How To Make Money Selling Courses On Udemy

in #business7 years ago

I've made $140,000 in the last 4 years on Udemy. Fellow Steemian, @jordanlindsey asked me how I was "killing it on Udemy"! So here's my 7 tips for "killing it" on Udemy.

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I wouldn't say I was "killing it" there. I'm actually making less these days that I used to. Not sure why. But now I'm making less courses as I'm interested in other things these days (cryptos, anybody?)

Anyway, I do know a thing or two about Udemy. And I've got a lot of friends who are successful there.

1. Enjoy creating content!

Be passionate about your subject!

Make sure you love creating videos about it and you love writing blog posts about it.

The most important thing in business is to enjoy it. If you don’t enjoy your business, you’re in the wrong business.

2. Create lots of courses

The worst thing you can do is just hide yourself away and spend months and months on perfecting your first course. (A nd then you'll put it on Udemy and wonder why nobody's buying it).

Get the first course out as quickly as possible – and make sure you tell all your contacts you're doing it so you can get their ideas – and peak their interest.

And then you can make the second, third, fourth, fifth course.

Just do it.

You're not going to be successful with your first course. It’s more likely to be the third, fourth, fifth, or the tenth course that you will strike gold with.

3. Create free courses

Udemy doesn't like free courses so much these days. But what you can have a course for free for a few weeks and get loads and loads of students on the course, because there’s always loads of freebie seekers on every platform.

Then you can add more videos and more value to it and then make it paid.

Udemy allows you to promote to your students on paid courses, so you can do promotional announcements to all the thousands of subscribers to that formerly free course.

It’s a great idea to make free courses on your own site anyway. I have 5 free courses on my own site here: https://robcubbon.com/freecourses

This is a Teachable site: I get the email addresses of all the people who sign up to my free courses so then I can promote to them my other paid courses as well. Upsells!

4. Create courses in a non-competitive niche

This is a bit of a cop-out really. I create courses around subjects that I know about, eg. WordPress, web design, etc., there are the things that I do so they're my niche.

But other people may be creating courses on Perl, on Java, on JavaScript, etc., and these are great niches because not a lot of people are doing courses on them and there’s not a lot of competition.

5. Marketing!! Sell that puppy!!!

This is a really big subject because you can't just put a course on Udemy and expect it to sell (or you'll be very lucky if it does).

Create loads of great free content. Create great blog posts on your site. Create great YouTube videos – you can put 30% of any course on YouTube. that would be fine you can sell

You do this for one reason and one reason alone and that's to collect email addresses.

So get opt-ins on your own site for a free ebook or free video content you've and get people's email addresses – then you can send them value emails as well as promotional emails asking them to buy your premium Udemy courses.

Udemy will see you're driving traffic and you're getting sales and then they will start to promote your courses

6. Meet other instructors

This is the best idea in entrepreneurship: meet other entrepreneurs online and offline!

Talk to them about what they're doing. Tell them what's working for you

It's a lonely a whole world out there if you're doing this all on your own!

7. Don't just concentrate on Udemy

That would be a big mistake. Don't put all your eggs in one basket!

Sell your courses on your own site, and there are loads of other platforms out there. You don't have to be exclusive to you to me so don't just do Udemy.

What do you think?

Is this a viable business opportunity for you? Let me know if you have any questions. Always happy to help.

Or check out my free courses: https://robcubbon.com/freecourses – one of them is about selling e-books and video courses.

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if you dont mind sharing, how much money did you spend on marketing and fees? im curious how much profit you made

this is profit @storcogato there are no fees on Udemy. However, I have been building an online audience for a while and that is my marketing - sending them emails, etc.

Good advice, thanks for sharing!

It's all about getting the SEO right and targeting good niches. Without any competition but still proper search results, bam, there's your money. Or you just go into saturated markets and ADVERTISE the hell out of em

Either that or to sell to your own audience @avilsd

On average, how long does it take you to author a course?

About one month, working one hour a day @superskillz followed you as well :)

@robcubbon Hey Rob what do you think of alternative platforms like optimizepress and clickfunnels for selling courses versus udemy? Of course udemy is like amazon with their own traffic but I wonder about the other options as well. Thanks for this post I am working on my first udemy course for chess.

@andrewlarson Never tried either but I don't like the idea of Clickfunnels because it look expensive and has too many bells and whistles. I don't like the idea of using WordPress plugins like Optimizepress because it of the resources it takes up on the server and you have to take care of security. I used 3 WordPress plugins to sell courses and they were all unwieldy (WishList, MemberMouse, and DAP). I was hacked on DAP. I'm now using Teachable which is so easy and off my site so security and speed is their problem. I would also recommend Thinkific for these reasons.

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The platform is already working and making a profit :)
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Thanks for these tips, Rob! Nailed it.

My Udemy revenue doesn't come close to what you have been able to accomplish, so well done!

I have personally steered away from creating videocourses for the moment, because I can't do everything. I'm trying to focus.

I'd like to add one extra tip to your post: if you script your videocourses (like I do: mine are not screencast recordings, but courses on (1) yoga and (2) productivity), you can use that script as a first draft for an ebook.

You can then either use that book as a giveaway to collect email addresses, or publish that ebook for Kindle on Amazon. That's what I did. Well, actually I did that for my yoga course. Not yet for my productivity course.

Note to self: Must turn productivity video course script into an ebook...

Thanks @livenowandwow – yes I've repurposed courses into books and books into courses. It's all about making your content work for you. I've also repurposed a book into an email course now I come to think about it.

I love you for sharing this. I was just noticing an ad for udemy today - tried to clik it but it snagged. Then I was thinking hey I love making educational stuff. Then I found this post. End.

wow @live2love sound like a Udemy fail. Never mind. It's not a perfect platform but there is an opportunity there

Business Profit! Master of Marketing! The main rule - Do it!

Thank you! I have to try it. But what if my English is not the best?

That should be a problem. Depending on your English, you could hire someone to do the voice overs for you but that would be expensive. Many non-native speakers teach in English. Also you can do a course in your language, there'll be less competition (but less demand).

Thanks for the info. I'm going to check it out. Respect. Upvoted.

let me know if you have any questions, @thedonfreeman

Great tips, Rob! Upvoted!