A side hustle starts as a fun thing you do on weekends and turns, somewhere around month four, into the kind of project that needs structure — but you can't justify the overhead of real business tools because the whole thing earns less than your day job pays in a week. You end up trying to track three clients, your invoices, your time, your tax obligations, and the next set of ideas in some combination of email, a notes app, a spreadsheet, and your memory. By month six, things start slipping.

The problem isn't that you need a CRM or an accounting tool. The problem is that you need *one place* that holds the side-hustle context, with low ceremony, and an agent that can pull what you need when you need it. A vault works for this — and the same vault can sit alongside your day job and personal life without forcing you into separate systems.

## One vault, one parent page, child pages for every dimension

In Docapybara, your side hustle gets a top-level page. Underneath sit child pages for *Clients*, *Finances*, *Time*, *Pipeline*, *Ideas*, *Tax*, and *Marketing* — whatever your specific hustle needs. Pages nest indefinitely, OneNote-style, so each dimension grows as the hustle does.

The agent treats the whole tree as one searchable surface. *"What's open with [client name], when did I last invoice them, and what did I quote for the next phase?"* gets answered from across the vault, not from one folder at a time.

For the broader case of one vault holding both your day job and your hustle, [Why Your Notes App Should Be the Same App for Work and Life](/guides/personal-life/same-app-work-and-life/) covers the argument. The hustle just becomes another category in the vault.

## Clients — the conversations, the contracts, the context

For service-based hustles (consulting, freelance work, coaching), *Clients* is the page that does the most work. Each client gets a child page underneath. Name, contact, what they hired you for, the rate, the engagement model, the contract PDF, the conversation history.

Drop the contract on the page. Docapybara converts uploaded PDFs to markdown via docstrange, so the agent can actually read them — *"what did the contract with [client] say about scope changes?"* comes back with the answer and the relevant section.

After every client call, drop a note. Audio recording in-app handles the longer calls — tap record (with consent), and you get a transcript with speaker labels. The agent can summarize: *"Summarize today's call with [client] — what we agreed, what's open, what I owe them by next week."* Saves rebuilding from your own memory at 11 p.m. when you finally sit down to work.

The shape mirrors the full freelance/consultant workflow at [AI Notes for Consultants: Staying on Top of Every Engagement Without Burning Out](/guides/sales-accounts/ai-notes-for-consultants/) — same agent, same vault, lighter for a side gig but the same mechanic.

## Finances — invoices, expenses, and the running picture

The *Finances* page handles the money side without forcing you into accounting software you don't need yet. An inline database via the `:::database:::` directive captures invoices: client, invoice number, amount, sent date, due date, paid date, status.

The agent updates it. *"Mark invoice #12 paid today."* Done. *"What's outstanding right now, and which is most overdue?"* Comes back with the list. *"How much did I bill in Q1, broken down by client?"* Comes back with the totals.

For expenses, a separate database with date, vendor, amount, category, receipt link captures the deductible side. Receipts can drop on the page as PDFs or images. When tax time comes, the agent can pull the categorized totals: *"Sum my expenses for the year by category, and flag anything that doesn't have a receipt attached."* (For the broader tax-season flow, [How to Use AI Notes for Tax Season Preparation](/guides/personal-life/tax-season-preparation-ai-notes/) handles it end to end.)

## Time — the part you can't tell where it's going

Most side hustlers have no idea how much time their side hustle actually consumes. Hours feel like 30 minutes; an evening of email feels like a quick check-in. Over months, the hustle either gets too big or stays too small for reasons you can't trace because you have no time data.

A loose *Time log* page with daily entries — what you worked on, rough hours — fixes most of it. Voice is the right tool. End of evening, walk around the block, talk for thirty seconds: *"Tonight, two hours on the [client] deliverable, half an hour on email, an hour on the new pitch."* Transcript lands on the page.

The agent can summarize: *"How many hours did I put in this month, and how were they split across clients and non-billable work?"* Comes back with the breakdown. Useful for the *"is this hustle worth the time"* question that everyone asks themselves around month nine.

## Pipeline — the work that hasn't landed yet

The *Pipeline* page tracks what's in motion but not yet closed. An inline database with prospect name, source (referral, inbound, outreach), stage (initial chat, proposal sent, negotiating, closed-won, closed-lost), value estimate, next action, and notes.

The agent helps with prioritization: *"What's in the pipeline, what's the next action on each, and what's stalling?"* Comes back with the picture. *"Which prospects are referrals from existing clients, and which are cold inbound?"* Useful for understanding what's actually working in your acquisition.

For prospects you're researching, the agent's *web_search* tool can pull current information. *"Look up [prospect company] — recent news, headcount, what they're doing in this space."* Comes back with sources you can read before the call.

## Ideas — the side hustle's side hustles

Every side hustler has a backlog of *next things*. The product idea that came up while talking to a client. The course you've been thinking about packaging. The newsletter you'd start if you had bandwidth. The agency model you'd test if you had time.

The *Ideas* page (or a dedicated page tree, one child per idea) is where they live without cluttering the active work. Each idea gets a few sentences: what it is, what's interesting about it, the smallest test that would tell you if it's worth chasing, what you'd need to start.

The agent can help with the *which one next* question. *"Looking at my ideas page, which two or three are most aligned with what's currently working in my client work?"* Comes back with reasoning grounded in your actual notes.

For the *"how do I start"* part of the next idea, [AI for Business Ideas: Stress-Test Before You Build](/blog/ai-for-business-ideas/) extends the same shape — agent stress-tests an idea against the rest of your vault before you invest weeks in it.

## Marketing — the stuff you're terrible at remembering to do

For most side hustlers, marketing is the part that slips first. Posting on LinkedIn, sending the newsletter, updating the portfolio, following up with last month's prospects. Important; not urgent; gone.

A *Marketing* page with a running calendar of what's planned and what's done helps. An inline database of past content (post or newsletter, date, performance, takeaway) builds up over time. The agent can summarize: *"What were my best-performing posts in the last quarter, and what's the pattern?"*

For drafting actual content, the agent works inside the vault. *"Draft a LinkedIn post about the lesson I learned from the [client] project — keep it short, in my voice, no hashtag farm."* The draft is grounded in your actual notes. (For the broader writing-grounded-in-your-own-material shape, [How to Draft Emails, Proposals, and Newsletters Inside Your Notes App](/guides/creatives-content/draft-emails-proposals-in-notes/) covers it.)

## A starter shape

One word on the day-job boundary: for side hustles that have to stay quiet relative to the day job, the vault helps. The hustle pages live in the same vault as the day-job pages, but the agent only surfaces what you ask for. There's no shared workspace, no team that sees your hustle pages, no notification that lands on a work device. Docapybara is single-user by design — the vault is yours; nothing in it leaves unless you export it. That matters more for side-hustle work than for almost anything else in the vault. (For the broader question of when Docapybara fits and when it doesn't, [Looking for a Notion alternative? Here's when Docapybara fits — and when it doesn't](/blog/vs-notion/) covers the trade-offs.)

If you're moving from "scattered across email, sticky notes, and memory" to a vault, this is what we'd suggest starting with:

- **Side hustle** — top-level parent
- **Clients** — page tree, one child per active client
- **Finances** — invoices and expenses databases
- **Time** — daily voice notes, agent summarizes
- **Pipeline** — inline database
- **Ideas** — running list, one page per real candidate
- **Marketing** — calendar + content history database

That's it. The vault grows the way the hustle grows. The agent handles the synthesis and the searching, so you don't have to remember which client said what, when the invoice goes out, or what the next post was supposed to be about.

Side hustles fail more often from chaos than from market problems. The vault doesn't fix the market problem, but it does take the chaos off the table.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/) — start with the *Clients* page and the *Finances* database, and the next time a client emails about scope, you'll have the answer in one search. For pricing tiers, see [/pricing/](/pricing/).