Help Centre

Getting Started

Create a course from web page URLs

Paste your documentation or help-page URLs and let AI build a course from them.

If your content already lives on the web — product documentation, a help centre, a wiki, or articles — you can point CourseConverter at those pages and AI will build a course from them, including any screenshots already on the pages.

How to use it

From the Courses page, choose New course and then Create from web pages with AI. Paste your page URLs, one per line, up to ten at a time. Choose how you want AI to use the content:

  • Keep their words — structures the existing content into a course and adds knowledge checks, without rewriting your prose.
  • Write a course — rewrites the source material into purpose-built course content.

Select Read pages & outline course. CourseConverter reads each page and shows you exactly what it found — the page title, how many words it read, and how many images are available. Any page it couldn't read is listed with the reason.

You'll then see the proposed course structure. If it looks right, choose Generate course and CourseConverter builds each module in turn. Nothing is created until you approve the outline.

Images from your pages

If the pages you point at contain images — product screenshots, diagrams, photos — CourseConverter will pick them up and AI can place them into the course where they illustrate the content. The images stay hosted where they already are; nothing is re-uploaded.

Not every page has images, and some sites lazy-load them in ways we can't read. The status list after reading tells you exactly how many images were found on each page.

Which pages work

CourseConverter reads pages the way a reader-mode browser does: it strips away navigation, sidebars, and footers and keeps the article content. That works well for:

  • Documentation sites
  • Help centres and knowledge bases
  • Wikis
  • Blog posts and articles
  • Marketing and product pages

It cannot read pages that build their content with JavaScript in the browser (many modern single-page applications, and some documentation platforms). If a page can't be read, you'll see a clear message saying so, and you can carry on with the pages that did work. As a workaround for those pages, copy the content into a Word document and use the Word import instead.

Cost

This is a Pro feature and it uses your own AI provider key, so you are billed directly by the provider. Cost scales with how much content you point it at — a handful of documentation pages typically costs a few cents. You can see a rough per-feature cost estimate on the Billing page.