Loading...
Answers
MenuWhat advice do you have for selling online courses?
We have been developing courses for clients and recently started selling our own, but it is difficult to get online purchases. Any tips?
Answers
It's a competitive market for online programs and takes concerted effort to make a splash and get noticed. Before providing tips since there's little context, here are some questions for you:
1. Do you have a platform/audience already developed who want the courses you've developed?
2. How did you launch the product? Putting a sales page up isn't enough. Your targeted audience needs to be primed to know that the product is coming, what it does for them, when it's being launched and then told it's available.
3. Follow up, follow up, follow up. Without out consistent reminders, your audience moves on because there's someone else promoting their online course.
Building and nurturing your audience is the primary and ongoing activity that will create demand. Your calls to action, urgency and keeping your courses top of mind will help keep sales consistent.
If you'd like to discuss a strategy and specific tactics for your products, feel free to schedule a call. I've been working and marketing on the web for 19 years and have seen a lot of tactics come and go, and it comes down to haveing a solid foundation, an audience for the service/content you're selling and a consistent way to connect with them.
Denise Wakeman
The most successful Elearning content strategies I have seen involve opt-in pages and then automated email sales funnel that convince the users of the value of your product. If they don't buy now, they will convert before your 7 Day barrage of emails is done.
And once they do buy, you have a different automated
Campaign that checks on them to see how they are doing and let's them know you are available for more learning.
A lot will depend on the *details* of what you are offering and price points, your existing network or networks you have access to and how your material is relevant to them. Generally, higher price point requires a longer funnel.
Is it difficult because you don't have traffic to the sales point, or is it difficult because once there people are not accepting your offer? Or both? (Do you have clear web analytic data to draw from?) Is your price too high? Is your funnel too short? Is your content not convincing? Are you trying to solve a problem that people don't really have, or not enough people? Are you solving a problem people really have, but not describing it in a way that people recognize? Is someone else doing it better?
To share some things that have been on top of my mind, and that I am working on developing while working with clients on designing, launching, marketing online courses:
- Think about marketing inline with how we about being an educator.
- Who will benefit most from the insights, skills we are providing? Do we really understand who they are quite well?
- Do we understand the problems (in detail) they are trying to solve—and how they describe those problems in their own language?
- Can we show convincingly—with real numbers—why the offering represents a better educational investment than other options?
Given the above kinds of considerations, a few directions I've been working with clients on:
- Offering a free mini-course that draws from the paid course.
- From understanding the potential ideal audience, reach out using Facebook advertising (which for us has become a much better platform in the last year).
- A powerful hack combined with above: connect Facebook ads to conversion pixels for remarketing efforts and to build Look Alike audiences based on customer data. This is a longer run strategy.
- Find relevant influencers (people with fans, list subscribers, etc., who are in a related niche) . Make deals as needed. : )
- Find gems in keyword research. People may not be searching for the terms you think they are. Especially, if your course can have international reach.
- Bootstrap audience by posting adapted (possibly much shorter, specific) versions of a course where course-buying traffic is already being collected (Udemy, etc.). Link to fuller offerings.
What I am feeling now though is that I will talk to clients about investing up front into survey work to understand learners' real goals and ways of describing the issues. I find the same thing in doing keyword research: experts in their field are often surprised about what people are actually searching for. With understanding the audience and their needs clearly, investing in specific campaigns is likely to have much higher leverage.
Selling online courses successfully requires a strategic blend of quality content, effective marketing, and authentic engagement with your audience. First and foremost, create courses that deliver real value by addressing specific problems or skills your target audience is keen to learn; well-structured, clear, and engaging content is key to building trust and encouraging positive reviews. Next, leverage multiple marketing channels such as social media, email marketing, and webinars to showcase your expertise and connect with potential students. Building a community around your course through forums, live Q&A sessions, or dedicated social groups can increase student engagement and retention. Additionally, offering free mini-lessons or previews can entice learners by giving them a glimpse of what to expect. Don't underestimate the power of testimonials and success stories—these social proofs often make the difference when prospective students are deciding whether to invest. Lastly, continually update your course material to stay relevant, and consider bundling courses or offering limited-time discounts to attract more buyers. By combining these strategies with genuine passion for your subject, you can create a sustainable and thriving online course business.
To sell online courses successfully, identify a specific pain point your audience cares about, build trust by sharing free value (like tips, videos, or case studies), clearly communicate the outcomes your course delivers, and use testimonials, urgency, and simple checkout flows to drive conversions.
Related Questions
-
What is the best country to start an online marketing and design business in?
I have registered over 20 companies in the last decade and from my experience I can tell you that every country serves a different purpose. I run a small gambling company that I have registered in Malta due to the legality of online gambling there. I have another company registered in Delaware, whilst my main company is registered in the Netherlands. If your business is only online I would advise you to register it in Europe or if you must in the United States in Delaware/Nevada. Credibility wise I would say that registering your company in Singapore or Malta or Costa Rica, will not benefit you much opposed to say Delaware or The Netherlands. I am available for a call if you need anymore help. I am currently doing a promotion for a one time free 15 minute phone call so just send me a message for the discount code.GS
-
What is the best timing in the new year to launch business marketing?
Hi there! In few words, the launch date does not matter a lot as long as you are following with a continuous marketing plan all the year. It is better to tune your lunch date according to your marketing campaign than connecting it to the seasonal event. The timing of your launch only matters if your website is already ranked or has a good authority associated to it. Launching a website is not like opening a local shop. The launch date is defined by the effectiveness of your marketing campaign. In other words, your question must be rephrased as: "When is the best time to launch my first marketing campaign for my newly created website?". In that case, you will need to describe in details what kind of website you have and how are you planning to market it. I would be able to give you a more accurate answer if you explain to me what kind of website are you planning to launch or what products mainly are you selling. Hope that helps!RZ
-
About to launch our new eCommerce website selling well priced unique watches. What is the best initial marketing strategy to use with minimal cost?
Here are some answers for you that I believe will help you. 1. You should implement a long term and short term strategy right at the beginning. What I mean is that there are essential parts to your marketing like SEO and content marketing that you need to implement right in the beginning, but will take a while to filter through, but these are essential if you want to have organic traffic. That would be L-T. The best for Short term for a newly launched site is ad's. Word of warning though. Know your customers demographics such as age, income, education etc, know your competitors demographics and then find the platform (such as social media channels) where your ideal customer is based on those researched demographics and then roll out targeted ad's for them. 2. You have to implement social media strategies right from the beginning of course, based on your demographic research. 3. Get busy Blogging - start with content marketing now. 4. Sweepstakes - start a giveaway to get traction with clients and create awareness. 5. Make sure you collect emails as these are like gold dust for future email marketing. 6. Video marketing is essential for competitive retail space and very powerful to get found on search engines like Google. Prior to me launching my digital marketing business 5 years ago, I built an online retail business and made many expensive mistakes. And they can be costly if not implemented correctly from the beginning. So in summary: SEO - very important, Ad's, Social Media, Sweepstakes, Blogging, Video & email marketing. I trust this will assist you. Let me know if you wish to have a call to discuss these or have follow up questions. Regards KennethKT
-
What strategies and tactics have people used to successfully launch and market apps to college students?
As far as targeting a single high school, I don't know. But, in terms of platforms this audience uses, Tumbler, Instagram, Snap Chat & Vine would be good targets.VP
-
How can I effectively market my online business to baby boomers / senior citizens?
You have a lot of options to market to boomers and seniors. That age group is facebook's fastest growing segment. Build ads that target that age group and think about having a facebook page to supplement your efforts there. Older people search just like the rest of us as well, so build an adwords campaign around keywords that might align with your product. Contact me if you'd like to chat about some options or need some help building your campaigns. Good luck!JR
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.