Almost exactly one month ago today, I launched my first e-course, Pinfinite Growth. The course is designed to help bloggers lay a strong foundation for their site and then guides them through several modules of Pinterest strategies aimed at bringing more of the right visitors to their blogs. I’ve been blogging and running my own business for awhile, y’all, but even still, I was nervous that my course would fall flat. A part of me thought that “maybe only three people will sign up” and I’d feel so bad about it that I’d refund those three people and move to Alaska to live as an eskimo. Or, you know, maybe something a little less dramatic, like eating a pint of ice cream by myself.

Actually, launching Pinfinite Growth was one of the best business decisions I’ve ever made. Since I launched the course 4 weeks ago, almost 150 people have signed up. And since we’re all friends here, I’ll tell you that that resulted in close to $30,000 in revenue. Holy shizzle. Three years ago, that number was closer to what I’d make in a year, not a month, so it left me a little dumbfounded and a lot excited.
Since I want you to have your own successful launches, I’m going to detail exactly what I did for the launch of my course — how I marketed it, which techniques brought the most revenue, and suggestions for your own launch. This post is MEATY y’all (vegan meat, if you’d like) — so I hope you’re sitting down. 😉 Let’s boogie!
First things first, here are the different platforms I used to market my course. I’m explaining exactly how I used them and what kind of results I saw from each platform. Woohoo! These aren’t in any particular order of awesomeness — just FYI.
1. Periscope
Periscope was the very first place that I mentioned my new course. During the week I mentioned it, I actually hosted a mini-series on Periscope, in which I hosted a Periscope event each weekday of that week, all based around a specific topic. The topic was “how to stand out online” and I covered topics ranging from SEO to Pinterest.
Pinterest was the final day in the series and after sharing some advice, I told everyone a little bit about the course I’d be launching on the following Monday. I also gave them a special link where they could sign up to learn more about the course and be offered a special bonus only for people who signed up from that link. After I launched the course, three of those people ended up signing up for the course.
2. Webinars
I hosted two webinars during the launch of my course. Wow, what an experience they were! I’ve been to webinars in the past where I felt like, instead of giving me useful information, they were just luring me there so they could sell something to me. Bleh. I didn’t want the people who came to my webinars to feel that way, so I took time to prepare free classes that were filled with useful information. I’m glad I did, because I received a lot of positive tweets and emails from people who felt like the webinars themselves could have been paid workshops. That made me feel like I was on the right path. (Also, it just made me want to give the internet a big, giant hug).

For each of my two webinars, I spent about 60-75 minutes teaching and about 10 minutes selling my course at the end. Since I was a newb during my first webinar, I didn’t create a trackable link so that I could see how many people signed up through the webinar. I definitely saw more sales than usual though, so I knew it was working.
Now, for my second webinar, I did create a trackable link (go me!) and found that 39 people registered for my course through that link. Holy bananas! My palms are getting sweaty just saying that, because it was so surprising and exciting to me. As awesome as webinars were for sales, they took an enormous amount of time to plan, market, and teach. I probably wouldn’t be able to realistically do more than two webinars a month.
P.S. If you want to learn how to do effective webinars, my friend, Mariah, has a killer course on them here.
3. My Email List
I have a primary email list that I use to send weekly emails to my crew. I didn’t want to alienate or annoy them, but I did want to make sure that I was utilizing this list, as I knew that emailing your list is a great way to sell your product.
Over the span of four weeks, I sent six emails to this list. Three of those emails were either directly related to Pinfinite Growth or incorporated the course into the email in some way. The other three mainly marketed upcoming webinars that I was going to be doing (where I would also mention my course). To be honest, I wasn’t very “strategic” about my launch planning. I had some ideas of things I wanted to do, but I didn’t create any sort of “plan” ahead of time. For my next launch, I’ll probably create more of a plan, mainly to help with my sanity (launching takes a lot out o’ ya!).
I wish I had kept better track of how many sales I made through my email list (and have been considering switching to an email provider that tracks these things more easily), but I can tell you that on days I did send an email, I would see a significant increase in sales. It does work, trust me.
**All in all, webinars and emailing my list were the two most profitable things I used to market my course. However, I’d say that my email list had the highest Return On Investment (ROI) because I grew my list fairly passively and it didn’t take long to write the “sales” emails that I sent to my list. On the contrary, webinars took a lot of time to plan, promote, and teach. I’m not saying you shouldn’t do webinars — I’ll definitely host them in the future — but I’m just letting you know the facts, yo.
4. Facebook Ads
I once looked at the “Power Editor” interface for Facebook Ads and probably spent the next several hours crying in a corner. It looks intimidating and isn’t incredibly straightforward. To compensate, I enrolled in FB Ads for Launching, which I heard about through another entrepreneur who found it extremely helpful. It definitely is helpful! The teacher, Farideh, really walks you through each step, which was awesome.
I created several ads to market my e-course and eventually narrowed it down to about two ads, which were performing the best. Overall, I received 16 conversions and spent $77. Since my course is about $200, that means I spent $77 and in turn made close to $3,200. Holy mackerel! I felt like I unlocked some sort of internet superpower. It was rad. This was my highest converting ad:

Now, on the flip side, I mainly marketed those Facebook ads to people on my newsletter list and people who visited the Pinfinite Growth sales page previously, but hadn’t purchased yet. Basically, people who were already familiar with me or the course. This could also mean that some of those people didn’t purchase directly through those Facebook ads.
Basically, the way FB ads work is that when someone clicks the ad, a tracking pixel is attached to them, so if they eventually purchase your product, it will show up as a conversion. So, that means that someone who clicked an ad could have later purchased my course after reading one of my newsletters or hearing about it on social media. Since I didn’t really market it to brand new audiences, I can’t really say whether the ads actually got people to buy, but I definitely think they helped and I will be using them again in the future.
5. Twitter Chat
Someone asked me awhile back if I started my biweekly Twitter Chat (#NectarChat) because it would be full of my ideal customers, who I could then sell to. I thought it was an interesting question because “selling” was probably the last thing on my mind when I created #NectarChat. Ha! But now that I was launching my course and had a solid Twitter chat community, it did feel like a smart idea to at least let them know the course exists.
Since #NectarChat is a place for bloggers and entrepreneurs to discuss strategies and advice, I created a Pinterest-themed #NectarChat. I mentioned my course a few times throughout the chat and offered a bonus for anyone who signed up that night. Five people ended up signing up for the course after #NectarChat.
Now, aside from leveraging my Twitter Chat to market my course, I didn’t do a whole lot of Twitter marketing. I did retweet things when students would share positive results, but that’s about it. I’d like to be a bit more intentional with this in the future.
6. Instagram
I wasn’t super active on Instagram during my launch, and I want to spend more time on Instagram for future launches. A few things I did right:
- I shared a “behind the scenes” video of the course website. This got a lot of comments and attention, which I think is due to the fact that it shows all the neat stuff they’d get access to if they enroll. I also don’t know if I’ve ever seen a BTS video for a course, so people may have liked it because it was something new. I didn’t track how many people purchased after watching that specific video, but two of the people who commented did end up signing up.
- I posted a convincing testimonial from a student. I was really happy to see in the private course Facebook group that students were sharing some incredible results after only one week of the course starting. I decided to turn one of those Facebook posts into a testimonial image, which I shared on Instagram.
Aside from those things, I shared some other Instagram images where I mentioned that I was hosting a webinar and included the sign-up link in my profile. I didn’t put a whole lot of time or strategy into Instagram, which I’d like to change for the future.
7. This blog + a giveaway
I honestly didn’t share the course very much on the blog because I figured most of my dedicated readers would be on my email list anyways. I wrote one post introducing the course and also shared a giveaway within that post, so that one person could win free entrance into the course (Congrats Stacia!). What I can tell you is that the day before I published this post, four people purchased the course. On the day I published it? Eight people purchased.
I’m honestly not sure how much the giveaway helped and wouldn’t consider it anything that really helped my sales, especially compared to the other things in this list.
8. Social Proof
This isn’t really a “thing I did to launch my course,” but I wanted to mention it because I think it’s crazy important. So, before I launched the actual course, I pre-sold it for about 2 weeks. During that presale period, I did make quite a few sales — likely from people who knew and trusted me. But once the course launched and students started seeing fast results, I made sure to share those results in webinars, with my email list, and on social media. I wanted other people to know that the course works.
If you’re launching something, then I strongly suggest sharing this “social proof” with your followers. I absolutely believe it will increase your sales, because it’s a lot more persuasive to see someone else talk positively about your course than to only see you talking about it. During the two weeks when I pre-sold my course, I didn’t have social proof yet, but if you’re smarter than me, you could have “beta testers” who try out your course either for free or a reduced price and can give you your first testimonials. Social proof works.
Why I chose to keep my course Evergreen instead of launching only a few times a year
Now, a lot of people choose to launch their courses only a few times a year rather than keep enrollment open indefinitely. That can be a great strategy, but I chose not to do that for a few reasons…
- I felt like I could make consistent sales throughout the year just by having it open for enrollment. To me, it felt like kind of a waste to create a course and then not make money from it.
- If people want to enroll when it’s not currently in “launch mode” then they’ll have to sign up for your email list and wait for it to be released again. This may build anticipation, but at the same time, it may also build disinterest. I feel that those customers who were really excited about your course may not be as excited if they have to wait three more months to enroll in it.
- I felt like it was the right thing to do for my audience. I didn’t want to stress them out if they couldn’t afford the course during a two-week launch window. I also know that new people discover my site pretty regularly, so I wanted them to have the chance to join if they wanted to.
Now, even though I’m keeping it evergreen, I do envision some “launch periods” from time to time where I will promote the course more (with webinars, emails, etc) than I would in a regular week.
Pre-selling vs. launching a finished course
After the suggestion from my friend, Mariah, I decided to pre-sell my course about two weeks before I released the finished product. I’m glad I did and I made about $11,000 during that pre-sell period, which certainly motivated me to finish the course on time and make it as awesome as possible (now I had actual people to impress and help!).
The one thing that pre-selling a new product doesn’t allow you to do is share that “social proof” of students who have had success with the course (since you wouldn’t have had students yet!). That’s why I’d recommend pre-selling and selling for 1-2 weeks after the course has been released. That way, you can start circulating the awesome results your students are having.
Things I’d change for future launches:
1. I want to put more time into social media promotions. I rarely mentioned the course’s launch on social media, but I have quite a few followers who I think would really enjoy my course, so it’s something I will prepare for more in the future.
2. Likewise, I want to put more time and thought into the emails I send to my email list. I don’t think the emails I sent were bad, but they were more spur of the moment than planned and scheduled. In the future, I want to create more of a launch plan and have specific emails pre-written.
3. I want to create Facebook ads to target new audiences. Like I mentioned, I only targeted people who were familiar with me. That worked out well, but I’d like to expand my reach on Facebook and hopefully draw in people who are new to my work and create more sales. That will take some experimenting, but I’m excited! Fist bump!
4. Harness Periscope more. I’ve been really inactive on Periscope during the past month (honestly, I’ve been pretty inactive on all social media while launching this course — ha!). But I know Periscope is the shizzle and I want to be there more often, not just to sell my course, but mainly to connect with my peeps.
5. Start planning webinars two weeks in advance. Bah! Webinars were very worth it, but took me forever to plan and create. I mainly used a slide deck while presenting, and each deck had 70+ slides because I wanted to keep things fast-paced and interesting. Creating 70+ slides for each webinar took me a looong time, but if I plan ’em more in advance, I think it will be more manageable. 🙂 By the way, webinars are really fun. Fo’ realsies.
Phew! 2,600 words later and you’re probably like, “Man, I never want to launch anything. Ever.” I totally get it — launching is tough! There is a lot that goes into it and it can be very time consuming. But yo. YO. It can also be incredibly worth it. The amount of revenue I was able to make in the past four weeks is almost as much as I made in the three months prior. I’ve also just felt more of a purpose in my work because I’m connecting with the Pinfinite Growth students and legitimately seeing them grow. So, if you’ve got a launch idea buried somewhere in your head, then I encourage you to pull it out, write it down, and get to work. It’ll be worth it, pal.


















Ahhhhh yes Melyssa, this is EXACTLY what I needed! I’m pretty sure I heard the Hallelujah Chorus start playing when I saw this on Pinterest, haha. I’m in the process of creating/launching my own e-course, so this is mega helpful. <3
That’s wonderful, Elizabeth! Really glad I could help. What is your ecourse about?
It’s an overview of Personal + Blog Branding and has lots of fun, juicy worksheets and what not – I’m hoping to be ready for launch by the end of the month, fingers crossed!
Woot woot! Go you, Melyssa! This is awesome. So glad I signed up to Pinfinite growth, I’m planning on having a big weekend of Pinfinite-dominating! I kinda wish I had been on Pinterest before signing up to your course, but I feel like I have already saved so much time with your help, so I know I will get there!
Thank you Phoebe! I’m so glad you’re in the course. Enjoy the weekend of Pinfinite domination! 😀
I agree with your strategy to keep your course evergreen. So many online courses these days are only offered once, twice, or whenever. Yes it builds anticipation but at the same time, let’s say it’s an expensive product with a bit more of an investment, as a customer I would want to be able to invest when it’s right for me. Maybe it’s money, maybe it’s time, but if I have the chance to buy when I’m ready versus when you are ready to launch, I’m more likely to invest. It’s also nice to not be “pushed” to buy something just because time is running out.
On a side note, launching can be exhausting! So much marketing goes into it. This way new people are discovering The Nectar Collective everyday and they can take their time getting to know you, your blog, and eventually purchase your course when it’s right for them.
I totally agree, Monica! It can be rough when an expensive product comes out but you can afford it at the time.
And yes, launching can be super exhausting! I feel like I worked harder in those first two weeks of launching than ever before in my business haha. It was crazy. But you’re right, now that things have settled and will be “evergreen” the stress is going down a ton and the new people who discover TNC can purchase the course when it feels right for them. 🙂 Thanks Monica!
This is such an insightful post!! I’m not at the point where I feel I’m ready to create an e-course, but it’s definitely on my list of life goals! Every time I saw someone post about your course I felt so inclined to sign up, and I totally would have if I had more time and money right now! Hopefully this summer I can dive into it and make the investment 🙂
When you create a course one day, I have a feeling it is going to be amazing, Jessica. And good for you for knowing that you needed to wait to enroll for when you had more time and money. 🙂
I’m dying to publish an e-book, and have no. clue. how to do it.
I haven’t published an ebook yet, but which parts are you having trouble with? The actual ebook creation or the marketing of it? I think a lot of the marketing tactics from this post would work for an ebook, too. 🙂
I’m sure this post will help me a great deal with the marketing, and other marketing as well, so I’m going to really pour over it. What I’m shocked that I can’t find easily, is any full and simple how-to in formatting and publishing an e-book, i.e. how to take it from word processing (like Word or Pages) to uploading to publishing.
I didn’t get to catch the second webinar because I spontaneously went out of town. But the first webinar was awesome! I would have already bought your course if I wasn’t using my blog budget on a conference this month :). I’m so glad it’s evergreen so that I can access it when my budget works!
Thank you Brittany! So glad you enjoyed the first webinar. 🙂
You did a great job! I just started the first module today and it’s AMAZING. I didn’t realize it would go “beyond” Pinterest but I’m so glad it does. Totally worth the $. Thank you!
Aw Marina! You’re making me smile. Thank you for that truly sweet comment. <3 So glad to have you in the course.
I love this! I am so proud of you! I’m one of those people saving up to buy it one day so I love that you are keeping it open! Also, you rock girl! Thanks for sharing all this! I am hoping to do something crazy like this one day!
Thank you so much Elizabeth! I’ll be cheerin’ you on when you do something like this, too! 🙂
Really great post Melyssa! Saving it for future ecourse planning domination 😉
I joined your second webinar and I remember thinking “poor girl, she must have spent ages creating this presentation!”. But you know what, it showed that you put a lot of effort in and that made you tots trustworthy!
Thank you Wendy! And haha! It did take awhile, but it’s allllll good. I’m glad it made me more trustworthy, too! That is nice of you to say. 🙂
Such an insightful post! The webinars were great, you could defo tell how much work you put into them, which in itself is a great testimonial to how good the actual course would be!
Aw thank you Sarah! I really appreciate that so much. 🙂
Great post! I’m currently working on an e-course so this was exactly what I needed to read. 🙂
Oh wonderful, Yvonne! I’m so glad.
Great post! I’m currently writing an ebook and I’m hoping I can promote it in similar ways you did with a course, thanks for sharing the info!
You’re so welcome, Harriet. What’s your ebook about?
It’s a mixture of an ebook and a workbook that’ll help you write a blog business plan 🙂
SO awesome, Harriet.
Melissa, thanks so much for sharing your results…I’m so nervous about launching mine and you made feel a little better about it. I’m not sure I’ll get the results you have but the fact that you were nervous but still trucked in and had amazing results gives me hope to not quit! Thank you!!!
Rekita, I SO understand those nerves in the beginning. It’s downright scary to put yourself out there and try something totally new. I have a feeling it will be very worth it though if you put in the effort. 🙂
Bookmarking this for sure! I’ve had a few successful launches and one major flop and it’s so disappointing to see all your hard work not convert to sales. Bleh! I’ll definitely be revisiting this page when I relaunch!
A few successful launches is an awesome accomplishment! I can definitely see how having a flop would be disappointing. Do you pre-sell your products? I know part of the reason Mariah pre-sells her products is to see if people would actually buy them so that she knows she should create the rest of it.
Thank you for creating such detailed and helpful blog posts! They are really interesting a helpful to read, I love knowing what goes on behind the scenes!
You’re so welcome, Jo! Really glad you enjoy them. 🙂
Excellent Post !!! However, I would like to know how you are working to develop the course. As you think through the structure of the course lessons. I’m just starting a blog and looking for help in these matters.
Thank you Maria! And that’s a really great question that will take some thought and a lot of words — I’m going to try and write a post about it! 🙂
Thank you so much!
Hello!! I loved your last webinar (couldn’t make it on the 1st one) i so loved it that i signed up for the course, Cant wait to start!! I was just curious about what webinar tool did you use? I really enjoyed it. Thank you so much for your time!!
Glad you enjoyed it Laura! I appreciate you coming. 🙂 I used Google Hangouts to share the webinar video and LeadPages to display the page. I hope that helps! 🙂
Truly an amazing inspiration!
Aw thank you Cassandra <3
No problem, I am a new business owner learning all the ropes of blogging and social media and actually learning how to web design on my own all while being a wedding planner and working at my BORING day job until my business takes off! I watch and read your posts all the time! Keep up the great work! Btw Social Media Superhero was fantastic! I learned a lot and already have implemented many of your tips 🙂
Melyssa, I just want to say thanks for caring. Whether I do a repost of your work on twitter, comment on your blog post, or whatever; you’re always sure to respond. The human element makes following you heartwarming and has challenged me to step up my game! Not to mention, the content is always so helpful. So, whether you post a thousand FB ads, promote from every social media platform ever created, and/or articulate emails like a “god”, I think nothing matters more than the relationship you continue to nurture with your audience. You rock, chick-a-dee!
Melissa, this may just be my favorite comment, ever. I really, really appreciate it and can’t tell you how much it means to me. I was just telling my partner the other day how important it is to respond to comments and social media, and the fact that you actually took that to heart is really special to me. Thank you for being awesome and especially for being part of this community. <3
Thanks for this post Melyssa. It shows me a few things I haven’t done well in my recent launch. I’ve had one sign up despite offering the absolute earth! I’m not moving to Alaska though… I’m just going to overservice my one client, create awesome material and make sure I put a better plan in place next time 🙂
LOVE your optimism and positivity, Becca. I bet you’re going to do so much for that one client and get an awesome testimonial to boot. Woop woop!
Thank you so much for this post Melyssa! I’m working on a course right now so this is SO helpful! ❤️
Edit: one question I just though of – what are you using to host your course? Is it fedora or a WP Membership site? Something else?
Woohoo! I’m really glad this was helpful, Fran. 🙂 And I’m currently using Zippy Courses on a WordPress site, but switching to Fedora has definitely crossed my mind. 🙂
Thanks for being so candid and willing to share all that info!! I just purchased Zippy Courses (today), can I ask why you’re considering switching to Fedora?
Great post! 🙂 I’ve been struggling between ”worth it!” and “waste of time..” for some period already, but you’ve inspire me to think about it at least for once more!
Therefore I have a question – how long it took for you to create the course?
Thanks!
ieva.
Thank you Ieva! 🙂 It’s hard to say exactly how long it took me to create, but probably about 4 weeks.
Hi Melyssa! I just wanted to drop by and let you know you’re doing an absolutely AMAZING job with everything, I love receiving your newsletter & each post is very encouraging. Good luck with the new courses.
Oh Noor, thank you so much for this awesome comment. It really means a lot to me. I appreciate you! <3
A very helpful post! I’m going through the motions right now and when I saw this in my feedly, I got so excited cos I follow you on twitter. Thanks for sharing your strategies with us. 🙂
Aw thank YOU for this awesome comment, Violeta. 🙂
Great post. Thanks for being so detailed – it definitely helps!
You’re so welcome, Katy! Glad you liked it. 🙂
What an amazing, helpful post! P.S. Your blog is definitely one of my favorite blogs EVER. Thank you for doing all of this!
Elizabeth, can I just say that you are seriously awesome? I appreciate this comment so much! <3
I love the thoughts you shared on why you chose to keep the course evergreen! I know for myself there are a handful of higher investment courses that I want to take but it’s frustrating when people only launch their course 1-3 times a year because it makes it hard to know exactly when they’re going to relaunch so I can make sure my business expenses are aligned for me to make that investment. It’s also hard to remember sometimes what course belongs to which person and why I jumped on their email list.
Pinfinite Growth is amazing! I’m learning so much and working hard to baby step and implement all of the things you’re teaching. I’ve already noticed a small, but steady, increase in my Pinterest engagement/traffic, and know it’s only going to keep going up as I continue to implement your tactics! 🙂
I’m so glad you’ve found the course helpful, Stacia! Keep going, you’re awesome! 😉
This was really helpful! I’m not looking at launching an e-course, but this really helped give me some ideas for marketing a release of an e-book I’m working on. By the way, LOVE your blog! I can’t stop reading it.
Thanks so much for your sweet comment, Kelly! I’m happy you found this helpful. Good luck with the release of your e-book! 🙂
Wow Mel, that’s so helpful and complete! Thanks for sharing your process and success with us! Have you considered re-using your webinar material? I’ve seen some people re-do the same webinar a few times to max out the potential. That might be useful for you, reach some more people you didn’t catch the first time, and maybe even some hard core fans would come hang out again. 🙂
Thank you so much Julie! 🙂 I’ve considered it, but haven’t done that yet. That may definitely be an option so that it doesn’t take me quite so long to plan new webinars though. 😉
Thank you so much for sharing all that! I am totally in love with your content and honesty!
I wanted to ask about webinars: is it something you do all the time (like a podcast, where you occasionally would sell on it but constantly provide awesome info), or is it something you do ONLY when you sell?
Congratulations on the successful launch, Melyssa! Sorry if this is too forward, feel free to tell me to mind my own beeswax, but I saw the course includes 2 live sessions with you (which: AMAZING!). Just curious how you plan to schedule that in your life with a course that’s evergreen.
I hope that didn’t come off as snarky, I didn’t mean it that way! Genuinely curious as it’s been a hurdle I too have been facing when thinking about developing courses.
Hey Megan! Totally not snarky at all. I really appreciate the congrats and intrigue. 🙂 So, the two Q&A sessions were marketed with the initial launch and happened within about 30 days of the course’s launch. Those sessions were recorded and then uploaded to the course website. So now, any new students who join are not advertised that they will get live Q&A sessions with me. They just get the recordings.
I may do more Q&A sessions in the future, in which I’d advertise it to existing students through our email list and FB group, but those haven’t been planned yet. 🙂 Does that help at all, Megan?
OMG SO helpful. Rooting for your continued success! Thanks for being so open!
Thank you so much for your support, Megan! 🙂
This is awesome, Melyssa!! Congrats!!
Thank you so much, Carmen! 🙂
Amazing post Melyssa! I have a question. You said “I mainly marketed those Facebook ads to people on my newsletter list and people who visited the Pinfinite Growth sales page previously, but hadn’t purchased yet.” How did you do this? I have tried to set up FB ads before but that sounds like such a specific group of people, I’m wondering how you targeted them.
Hi Julie Ann! In both instances, you need to create a Custom Audience. For the newsletter list audience, you should upload a CSV of your subscribers (or use the direct Mailchimp integration they have if you use Mailchimp). For people who have visited your sales page, you need to insert a tracking pixel on that page (search for “Facebook Tracking Pixel” plugins in order to do it really easily on WordPress) and then create a custom audience of people who have visited that page with the tracking pixel. I hope that helps. 🙂
Melyssa, this is amazing and I’m so grateful you shared this with us. I cannot believe you made $30K. You are a freaking rockstar. Also, I’m a sucker for great names + pun so Pinfinite Growth is my jam. Congrats, congrats, congrats!
Thanks so much, Mattie! You are so sweet 🙂 and obviously you know YOU’RE a rockstar too, girl 😉
This is an awesome guide to launching courses, which I guess I better get pre-selling mine, thanks for putting together these simple strategies
Hey Meaghan, thanks for stopping by. Good look with preselling!
I love THIS!! Bookmarking it for future reference. Congrats on your launch, Melyssa!!
Awesome! Thanks for stopping by.
Hi Melyssa! This is an other incredible post and although it all seems a little intimidating I do think that this is a great post for future reference! 🙂 Thank you for writing!
Hi Sofie. Thanks so much for your comment! I know it can be intimidating, but you will definitely know when you are ready!
Awesome Melyssa! I’m going to do it!! Just not exactly sure what my topic will be yet. I have ideas, but I keep talking myself out of them. I signed up for X0Sarah’s course, but I’ve been procrastinating. Time to kick my rear in gear!! Just bookmarked your post for reference as well. Thank you!
Yes! I’m so glad to hear that you are ready. You can do it 🙂
Hi Melyssa! I am working on e-courses. I have 2 teaching degrees, but with 5 kids 12 and under I am not going into the FT work zone. Plus blogging is funner 🙂 So as I am writing my outline and brainstorming ideas, I often get to thinking his might be more like a book. How do you make it more “course-like” and not like a book?
Hi Jeniece, that’s what is great about courses! You can take the time you need to build it. Adding video and slides will help it be less book like. Or you can opt for an email course that is dripped out overtime.
If you need help with your Facebook ads, that’s my specialty! Let me know 🙂
Thank you!
Great article. Exactly what I need at this moment 🙂 I am using the pre-sale strategy but at the moment there is not 1 single sale but I just started using Pinterest.
Would love to enroll in Pinfinite Growth but unfortunately it costs as 1/3 of my monthly paycheck. Waiting for a bonus so I can enroll or maybe discount coupons will be available in a near future? 🙂
I have learned so much already just by reading your blog. Thank you!
Hey Igor! Keep and eye out for bundles. I’m so glad to hear that you’ve found these posts helpful.
I definitely understand that! I am glad that you have been finding the tips on the blog helpful 🙂
Thank you for sharing this! This is super helpful. I launched my first course in September, a DIY home staging course Stage Your House Like A Pro) but it didn’t sell very well. Mostly it’s my fault because I didn’t have a very good launching strategy/plan. But it was a great learning experience. And kudos on the Fb ads! Usually it’s pretty hard to sell via FB ads, so it’s awesome that you not only was able to convert, you also made $. That’s impressive!
Oh that sounds amazing! Home staging is super cool. Thanks for your sweet comment 🙂
Home staging sounds super awesome! That is such a great course idea 🙂
Also, thank you for that comment about my ads!
Thanks, but I think the niche may be too small? The course hasn’t performed as well as I’d like, even though people who had taken it said that they got a lot out of it. I’m going to leave it alone for now and I’ll revisit the course once we get a little bit more traction.
It could also be your marketing strategy. Home Staging is a REALLY good niche!
Thanks so much Melyssa, I look forward to growing my blog in 2016 with the Blog Hive! Since my business is 100% online next year, the pressure is on 🙂
You’re gonna be great!
This is so incredibly helpful! I have done many courses ab out marketing and building an online business, but rarely have found any info on how to actually launch a course. I plan on putting thsi into use for some big projects in 2016!
That is awesome Jessi! I’m glad that this is helping you to launch your course 🙂
I am so glad that you have found this helpful. I am excited that you will be able to launch your product!
Melyssa, as I’m approaching my next launch (yay!) I have a question: for the pre-launch period did you do any special offer that made it worth it buying the course before the actual launch? (discount, bonus, something?) Many thanks!! 😀
Thanks for sharing! I’m launching my first e-course this year and am planning on doing it evergreen. I was wondering how one would work webinars into such a type of product. Bookmarking this for future reference!
What I do is I record the webinar and upload it a leadpages page (or a page inside your blog). Then you send people to watch it so traffic is constantly being sent to it. That way every time someone watches it it’s an opportunity for a sale and they keep coming!
This is so helpful as I work toward launching my e-course on how to make the transition to living frugally. I’m really working hard on content, but kind of confused about the whole platform thing. If you don’t want to share, I understand, but I’m curious which platforms you use to set up your e-courses? I was looking into Udemy and Teachable, but not sure what I need / want and would work best for the blog so I’m looking for other opinions. Thanks for sharing all of this info!
Great article Melyssa! Brilliant as always. How would you recommend outlining for products. I have so many ideas for what could be products, but I feel like the ideas have too many parts to be broken down into. Any recommendations for outlining? Or breaking them down into smaller segments?
Appreciate any help!
Love your evergreen strategy, I personally think launching is overrated, ha ha! And like you said if you have a course why make people who want it wait!?
It’s all a balance 🙂 Thanks for commenting Julia!
thanks for your transparency with it all! I understand why some teachers only have their classes open during certain times but I definitely enjoy being able to sign up when it works for my budget and schedule.
Absolutely, there are so many benefits to evergreen! Thanks for commenting, Sara 🙂
Thanks for this interesting post, with some great strategies I’ll have to try! Have just launched my first course and am doing a couple of instagram campaigns, but not convinced anyone will ever sign up. Learning curve I suppose!
Sounds like you’re on a great track, Sophie! I know you can be wildly successful 🙂
Thank you! <3
Just wow Melyssa! I think I looked over this post when it first came out and was impressed but now that I am in the process of planning my first real product launch and wanted to come back and learn from a real pro while making my schedule. As one of those pinfinate growth students who has seen some serious growth in my traffic, I knew you’d have some great instruction. I am typically a very organized person but the idea of all the moving parts associated with a launch are kinda scary. It’s not like a blog post where you write it and share it hardcore for a few days then sporadically over time. Before it’s even out you have to start marketing, you have to write “pre-courses” (blog posts) to gain traction, purchase ads, have classes to teach people and tell them about your class before it’s even launched. Creating the course is really just half the work, I’m seeing as I get deeper into it. Thanks for all the great ideas and tips. As always it has been a huge help. I have some new ideas I want to add and a clearer perspective on how to execute some existing ones. You rock!
DIA! I’m so impressed by how much you’ve learned in such a short amount of time. Yes, there are a TON of moving parts when it comes to course creation and promotion but I have no doubt that your launch is going to go amazingly! Best of luck and please keep me posted on all of your progress 🙂
Great Article Melyssa,
Congrats on your launch. This is inspiring.
You know what would be a great opt-in here?
your launch calendar. I’m a visual learner and reading this was fine but a visual calendar that include pre, prelaunch and launch would be excellent so we can see just how everything fit together.
I know this is old, I hope I can still ask questions 🙂 I was wondering how many people you had on your list when you launched this, because I am always curious if my list is there yet and ready for a lunch…
So encouraging and inspiring Melissa! I’m getting ready to launch my very first e-course and I so needed all this info! Thank you so much!
Yay! I’m so glad this was helpful for you, Ana. Thanks for letting me know 🙂
That’s great Melissa! I’ve been having in mind for the past months to do online courses because I love teaching and helping people, and now that I’m living in Morocco I can’t find many students here; so the Internet would be a really great solution!
What keeps me back are mainly two things:
1) self confidence: I’m super afraid of failure
2) and finally my spoken pronunciation of English. I know most of my followers aren’t from Spain like me, so I think I need to do the course in English to help them. But I’m soooo ashamed of recording my voice, and even more in another language!
But for this 2017 year my word is “TEACHING” so I will do it 🙂
__
Claudia – http://www.heartmade.es – Design for Happiness
Don’t let the fear of failure hold you back! Chef Fabio Viviani has gone on to becoming one of the most renowned chef’s of our time and he has a very thick Italian accent. You’re going to do great. I believe in you! 😀
Wow thanks Melissa! Having that reference is the kind of motivation I needed!
Hi @Melyssa Griffin:disqus, thank you so much for the great content! Do you use post-launch surveys for people who expressed interest but didn’t buy? Do you have a template to recommend (for the survey)?
Thank you so much for your kind words, Kasey! 🙂 Post-launch surveys are a great way to assess what you can do differently the next time you launch your course or product. I recommend exploring SurveyMonkey or Typeform as complimentary services. Find out why they didn’t buy (sometimes it’s just a matter of timing!) Good luck with everything 🙂
I’m interested in launching my own course, but I’m confused how to go about it. What platform did you use to host your course?
Hi! 🙂 I use Teachable to launch all of my courses. It’s an amazing course platform that handles everything for you – there is also a free plan if you’d like to investigate: https://teachable.com/pricing/comparison
Hi Melyssa ! Thank you for this awesome post as usual ! What kind of bonuses did you offer to people that subscribed sooner ? I was thinking about offering a discount the first week of the launch but I guess I need to pick one or the other solution ? (discount to subscribers or to everyone during the first week of the launch) 🙂 Thank you in advance for your answer Melyssa 🙂
Hi Elo 🙂 It’s been awhile since this initial launch of Pinfinite Growth, but I love to offer ‘early bird’ bonuses to those who opt in for a course during the early stages of the launch. I sometimes offer a mini course, or you could throw an additional training video, an extra guide, something to extend the value and sweeten the deal for your student 🙂
Thank you Melyssa ! Yes I know it’s been a while since you launch this course, I follow for maybe one year now and your such a gourou for me! 🙂 I’m about to launch my first product (an ebook) and it’s so exciting !!! Can’t wait to launch and check if the interest of my subscribers is real ! Love your advice, I’ll try to be creative to find good bonuses for my early subcribers 😉 (excuse my french !)
How do you presale? Is there a article on this?