Cómo comercializar un curso online
Cómo comercializar un curso en línea: descubra todos los pasos necesarios para aumentar las ventas y las inscripciones
Cómo comercializar un curso en línea: descubra todos los pasos necesarios para aumentar las ventas y las inscripciones
So you've made an incredible online course that you know will be valuable to so many people, you publish it online with excitement, what an exhilarating moment! And then all you hear is crickets.
In this article we're going to be taking you through several strategies on how to market your online courses, including marketing your courses before they even exist so you go into the process of making your courses with confidence.
Rather watch a video than read? Jump to our webinar covering all of this instead at the bottom!
What are the steps of your course funnel? What metrics are you tracking to measure the performance of each of these stages? Which stage of the funnel do you need to address the most? It's important you're crystal clear on this, because your funnel and the performance tracking of this is the foundation to successful marketing! How are you going to know what you need to focus on unless this is clear? We recommend measuring KPIs on a monthly basis but you can go for more or less frequent like weekly or quarterly, depending on what suits you and your team. Sometimes updating and measuring performance involves manual work so try not to get bogged down too much with this. If you do then all you'll be doing is measuring and not have any time for actual work on executing to improve the performance. Some key things to track are social media followers, website visits, sign ups to free content (eg free course, free trial, webinar, whitepaper etc.), course sales, course subscriptions, net promoter score and repeat sales.
While your course building tool or LMS should give you some performance reporting on course sales and engagement, you may need some other tools to track other parts of the funnel.
Here's a few ideas:
We're offering a free course funnel dashboard template for you to start implementing this step. It even has charts linked to all the data so you and your team can easily digest the numbers. Just click here to open the template , and then either click file and then make copy, or download it as an excel spreadsheet.
These are two different things by the way! You might be getting some course sales from one type of customer but actually really want another type of customer. For example, maybe you're making sales of your leadership course to entrepreneurs just because they were the first ones to purchase, but what you really want is to attract Fortune 500 companies to buy your course and teach it to all their staff. Big customers can often be easier to deal with and more willing to pay higher prices after all!
Some attributes of your target audience to define might be:
Sounds pretty simple right? Once you're on top of these first two steps, hopefully you'll have some ideas of where your target customers may be getting stuck in the funnel. Do try your best to see it from their point of view, going through and testing in detail each stage they would be going through. Often it can be right up the top of the funnel. How can you expect them to purchase your course if they don't even know you exist? If this is the case then it can be beneficial to focus on top of funnel performance; things like social media followers, website visits, SEO and free content are good places to start. This can be frustrating for some course creators to hear because it feels like it will take an eternity to really grow these metrics and start converting them into course sales, especially if you're just handing out all your good stuff for free!
Well, unfortunately we don't have any get rich quick advice for you because building a business and selling a product is a marathon, not a sprint. That's why not many businesses make it to 7 figures from course sales, because they're not willing to make a hard long-term commitment and think years ahead. Building a brand takes time so put in the hard yards consistently to build up your brand awareness and the relationship with your target audience so you can reap the benefits big time in the long-term.
Once you've implemented potential fixes and changes to improve growth at specific stages of your funnel, you'll need to keep an eye on this growth to learn what's working and what's not. Has website traffic increased? Has social media engagement or followers increased? Has your conversion rate of free to paid course sign ups increased? Has your learner net promoter score increased? You should be able to answer these questions after you've made some changes to address them.
Understanding your options for growth is key
Every business is different but there's a lot of best practices in digital marketing and even for course creators. Understanding these as a base and seeing how your funnel lines up can be a great place to start. After all, you need to have ideas and prioritise the tasks that focus on where you're falling short. Having this awareness and identifying growth opportunities is the key to boosting your course sales. Below we cover several digital marketing areas to think about. We even go through them all in a video webinar with a successful course marketing example of what you can model your brand off.
Social Media
The social media channels that you use to market your courses can highly depend on who you are marketing to. This is why it's absolutely key to understand your ideal customer and their behaviours online. LinkedIn is great for those targeting businesses, particularly white-collar/professional services type roles. Larger businesses can tend to be on LinkedIn more too but it can depend on several factors. If you're going for more of a B2C audience rather than B2C, then maybe something like Instagram or TikTok could be best. It really depends on the specifics of that audience. Other social media platforms include Facebook, Pinterest, Snapchat, Youtube, X (Twitter), Reddit and more. Our recommendation is to focus on just one channel and getting the most out of that for organic posting. You can branch out and test the waters a bit with the others but over time it's best to really double down on what works.
From a content perspective, here are some ideas to get you started with organic posting:
Paid Advertising
The most popular advertising platforms to use for course creators are:
Meta covers both Instagram and Facebook. Google's main advertising is through search terms, but they do also offer YouTube ads and display ads through the platform too. LinkedIn is great to get very targeted with a B2B audience as you can decide on specific companies, industries, job positions, locations etc on who you want to target with your content. Google's search targeting can be very relevant. For example if you're a dental training provider you may want to run google ads which show your website when people search for "online dental training courses". Similar to LinkedIn, Meta ads is a lot about the targeting options you are putting in, but there is less occupational type data to use in there. Although, because there are so many active users on Facebook and Instagram, often B2B marketers will use Meta Ads just for retargeting of website visitors who have not purchased.
Of course running paid ads requires an actual advertising budget! Some training businesses have figured out a formula to do so profitably. Usually this requires your course prices to be on the higher end. For example, if you spend $500 on average in advertising for each course sale, and the course sells for $2,000, then you're making a $1,500 profit, not including all the other costs involved. If you're selling lower priced courses, well this can be a lot harder to make a profit as you'll need to have a very low average advertising cost per sale.
Website Design
The most popular website building tools we see used by course creators are:
Try not to get too caught up about this though. The tools are important, but it's way more important what you actually do with them, and it can be a huge expense and resource investment to switch between tools. If you're thinking about this, make sure you've got a great reason to.
There's a few best practices you should really adhere to in your website design. In the video at the bottom of this article, we take you through an example to check out too. Here are a few things we recommend aiming for:
SEO
Imagine generating highly qualified leads without paying. Well, many course creators manage to do this through SEO (search engine optimisation). SEO is just a fancy term for showing up in google results without paying. If someone searches for 'leadership skills for CEOs course' and your website is the first one to show up, well that's going to help you a lot with relevant website traffic! Plus, it is so much more sustainable for your business not having to rely on paid advertising. Free sales are so much better than paying for them, right!?
So how do I rank my website for big search terms? Again, we're not trying to be party poopers here, but we need to make it clear while there's so many opportunities in SEO, it can take time and there's not a quick solution. Here's some important strategies which factor into your SEO performance:
Email Marketing:
The most popular tools we see used by course creators include
Again, it's more about what you do with these tools though! There's basically two types of emails you should be sending:
A) Automated emails These should trigger within a specific stage of the customer journey. For example, an email to a new course sale to confirm their purchase and how to access the course as well as letting them know you will give them bonus value for buying the course such as a free call or priority support. Other great automated emails can be a series that nurture customers through stages of the funnel, for example from a free sign up to paid course user. This is why it can be a great idea to offer free content like webinars, free courses, free guides in exchange for their email address so you can then build up and nurture a positive relationship with them before they become a paying customer.
B) Bulk campaigns Bulk campaigns are great for targeting a specific part of your database with relevant updates or offers. It's best practice to segment this into specific parts to personalise the communication. Try to avoid general newsletters that just got to the entire database where possible.
AI Tools:
Some of our favourite AI tools for marketing courses include:
¿Prefieres consumir todo este contenido en formato de vídeo? Vea a nuestro cofundador y director de marketing explicarle todo esto, además del importante ejemplo que mencionamos y que puede servirle de inspiración en este seminario web de dos partes que se muestra a continuación. Si esto te ha parecido útil, dale me gusta a nuestro canal de YouTube y suscríbete a él para mostrar tu apoyo.