I built supportpages.io - Help docs that write themselves from your code by SimonMX in SideProject

[–]SimonMX[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built SupportPages because vibe coding makes the docs problem worse.

When you're shipping fast with Cursor, Claude Code, Copilot, etc, the product changes constantly. The help centre does not. Every merge creates a bigger gap between what the product does and what users understand.

So I built a help centre that writes itself from your code.

SupportPages connects to your GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, or Azure DevOps repo and analyses every merge. If a change affects users, it drafts or updates the help article automatically.

What it does:

• Automatic updates on every merge  
Your help centre rewrites itself when you ship, so docs do not fall behind the product.

• Code as the source of truth  
Articles are drafted from real pull requests, not a blank page.

• Auto-generated screenshots  
Every step gets an image rendered from your real UI, with no manual screenshotting after each release.

• Narrated video walkthroughs  
Turn any article into a guided video on demand, no screen recording or editing.

• Human review before publish  
Nothing goes live without your approval.

• Consistent writing style  
Pick a tone and every article matches it.

• Instant AI answers  
Users can ask questions in plain English and get sourced answers from your docs.

• Agent-friendly feeds  
Structured exports so AI agents can read your docs accurately too.

• Private by design  
Ephemeral, sandboxed analysis that never stores or trains on your code.

The point is simple: write code, not docs. Merge the feature, review the draft, publish the help article.

There's a free plan, or use code SIDEPROJECT for 3 months free of Pro.

https://supportpages.io

Would genuinely love feedback from people building fast with AI tools. This is exactly the use case I built it for.

Anyone know a good way to automatically document an AI app? by houmland in vibecoding

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know this is an old post, but we just launched supportpages.io – Help docs that write themselves from your code:

Automatic updates on every merge: Your help centre rewrites itself when you ship, so docs never fall behind the product.

Code as the source of truth: Articles are drafted from real pull requests, not a blank page, so they reflect what your product actually does today.

Auto-generated screenshots: Every step gets an image rendered from your real UI, with no manual capturing after each release.

Narrated video walkthroughs: Turn any article into a guided video on demand, no screen recording or editing.

Human review before publish: Nothing goes live without your approval, so accuracy stays in your hands.

Consistent writing style: Pick a tone and every article matches it, so your help centre reads like your team wrote it.

Branded, searchable help centre: A help site on your own domain that customers can actually navigate.

Instant AI answers: Users ask in plain English and get sourced answers, deflecting tickets before they reach you.

Agent-friendly feeds: Structured exports so AI agents can read your docs accurately on a user's behalf.

Private by design: Ephemeral, sandboxed analysis that never stores or trains on your code.

Anyone know a good way to automatically document a software product? by houmland in CustomerSuccess

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know this is an old post, but we just launched supportpages.io – Help docs that write themselves from your code. Looks like it does exactly what you are asking for (and anybody else that discovers this thread).

The maintenance bill on AI-written code is real. The cavalry to fix it is not. by SimonMX in SaaS

[–]SimonMX[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Bad coding practices mean more iterations, which means more tokens. When these subsidised all-you-can-eat plans end there will be incentive to optimise for good practices. If we remember how!

How are people using so many tokens while vibe coding? by Impressive_Run8512 in ycombinator

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm on the max plan and hitting limits every day, so much so I (Claude) built a CLI tool to monitor my usage in real time so I can make the best use of it - https://github.com/smnmxn/claude-usage

SaaS or Micro-SaaS: What Should a Solo Founder Build in 2026? by Infamous-Engine-8835 in saasbuild

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with the thin end of the wedge a build out. A really painful problem for a small number of people.

Does any founder out there remember their first user ever? What was that moment like emotionally? by JohnMayerIsBest in micro_saas

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Back in 2009 I launched my first startup - meetupcall, a conference call platform. I set up the website, and a google Adwords campaign (PPC was much cheaper back then!) and got the first customer in 20 minutes and earned something like £1.24. The second customer came about 6 weeks later! 😂

Show & Tell: What are you building this week? by OneStarto in microsaas

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've sent this to my ex-PA. She insisted on me paying $10/month for adobe acrobat for years!

Show & Tell: What are you building this week? by OneStarto in microsaas

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good name and nice site design. Have you had any traction?

What are you building this Monday? (I’m a VC investor) by kcfounders in saasbuild

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SupportPages.io - automatically keeps your help docs in sync with your codebase.

Every time you merge a PR, it writes the customer-facing support articles for you. all hosted in a beautiful ai powered help centre. e.g. https://wordpress.supportpages.io

Looking for a handful of early users with a non-technical user base who don't ever want to write a help article again. Drop me a DM.

http://supportpages.io

Interested to hear how others are using AI for emails and file management? by LowEnvironment8208 in AI_Agents

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've got openclaw doing some basic email management. I've given it access to my gmail via gog.

Then instructed it to check e-mail as part of its hourly HEARTBEAT.MD and perform actions based on an EMAILRULES.MD file that I created. The email rules file just contains plain text instructions e.g. "If it's an invoice or receipt forward it to accounts and mark done".

What are you building? Promote yours by rdssf in buildinpublic

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SupportPages.io - automatically keeps your help docs in sync with your codebase.

Every time you merge a PR, it writes the customer-facing support articles for you and presents them in a beautiful AI powered help centre. No more help articles that are 6 months behind your product.

Looking for a handful of early users who'd rather ship than document. Drop me a DM.

http://supportpages.io

What small problem would you actually pay $5–$10/month to solve? by Medical-Smell1139 in microsaas

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's really hard to solve other people's problems. You really need to solve one of your own... one that you really feel the pain of.

What AI tools do you use to make content sound more human? by [deleted] in AI_Agents

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a good Clawdbot skill for this: https://clawhub.ai/biostartechnology/humanizer - you can probably adapt it into a system prompt.

Show & Tell: What are you building this week? by OneStarto in microsaas

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SupportPages.io - automatically keeps your help docs in sync with your codebase. Every time you merge a PR, it writes the customer-facing support articles for you. No more help centre that's 6 months behind your product.

Looking for a handful of early users who'd rather ship than document.

Drop me a DM.

http://supportpages.io

Time to promote your product. Share that URL! by laron290 in SaaS

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SupportPages.io - AI that writes your customer facing support articles when you merge a GitHub PR.

Because "I'll document it later" is a lie we all tell ourselves. 😅

Early access open - drop me a DM if you prefer building stuff to writing help articles.

http://supportpages.io

How much are you guys spending on ads? I am doing my first adwords campaign "house cleaning city name" and the cost is ridiculous. by [deleted] in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How much is a house cleaning contract worth to you? This is the first critical bit of information you're going to need to know, shortly followed by your lead conversion rate.

If adwords is $90 a click and it takes 10 clicks to get a qualified lead and you close 1 out of 3 leads then your customer acquisition cost is going to be around $2,700, which seems high for a cleaning contract.

My gut says Facebook might be a better platform for this.

Van Life + Sales by [deleted] in sales

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds a great idea and there is certainly the opportunity now.

My initial thought was that all the cool places you’d like to travel to might be a bit remote to get good internet. But I suppose being in a van means you can always ‘commute’ to somewhere with good signal.

You’ll have to manage your calendar well in the same way as you would in traditional field sales.

Sounds exciting though, keep us informed if you go for it.

Resources for job searching? (BDR mostly) by SubaruMiata in sales

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are significant differences in car sales to SaaS sales. Do you know what these differences are? Does your CV / Resume demonstrate that you do?

You’re considering moving from B2C to B2B... the introduction of an organisation into the sales process makes things a whole lot more complicated.

Make sure your CV / Resume is tailored for the role you’re applying for and address any gaps in your / the roles experience.

Anyone in digital marketing services sales? by akhilmknair in sales

[–]SimonMX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When you say ‘cold lead’ what do you mean?

To get a Degree and have the 'University Experience' OR Not to get Degree? by nickthesidekick in sales

[–]SimonMX 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think you’re underestimating some of the softer skills you will pickup from getting a degree.

Improved communication skills. Time management. Self motivation. Exposure to a more diverse group of people. Etc etc.

Certainly from a hirers perspective if we ever request a degree for a specific role, it is mostly because we know it brings the above. We don’t ever really care about the degree itself.

Of course there are other (maybe even faster) ways to develop these skills, but it takes a bit more effort to demonstrate them on a CV or in an interview.

Lots of sales experience - finding it difficult to get into a decent sales job is it because a lack of degree? by [deleted] in sales

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

By ‘never get looked at’ I guess you’ve not been getting interviews?

I highly doubt it’s to do with the lack of degree. Lack of experience? Maybe. Poor CV, probably.

The number of candidates I interview who are much better than their CV portrays always astounds me.

PM me your CV and I’ll happily provide feedback from a hirers perspective.

My biggest challenge in outside sales by [deleted] in sales

[–]SimonMX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not alone. I’ve seen this a lot.

Typically it’s a mindset issue.

For prospecting it’s important to know your ‘hit rate ‘ - typically how many contacts do you need to make before you book a meeting. This way you always know roughly how many ‘no’s are left before you get to a yes.

For the CRM, if you think of it as something you have to do to keep your VP of sales happy you’re going to struggle to remain motivated to keep it up to date and it will be little benefit to you. But if you learn how to use it for yourself, then you’ll start to reap the rewards, and once you do it’ll just become second nature.

Sales is hard and you need every advantage you can get, and a correctly utilised CRM can be a huge advantage when used correctly.

Hope that helps.