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Course Creation

Turn your documentation into a course — just paste the URLs

July 12, 2026

Most teams already have the content for their training — it's just scattered across a documentation site, a help centre, or a wiki. Turning that into an actual course has always meant copying, pasting, restructuring, and re-uploading screenshots. Not any more.

Paste your URLs. Get a course.

Choose Create from web pages with AI, paste up to ten page URLs, and CourseConverter reads them and builds a structured course — modules, content, and knowledge checks. It shows you the proposed outline first, so nothing is created until you approve it.

Your screenshots come with it

If the pages contain images — product screenshots, diagrams, architecture drawings — CourseConverter picks them up and AI places them into the course where they illustrate the content. Your existing visuals do the work they were made for, in a new format, with no re-uploading.

It reorganises, it doesn't just copy

One long documentation page might contain ten distinct topics; three short pages might belong together in one module. AI reads the content and organises it by what makes sense for a learner, not by where the page breaks happened to fall.

Two ways to use your content

Choose Keep their words to preserve your existing prose and simply add structure and knowledge checks around it — useful when the documentation is already well-written and accurate. Or choose Write a course to have AI rewrite the source into purpose-built instructional content.

What it can and can't read

CourseConverter reads pages the way a reader-mode browser does — stripping navigation and chrome, keeping the content. Documentation sites, help centres, wikis, articles and marketing pages all work well. Pages that build their content with JavaScript in the browser can't be read, and you'll be told clearly when that happens so you can use a different page or fall back to a Word import.

Creating a course from web pages is a Pro feature and runs on your own AI provider key, so you're billed directly by the provider with no markup.