How to structure SaaS documentation for buyers and users: getting started, configuration, deployment, API docs, troubleshooting, security, and changelog.
Documentation is not only a support asset. For developer products and technical SaaS, docs are part of the buying process.
A buyer reads docs to answer one question: "Is this real enough for my use case?"
The first docs path should get a user from zero to a running app:
Keep this path short. Link to deeper pages instead of explaining every subsystem inline.
Environment variables need more than names.
Document:
This prevents launch bugs and support questions.
For a SaaS foundation, core docs should cover:
Each page should explain how the module fits into the whole app.
Screenshot placeholder: docs index with module categories.
API docs should show:
If an API requires admin access or organization membership, say that explicitly.
Troubleshooting docs are high leverage because they reduce repeated support.
Common sections:
Use symptoms and fixes, not vague advice.
Security docs should cover:
Even if you are not selling enterprise yet, security clarity matters.
A changelog helps buyers see that the product is maintained.
Good entries include:
Do not hide important changes in commit history only.
Docs should not be isolated. Link:
Internal linking helps users and search engines.
Outdated docs are worse than missing docs. Review docs when:
Documentation should ship with the code changes that make it necessary.
Before launch, publish:
That is enough for buyers to evaluate the product and for early users to move without constant support.