My only gripe is pricing model not yet published. No regrets so far.
Finally something that fits
Have been running Vektorgeist for a while, here is where I land. Got real value out of group and personal workspaces. It fits well for finding contract work running or building agents.
Finally something that fits
Hadn't planned on switching, but Vektorgeist was hard to ignore. The community focused on technically serious practitioners is more useful than I expected. Glad I made the switch.
Does the job, a few gripes
Came to Vektorgeist after getting frustrated with what I had before. What stands out is how it handles combines portfolio, marketplace, and jobs in one place. The output quality holds up better than I expected. It would be a five if not for newer platform with a smaller user base. No regrets so far.
Recommended without reservation
Picked Vektorgeist for the price, stayed for the quality. It just works, day after day, without surprises. It slotted into my routine without much fuss.
Solid daily driver
Picked Vektorgeist for the price, stayed for the quality. Their take on combines portfolio, marketplace, and jobs in one place is genuinely good. What stands out is how little babysitting it needs. Found it works best for getting agent identities verified for client trust. Would sign up again without thinking twice.
Related Tools

Lindy
No-code AI agents that handle email, meetings, and recurring workflows

Wolli
Open framework for AI agents that grow around a purpose and extend themselves
n8n
Fair-code workflow automation with 400+ integrations

Almanac
A hosted, source-cited wiki that turns your files into context your AI agents can use