No sells with 250 page visits

Hello, I published my first course a couple of weeks ago https://www.udemy.com/course/software-practices-and-writing-clean-code/
I think I've promoted it fairly well(with youtube and writing articles), but from the all ~250 visitors - none of them bought the course(except for a friend of mine and one other guy that I'm pretty sure he pirated the course, uploaded it to his website for free and took his money back)

So my questions are:
1. Is this normal for the first month?
2. Shouldn't I had at least 1-2 sales from 250 visitors?
3. Do you see something obvious that I can fix on my landing page(I know that the promo video is a little bit cringe, maybe I should fix it :D)?

Thanks for reading.

Comments

  • RandyMinder
    RandyMinder Posts: 670 visionary rank

    Hi @devsmanship
    - The one thing that really stands out to me is the price of your course. Virtually no one is going to pay $95 for anything on Udemy. And, if they do, they are likely to buy it and then ask for a refund, as you have already run into.

    Another thing I noticed is the length. It's only 1.5 hours. You are asking a ton of money for a very short course.

    Have you taken a look at how many other people have created courses on writing clean code? I did a search and there are a lot of them. You have a lot of competition.

    I did watch your promotional video and, for me personally, I didn't really like it. I generally don't like authors who try to be funny for the sake of being funny. Also, your accent is very thick. This is going to make people spend extra effort trying to understand you. Some students don't mind this and some don't like it at all. For me, I will always try to find a native English speaking instructor if I can. I don't like having to spend extra energy trying to understand what the instructor is saying.

  • Try to reduce the Price and then create coupons for students. in each month 3 coupons instructors can create

  • Is anyone paying the full price for a course anyway? I have the impression that everyone is buying the courses at $10-15, so why does it matter that the course is $95?

    I kinda agree with you about the "funny" part, I push it a little bit too much, but I don't agree with the accent part. I mean, I hardly can do anything about it and there are a ton of instructors with accents that have great success. Probably there are people that won't enroll because of that, but they are rare.

    Thanks for the response :)

  • Thanks, I will try that. Thanks for the response :)

  • RealFelix
    RealFelix Posts: 64 trailblazer rank

    I read some comments from people who sell a lot on Udemy and they hardly sell anything for the original price. Also, some say you should choose a high price, so the course looks more valuable when it's being discounted.

  • RealFelix
    RealFelix Posts: 64 trailblazer rank

    Ask your friends and family to take a closer look at your course and write a review. You only have 2 students and only one rating. Make it at least 5 ratings with the help of your friends and family. This will help you:

    1. Rank better
    2. Create more trust
  • RandyMinder
    RandyMinder Posts: 670 visionary rank

    @RealFelix
    , @devsmanship
    - I would be careful suggesting this. Udemy has ways of determining if instructors are trying to scam the system by having family and friends inflate ratings. I have no idea how they do it, but I know they do.

  • RealFelix
    RealFelix Posts: 64 trailblazer rank

    I understand. I think as long as they're actually liking the course and it's relevant to them, there should be nothing wrong with this approach :)

  • I know this because I've seen a lot of top instructors that are not native English speakers and they have a lot of reviews and no one cares about the accent.

    I know this because I know a lot of YouTubers that have accents and no one cares.

    I know this because I have listened to Phil Ebner's podcast and every time when there is an instructor with an accent they ask him about that and it's not an issue.

  • Thanks for the encouraging words :)

  • RealFelix
    RealFelix Posts: 64 trailblazer rank

    @Randlee
    I just realized that even Udemy itself suggests to send the course to friends and family to get more traction. Check out this page and read step 3: https://www.udemy.com/instructor/resources/?page=audience

  • I would recommend to make it free for few days. You will get a lot of students + positive reviews and this will surely attract new students.

  • EveWilliams
    EveWilliams Posts: 155 specialist rank

    Congratulations on posting your first course! Don't be too demoralised; it takes time to gain traction on Udemy. I recommend watching Louise Croft's course on Udemy course creation and marketing. She also has some great stuff on YouTube under the name Digital Nomad Girl. She was my inspiration at the start.

    With regards to your sales, you are in a crowded niche and your course is short. How do you think it compares to competitors, especially the best sellers? Can you offer something they can't? Could the bite size length be a positive, 'coding for busy people?' I'm going to be honest, my best sellers are between 12 and 20 hours long but those are literature courses and that's what people expect in that niche. If I had a choice of 2 courses at daily high prices, I might go for the longest because it seems the best value. Sales on Udemy tend to be higher volumes at low cost, whereas on Teachable you can charge a premium and add extras. It's about getting to know the platform so you did the right thing by posting here.

    Have you used the marketplace tool to check the conversion rate in your niche?

    Do you have a really clear idea of who your students might be? Really aim for those people in the landing page, promo video, title and subtitle. Maybe try and get some quotes from people who love your work in too for social proofing until you build up reviews.

    Read other courses' reviews carefully to find out what needs aren't beinget by existing courses and what people value most in a coding course.

    Just to encourage you, I did not do anywhere near the research I should have done when I posted my first course. I taught in some reputable Russell group universities and I thought my teaching experience elsewhere should guide me on what to put in the course. Wrong!!!! So I edited it and added to it and it's been featured on several blogs as one of the best singing courses online but only after a couple of years. It started out looking like something a kid could have filmed! I now have 16 published courses and didn't really know what I was doing until about course no. 10. It's actually easier later on because you can send promo emails to existing students. At the start you don't have that. Co-teaching is a good way to build a following as is promoting it off Udemy like you have been doing.

  • I think if I make it free then I won't be able to convert it to paid again. Is that true?

  • Thank you so much for your answer! I will think about all your questions.

  • No. You can change anytime but before updating the price of your course, please be aware that switching the price of your course between free and paid more than once will result in restrictions to your promotional announcements.