The Hidden Goldmine in ‘Boring’ Technical Writing
Did you know that the average SaaS founder spends nearly 40% of their weekly schedule answering repetitive support tickets that could have been solved by a single, clear paragraph of documentation? It is a staggering waste of high-value talent, yet most startups are too busy building features to write the instructions. While thousands of freelancers are currently fighting over $20 blog post gigs on Upwork, a silent group of ‘Documentation Architects’ is quietly invoicing $3,000 to $5,000 for a single user manual. Here is the bold reality: Silicon Valley is currently drowning in complex code but starving for simple clarity, and they are willing to pay a massive premium to anyone who can bridge that gap using the right tools.
📹 Watch the video above to learn more!
What Exactly is an AI-Assisted Documentation Business?
At its core, this business model involves creating technical guides, API documentation, and user onboarding manuals for software companies. You are not writing a novel; you are creating a map. In the past, you needed a computer science degree to do this effectively. However, with the emergence of Large Language Models like Claude 3.5 Sonnet and ChatGPT, the barrier to entry has crumbled. You can now use these AI tools to ‘read’ a piece of code or watch a screen recording of a software feature and translate that technical jargon into human-readable instructions. You aren’t just a writer; you’re a translator who uses AI to do the heavy lifting of understanding the logic, while you focus on the structure and clarity.
Why Founders Are Desperate for Your Help
The best part about this niche? It is recession-proof because it solves a direct financial leak. When a company lacks good documentation, two things happen: their support costs skyrocket, and their user retention plummets. If a user can’t figure out how to use a software tool within the first ten minutes, they cancel their subscription. By providing professional documentation, you are directly increasing the ‘Life Time Value’ (LTV) of their customers. Founders don’t see this as an expense; they see it as an investment in their product’s scalability. Because this work feels ‘boring’ and ‘technical’ to most creative writers, the competition remains incredibly low while the demand stays high.
How to Build Your Documentation Agency from Scratch
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Identify the ‘Documentation Debt’ on Product Hunt
Start by browsing Product Hunt or IndieHackers every morning. Look for startups that have just launched their Version 1.0 or 2.0. Visit their websites and look for a ‘Help’ or ‘Docs’ link. If the link leads to a sparse page with three articles or, worse, a ‘Coming Soon’ message, you have found a potential client. These founders are currently feeling the ‘Documentation Debt’—they know they need it, but they are too busy fixing bugs to write it. This is your entry point.
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The ‘Loom-to-Logic’ Workflow
Instead of asking the founder to explain everything in a meeting, ask them to record a 5-minute Loom video of them using the software. You then take the transcript of that Loom video and feed it into an AI tool like Claude. Use a prompt like: ‘Based on this transcript and these screenshots, create a step-by-step user guide for the [Feature Name] module.’ This allows you to capture the founder’s intent without wasting their time, which is their most valuable asset.
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Master the ‘ReadMe’ Aesthetic
Presentation is everything in the tech world. You shouldn’t deliver your work in a Word document. Instead, use platforms like GitBook or ReadMe.com to host the documentation. These platforms provide a sleek, professional side-bar navigation and a clean ‘developer-friendly’ look. When you show a founder a demo of their own software documented in a beautiful GitBook interface, the perceived value of your work jumps from $200 to $2,000 instantly.
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The ‘First Page Free’ Outreach Strategy
Cold emailing is hard, but ‘Value-First’ outreach is easy. Pick one confusing feature of a target startup’s software. Write a perfect, 300-word ‘How-To’ guide for that specific feature using AI. Send it to the founder with a message: ‘I noticed your help docs were a bit light on this feature, so I drafted this for you. If you like the style, I can do your entire platform in 14 days.’ This approach has a remarkably high conversion rate because you’ve already proven you can do the work.
Realistic Earnings: From Side Hustle to $5K Months
Let’s talk numbers because the math in this niche is incredibly attractive. A standard technical documentation project for a mid-sized SaaS platform usually ranges between 20 and 40 pages. At a conservative rate of $150 per page, a single project can net you $3,000 to $6,000. For a beginner, completing one such project per month is highly feasible while working part-time. As you get faster with AI prompting, you can reduce your ‘time-per-page’ from three hours down to 45 minutes. This means your effective hourly rate can easily exceed $200. Most documentation architects aim for 2 projects a month, bringing in a steady $7,000 to $9,000 in revenue with almost zero overhead costs.
The Essential Toolkit for Documentation Success
- Claude.ai: Best for understanding code logic and maintaining a professional, non-robotic tone.
- GitBook or ReadMe.com: The industry-standard platforms for hosting beautiful, searchable documentation.
- Loom: For capturing ‘knowledge dumps’ from founders without needing live meetings.
- CleanShot X: For taking high-quality, annotated screenshots that look professional and clear.
- Grammarly Premium: To ensure there are zero typos, as technical users are very sensitive to errors.
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
First, never rely 100% on the AI’s output without verifying the steps yourself. If your guide tells a user to click a button that doesn’t exist, you will lose your credibility instantly. Always ‘smoke test’ your instructions. Second, avoid using overly flowery language. Technical writing should be ‘invisible’—it should get the user from point A to point B as fast as possible. Finally, don’t undersell yourself. If you charge $20 an hour, you’ll be treated like a commodity. If you charge $3,000 per project, you’ll be treated like a consultant.
Your Next Step to $150 Per Page
The gap between where you are and your first $3,000 invoice is simply a lack of a portfolio. Your immediate next step is to find an open-source project on GitHub that has terrible documentation, and rewrite their ‘Getting Started’ guide today. Use that as your ‘Golden Sample’ and start reaching out to SaaS founders on LinkedIn. The ‘boring’ work is where the real money is hiding—are you ready to go find it?
