Introductory to Intermediate Python Courses

Before I get started on making videos, etc. I just wanted to ask for any advice on how best to create my course. Of course, I want to make this as professional as I can, and also attract student.

Best, John Griner

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Comments

  • Bella
    Bella Posts: 3,694 traveler rank

    Hey @JohnGriner466
    , happy to hear you're planning on creating your first Udemy course. We have a recommended course creation process, in which our learning design experts break down the best practices to help you build a solid foundation for your course:

    For further information, check the resources below:

    You may also want to take our Official Udemy Course about how to create an online course.

    All the best!

    Bella Almeida

    Udemy Community

  • Bella, thanks,

    What I am unsure of is the length of the lessons/lectures. Trying to keep them @ or under 6 minutes seems to be Udemy industry standard, and thus, I will make a lot of 6 minute (content) videos, as part of a larger series? If so, the content is 6 minutes,, and so if I want to teach "how to upload data in Python, I would have to keep the WHOLE content under 6 minutes, and then move to the next logical topic, like how to parse and clean uploaded data, in a separate 6 minute video. Or if I want to REALLY teach how to clean the data, reshape, format, etc., break it up into 4-8, 6 minute videos?

    John

  • Bella
    Bella Posts: 3,694 traveler rank

    Happy to help with that, John! There is no maximum video length but we recommend videos to be between 2-6 minutes long. For more information about our requirements please see the Udemy Course Quality Checklist.

    I also recommend this post from our Community Champion, @LawrenceMMiller
    , with tips for the creation of video lectures.

    Hope this helps!

    Bella Almeida

    Udemy Community

  • ok, to get started, and attract students and actually make money. What is the best way t start?

    Also, how much are we paid?

    Thanks, John

  • @Bella
    That link doesn't work. I think this is the link on lecture effectiveness that you are pointing to: https://community.udemy.com/t5/First-time-Course-Creation/Lecture-Effectiveness-The-Research/m-p/14189

  • Bella
    Bella Posts: 3,694 traveler rank

    Oops

    Thanks for providing the correct link, Lawrence!

    Bella Almeida

    Udemy Community

  • SharonRamel
    SharonRamel Posts: 1,312 rolemodel rank

    Before you begin @JohnGriner466
    check out the top courses in python here on Udemy. There are over 10,000 courses. You will need to ensure you have a unique selling point. What will set your course apart from your competition? How is your course going to provide that wow factor that the others courses lack? This is essential as it will drive your marketing and promotion to get started.

  • Belle,

    Is it ok if the video is 640 p. I am having issues with downloading a video maker that is 720 p. The one that I am using is 640 p, and is fine.

    John

  • ok, is it ok if I use a video maker that is 640 p quality? I am having issues downloading one that is 720 p

  • ElianaC
    ElianaC Posts: 5,412 Udemy rank

    Hi @JohnGriner466
    I'm very sorry but this is not possible. Udemy requires that video content is HD quality, with a resolution of at least 720p. You can find some editing resources here’s a great roundup of free & paid resources.

    Regards,

    Eliana

  • FrankKane
    FrankKane Posts: 1,815 rolemodel rank

    Like Sharon said, there are over 10,000 existing courses on Python on Udemy that have a head start on you. The honest answer to "how much you are paid" is probably very little, unless you do some research and choose a more focused topic that has less entrenched competition.

    In your instructor dashboard you should see an Insights tool under Tools. You can use that to understand the competitive landscape of your topics, and even the median monthly earnings for courses in that topic. It's incredibly important to choose the right topic to teach if your goal is to make money.

  • ok, i had already downloaded and tried Screencast-o-matics, and found that if I record both me and the screen with the video in the bottom left hand corner while I use PPT and Jupyter Notebooks, it allows me to have 720 p, and plus, that's what we want, a video that not only shows the tutor but an interactive teaching where I not only use PPT, but show the students how to use Python in Jupyter Notebooks

  • ok, a few things. I have made some videos, and I am ready to upload them and finish the course creation. It seems like that I am only allowed to upload 1 video. I tried to upload all the videos via bulk upload, but got an error. Also, when I try to set-up direct deposit it will not connect. Thus, do I set the price for EACH video, or ALL the videos?

  • You set the price for the course, not fo each video. Upload each video for each lecture one at a time. It isn't that hard or time consuming.

  • right, I have uploaded the Intro video, and when I try to upload the subsequent videos, the only option I see is bulk upload. I tried to upload all the videos via bulk and got an error, then I upload one via bulk, and it's been spinning on 99%

  • John, are you creating a new lecture? You should be in your "curriculum" page, add a lecture, and the add content. That is how you ad videos. You don't add them independent of a lecture.

  • here is the screenshotUntitled.png

  • click on that little down arrow on the right.

  • ok, I have the videos uploaded, and for the curriculum page, where I type in subtitle and description I continue to be unable to save this page: Curriculum .png

  • Ok, I submitted my course for review. So, now, I should just wait. As far as the rate per hour, I was not put, someone said that you can always change it later.

  • John, I don't think you have correctly selected the category and sub-category. Are you sure you want to be in the "Teaching and Academics" category?????

  • Lawrence, hmm, I thought that was the most logical place.

    Can we suggest a better category?

    John

  • Who is going to be searching a topic that will lead them to your course? Academicians?

    I don't know your subject but my guess is that if you put it in this category it will be buried and lost. It is like a supermarket where you are selling candy and you put it in the dog food section. It won't sell. Look at the list of categories and decide which best fits your course.

  • Search competitive courses and see what catagory they are in.

  • Lawrence,

    Ok. Different category, maybe lower price? As far as you I am trying to reach, I'm not quite sure. For the most part, just anyone the wants to learn Python, at more of a beginners level; that's how I designed the course. So, yes, probably academics, but students, high school and university students that either are in class and would like ancillary help via video, etc., or highschool students who need help because their teacher is not the best, continue education adults, anyone that wants to learn Python for any reason, and needs someone where to start. Thus, in short for Academics at the beginner to intermediate level. I can record more advanced lectures if need be. Ok, I will go back and look at the categories. Thanks. Also, I set the price at $49.99/hr. Maybe I should set it a bit lower?

    John Griner

  • John, there is no pricing per/hour. You have a price for the course in its entirety. Again, look at your competition, there is a lot of it. Look at the courses that sell the best. https://www.udemy.com/courses/search/?src=ukw&q=Python

  • Lawrence, Thanks. Can we place my course in Development, under Python. Also, I want to set the price to $9.99.

  • Lawrence. Thanks. I have set it at $49.99

  • Lawrence,

    I just looked at one of the courses, and the price is set at $15.99. This particular course far exceeds, in content what I have done. Thus, I should probably ad more content, i.e. more videos, downloadable material, 70 coding exercises, a test, etc.

    Thus, it will take some time if this is this case.

    Thanks again, for your help, John

  • My guess is that that price is the current sale price. Not the list price.