Hey there,

You know what happens when you get stuck on a piece of software?

You go to YouTube.

You type in the exact problem. And either nothing shows up. Or you find a 45-minute video where the answer is buried at the 32-minute mark.

Frustrating, right?

Now multiply that by millions of people. Every day. On tools like Notion, Replit, Lovable, Webflow, Photoshop.

All of them stuck. All of them searching. Most of them finding nothing useful.

That's the gap. And that's the idea.

Why I'm Handing This To You

I already have too many things going on for me.

Could I outsource this to Fiverr just like the model says? Yes. Technically nothing stops me.

But I've got enough on my plate. And honestly, I'd rather hand you a working blueprint than sit on it until I never get around to it.

The real reason I'm giving this away though?

You don't need to be an expert to pull this off.

You don't need to know the tool. You don't need to be on camera. You just need to find the problems and pay someone else to solve them on screen.

That's a business model, not a skill set.

Someone's building this. Might as well be you.

Also, once you figure out the grunt work, this model is highly replicable.

There are tons of tools out there that need tutorials and you’re not gonna stop at just one, right?

The Blueprint

First, pick one tool.

Not "software tutorials in general." One tool. Lovable. Framer. Notion. Replit. Descript. Something with a growing user base, a learning curve, and not many dedicated tutorial channels yet.

Then follow this exact sequence.

Find 50 problems. Go to Reddit. The tool's Discord. Their support forums. Twitter/X. Search "how do I" and "not working" and "help with." Write down every specific problem you see. That list becomes your content calendar.

Commission the solutions. Go to Fiverr. Find a verified expert in your tool. Pay $15–25 per video for a clean screen recording. No fluff. Just the fix. You're the producer. They're the talent. You never need to touch the software yourself.

Edit and post. CapCut works fine. Add captions, a simple intro, proper tags. Keep it under 3 minutes. A tight 2-minute video that answers one question will always beat a 20-minute ramble.

Seed it manually. Whenever someone asks your question on Reddit or Discord, drop the link. Not spam — actual help. This is how the first views come. It also trains YouTube's algorithm on exactly who your audience is.

Stack the revenue. You need 1,000 subs and 4,000 watch hours for AdSense. Tech tutorial channels earn $8–$20 per 1,000 views — one of the highest brackets on YouTube. But don't wait for that.

Link to the tool's affiliate programme from day one. Most SaaS products have one.

The shortcut. Don't want to wait 6 months to monetise? Buy an already-monetised channel on Flippa, rebrand it, post there. More upfront cost. But you're making money from video one.

The upsell. Once you hit 2,000+ subscribers, package your best videos into a beginner's course. $29–$49 on Gumroad. Linked in every description. The channel becomes a funnel for a product you built once.

Why Right Now

New tools are launching every month.

And user bases are growing faster than tutorial content can keep up.

Lovable went from zero to hundreds of thousands of users in under a year. Every new feature they ship creates another batch of confused users. Another batch of unanswered YouTube searches.

The gap widens every time the product updates.

And here's the best part — this content is evergreen.

A video you post today answering "how do I deploy on Replit" will still get views in 2029. You do the work once. YouTube distributes it forever.

The One Thing That Makes It Work

Your titles are search queries. Not headlines.

"Lovable tutorial" — nobody clicks that.

"How to connect Lovable to Supabase without errors" — every single person stuck on that exact problem clicks that.

Write your titles like someone typed them into YouTube at 11pm, frustrated, desperate for a quick answer.

That's your entire distribution strategy. Be the exact result they were hoping to find.

Go Build It

Pick the tool today. Spend one hour on Reddit finding problems. Commission your first video this week.

Go.

Talk soon, Kris

P.S. — The whole thing costs around $1,000 to test. 50 videos at $20 each, some editing, a channel name. Worst case — it doesn't work and you're out a grand. Best case — you've built something that earns while you sleep. I'd take that bet every single time.

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