Welcome to Videojac
Getting started with Videojac
A quick tour of Videojac: how to open it, what each section is for, and where to go first.
Run your own SaaS video editor — beautiful templates, browser-based editing, your brand, your Stripe account. End-users sign up at your share link, edit videos in their browser, and you bill them monthly through your own Stripe account.
This first lesson is a quick orientation. Once you finish it you'll know where the main sections live, what to set up first, and where to go when you have a question.
The first time you open it
When you install Videojac, the platform takes you straight in. The home screen shows the dashboard with the most important numbers at a glance: today's activity, anything that needs your attention, and shortcuts to the things you'll touch most often.
If this is your very first time, take a minute to:
- Click around the sidebar so you know what each section is for.
- Open Settings and check the basics — your business name, currency (this is set by the country code on your phone), and any labels you want to customize.
- Add at least one record so you have data to play with. Real data makes everything else easier to learn.
Where to find things later
Every section is just a click away from the sidebar. The most-used screens are pinned near the top; deeper configuration lives under Settings. If you can't find something, the search field at the top will usually take you there.
When something doesn't make sense
If you get stuck:
- Open Support from the platform sidebar and start a conversation — we usually reply within a few hours.
- Use the Phone option on the support page if it's time-sensitive.
Tip: Some lessons also have a short video — if one's available, you'll see a Watch tab at the top of this page. The written version covers the same ground and stays up to date as the app changes.
That's the whole orientation. The next lesson goes deeper into the day-to-day work — adding, editing, and managing the things this app is built for.
Working in Videojac day-to-day
The rhythm of using Videojac — how to add things, find them again, edit them, and keep your lists tidy.
Most of your time inside Videojac will be spent adding records, finding them again, and updating them as things change. This lesson covers that rhythm — the same handful of moves repeat across every screen, so once you've got the pattern down, the rest of the app feels familiar.
Adding something new
Every list screen has an add button — usually a + near the top-right. Tap it, fill in the short form, save. The form only asks for the essentials; you can add the rest later by opening the record and editing the fields you need.
Save early, edit later. Videojac saves your work as you go and nothing gets locked.
Finding it again
Three ways to track something down:
- Scroll the list. Default is newest first, so anything you added today is near the top.
- Search. The search field at the top of the list matches name, phone, ID — whatever identifying info is on the record.
- Filter. Most lists have category/status filters in the toolbar so you can narrow to "active", "pending", "this week", and so on.
Editing and updating
Open a record by clicking it. Inside the detail page you can change any field, add notes, attach files, and see the full history of changes. Saving is instant — there's no separate "publish" step.
If you change your mind about an edit, every screen has an undo path: either re-edit the field, or restore an earlier value from the activity log inside the record.
When you no longer need it
Tip: Videojac keeps your old records forever by default — even when you archive them. You can always come back to them. Archiving is preferred to deleting in most cases, since you keep the history for reports and audits without cluttering the active list.
If you really want a record gone permanently, the delete option lives on the same menu as archive (often behind a confirmation).
When the screen doesn't behave the way you expect
The written guide is the source of truth and stays current as Videojac evolves. If a screen looks slightly different from what you read here, the gist still applies — buttons may have moved but the shape of the work doesn't change.
For anything you can't figure out, Support from the platform sidebar will reach our team — we usually reply within a few hours.
Sharing Videojac with the people you serve
Connect a custom domain, share your public link, and give customers a clean way to interact with you.
Videojac isn't just for you — most of the value comes from sharing the right pieces with the people you do business with. That might be customers checking on an order, partners viewing a report, or staff logging in from their own phones. This lesson covers all of that.
Your public link
Every Videojac install comes with a public URL automatically. It looks something like mypancho.com/p/your-id/Videojac/... and works without anyone needing a Pancho account. Share it with customers via WhatsApp, SMS, or just paste it on your website.
You'll find the public link in Settings under "Share with customers" (or similar wording, depending on the labels you've set).
Bringing your own domain
If you'd rather customers see your own domain instead of mypancho.com, set up a custom domain from Account → Domains on the platform sidebar:
- Add the domain you own.
- Point its DNS at Pancho (we show you the exact records).
- Choose which app/section the domain should serve.
- Wait for the verification + SSL — usually under five minutes.
After that, every customer-facing link will use your domain automatically. SSL renews itself.
Staff and team members
If Videojac supports staff (most apps do), invite them from the Staff section in Settings. They get their own PIN-based login that's separate from your Pancho admin account — they only see the app, not your billing or other apps.
Tip: Give each staff member their own login rather than sharing yours. Activity logs only make sense when actions are tied to individual people.
When sharing doesn't work the way you expect
- If a customer says your link doesn't load, double-check the domain DNS records first; most issues are pointing-related.
- For everything else, Support is the fastest path to a real answer.
Customizing Videojac for your business
Tweak labels, statuses, and features under Settings so Videojac speaks your business's language.
Every business runs a little differently. Videojac ships with sensible defaults, but most of the labels, statuses, and behaviors can be changed so the app speaks your business's language instead of ours. This lesson covers the customization knobs that matter most.
Where customization lives
Almost everything is on the Settings page. The sections you'll touch most often:
- Business info — your name, contact details, branding.
- Labels — rename "customer" to "client", "order" to "ticket", etc. The change flows through every screen automatically.
- Statuses — adjust the names and colors of order/job stages so they match how you describe them out loud.
- Features — turn modules on or off depending on what your business actually does.
- Pricing / catalog — if your app sells anything, this is where the price list lives.
A good order to customize in
- Start with business info. This is what shows up on receipts and public pages, so it sets the tone for everything else.
- Adjust labels next — that's the biggest visible change and it's a one-time edit.
- Tune statuses once you've used the app for a day or two and know which stages you actually need.
- Leave features for last — toggle them only when you're sure you don't need a module, since old data stays put but new entry points disappear.
Things to be careful with
Heads up: Currency is set once at signup based on your phone country code and can't be changed later. If you signed up with the wrong country, contact support before adding important data.
A few other changes are one-way:
- Pricing changes apply to new orders only — old orders keep their original prices.
- Deleting a category that's already on records will detach those records, not delete them.
When you're not sure what something does
- If a setting's tooltip doesn't make sense, leave it on the default. Defaults are picked to be safe for most businesses.
- Support can answer "what does this do?" for any individual setting if you'd rather ask than experiment.