Learn more about Personal Plan

Abbie
Abbie Posts: 3,191 traveler rank

Hi everyone,

In March, we announced plans for a pilot of a curated subscription option for individual learners. You asked great questions, and we let you know we'd answer more of them as we got closer to launching this new offering.

With Personal Plan opening up to a limited audience in the next month, we've put together an overview to help you understand more about the goals and structure of the pilot. Read more in the Teaching Center, and we'll see you back here in the Community with your questions and feedback.

Teach on,

The Udemy Instructor Team

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Comments

  • ElianaC
    ElianaC Posts: 5,467 Udemy rank
    Thanks for the question, @Jonas Schmedtman
    1. Our very first iteration of the pilot in the US will use a price point of $29.99. However, we know pricing is an important piece of the puzzle when it comes to making subscriptions successful, so we'll be testing pricing as we scale the pilot.
    2. Our goal with this pilot is to establish incremental revenue for instructors and Udemy. To make this happen, we're investing significantly not just in acquiring new learners who may be interested in subscriptions, but in building a user experience that keeps people learning (and subscribing) for a long time. In our previous tests with individual consumer subscriptions, we've seen this model produce higher revenue for both instructors and Udemy, even accounting for the difference in revenue share between the subscription and transactional models.
    To your question about the future of subscriptions, the goal is not to replace the transactional marketplace but to complement it. Based on previous testing and data, we believe we can make incrementally more revenue by exploring both a subscription AND a transactional model than by offering the transactional model alone.

    Eliana Cerna

    Udemy Community

  • Sounds great!

    Will the new Personal Plan always require exclusivity to Udemy?




  • @ElianaC
    You probably think this is obvious, but your said "Our very first iteration of the pilot in the US will use a price point of $29.99. "

    Per what? Per month? Per Year? Per course?

  • @ElianaC
    @Abbie
    Do you know if we will be able to send promotional emails to students who enroll in our courses through the subscription model?

  • The role out of the Personal Plan is an experiment for Udemy. It is also an experiment for us instructors. I think the concern about the 25/37/50% revenue split transition is a legitimate one for us instructors. We should be concerned, but we should also have a wait-and-see attitude. There are many questions that none of us can answer now. For example:

    1. Will this result in a net increase or decrease in our personal earnings? In the end, this is the only question that really matters.
    2. Will this increase or decrease traditional marketplace sales? It could actually have the effect of increasing if Udemy advertising brings more people to the site.
    3. We don't know the price that students will pay for their subscriptions. And, what percent of their time will be spent on each of our courses.
    4. This might change which courses are most attractive and therefore which earn the most. When it comes to viewing time there is some equation of intellectual value to entertainment value. This will sound crazy, but a course titled "The Best Web Development Jokes of All Time" might be very successful in attracting eyeball/hours. An instructor who is boring is going to lose to an instructor who is more entertaining.
    5. How much money is Udemy going to invest on advertising and what impact will that have? Maybe Udemy is going to invest a hundred million dollars of new capital in advertising that will bring in many millions of new students. Even with the 25% split, we would all gain.

    I am sure you can think of other questions as well. I suspect that even Greg cannot answer these questions at this time, which is why you experiment to see what works. What we do know is that this month is a pretty slow month for everyone and I suspect that is because Udemy is spending fewer ad dollars this month, saving for a marketing push as they role out the new plan. Just a guess.

  • I noticed that the last two weeks have been slow for sure. Maybe a side effect of trying to get ready for the May 1 change to new plan.

    I cannot see how the Individual Subscription Plan can work. I am assuming that the 29.99$ Price point is per month. That translates to roughly 360$/year. If we assume on an average that course might cost 14$ during sale, that would translate to 26 courses per year. How many students would be interested in that ?

    Having both Traditional Market Place and Individual Plan may not make much sense. What am I missing ?

  • @VirajShetty265
    I am not sure you are missing anything. Buying behavior is sometimes unpredictable. How it is presented to the market will determine it/s success. One might ask, why am I paying Netflix, Hulu, etc. a subscription fee, rather than just paying for each separate movie I watch? The subscription model is obviously working for entertainment and it is working for business subscriptions (UFB), but will it work of individual education? We will find out.

  • ElianaC
    ElianaC Posts: 5,467 Udemy rank

    Hi @LawrenceMMiller
    sorry for not being clear, the price point of $29.99 will be per month, for access to the full subscription.

  • @LawrenceMMiller
    - Definitely worth a try for sure. You make an excellent point - if more people are attracted to the site because of this, then it can have an effect of increasing the traditional marketplace sales. We are more likely to benefit indirectly

  • Abbie
    Abbie Posts: 3,191 traveler rank

    Hi all. Thanks for asking good questions and really seeking to understand goals and plans around the new subscription offering.

    @Joshua George
    : You asked if courses in Personal Plan will require exclusivity. The short answer is yes. However, currently, the only content considered for inclusion in the Personal Plan is content that's already included in Udemy for Business. So effectively, there aren't any new requirements with respect to exclusivity

    @JonAvis865
    : You asked about promotional announcements. For instructors, this will function similarly to Udemy for Business. Students who enroll in your course through Udemy for Business can view educational announcements you post to your course, but by default they won't receive email notifications for promotional or educational announcements. It will work the same in Personal Plan.

    Then, to the question around revenue share ( @CarlosDeLeon
    @LawrenceMMiller
    , others). You're all correct that the reason we adjusted Udemy for Business revenue share from 50% to 25% a few years ago was to enable the investments that drove greater overall revenue for both Udemy and instructors. It's a similar idea for the individual subscription.

    In order to make subscriptions successful -- where "success" is higher revenue overall for instructors and for Udemy -- we need to make significant investments that don't exist for a la carte purchases. This does include some short-term investments, such as building the required infrastructure, but it also includes some ongoing, additional marketing investments that are different from those required to drive a one-time sale.

    Acquiring and retaining a subscription customer can be more complex and costly, but with returns that make the investment worth it. The value of a subscription offering is in retention: not just getting someone's attention and convincing them to make a one-time payment, but creating an experience that keeps them subscribing for months or even years.

    We agree with Lawrence that the most important question is whether overall you make more revenue (assuming the work required of you is the same). Our work so far in individual subscriptions has strongly suggested that we can create higher returns for participating instructors by adding a subscription option than by continuing with only the direct purchase option.

  • ba0708
    ba0708 Posts: 217 specialist rank

    Thanks for the response, @Abbie
    . It's true that if the revenue goes up (without adding more work), the revenue share doesn't matter much. I actually believe Udemy can do this; the numbers just looked odd to me. Anyway, I'm fairly optimistic since changes Udemy made have historically not impacted instructors negatively, so I hope this won't be an exception.

  • @Abbie
    Hi There. What is the timetable for this roll-out? Thank you.

  • Kain_Ramsay
    Kain_Ramsay Posts: 61 specialist rank

    For those expert and engaging instructors who create top quality content, this will undoubtedly be an excellent move.

    At the same time, this move will naturally enable much of the junk teaching that the platform has attracted in recent years to sink to the bottom and die.

    Naturally, those who aren’t expert in what they teach will feel intimidated by this move. Subscription models have my vote all the way!!

  • GuilhermeMP
    GuilhermeMP Posts: 391 mentor rank

    @MichaelPog
    I agree. Udemy should not become YouTube

  • @ElianaC
    and @Abbie
    - for both the personal subscription and UFB, if a student does not watch any courses in a given month, I assume their payment still goes into the overall pot to be split among the instructors based on minutes watched by everyone else? Or does their payment for that month go 100% to Udemy?

  • Abbie
    Abbie Posts: 3,191 traveler rank

    Hi @Irishguitarist
    , we've already begun to make Personal Plan available to a small number of students in select geos. As we confirm the results look promising, we'll be expanding the pilot over the coming weeks and months.

  • Abbie
    Abbie Posts: 3,191 traveler rank

    Hi @MichaelPog
    , we definitely agree that the length of a course is not always a predictor of its value. What we've seen with Udemy for Business, which uses the same engagement-based payout model as Personal Plan, is that in a subscription context it's not only the longest courses that draw the most overall engagement.

    When a learner has access to a full collection, they consider different things when choosing which course to take. Learners deciding on what course to purchase might ask "how much can I get for my money?" But when they already have access to the whole collection they may ask "how much can I get for my time?"

    We can't guarantee that learners paying for their own subscriptions will behave the same way as learners who have a subscription provided by their employer -- that's one of the things we're aiming to learn from this pilot. But we do want to reassure you that from what we've seen from our existing subscription programs, there are many factors beyond course length that contribute to a course's engagement and success.

  • Abbie
    Abbie Posts: 3,191 traveler rank

    Hey @WilliamStewart
    , - Yes, if a student subscribes but doesn't consume, the money they paid for their subscription still goes into the overall instructor revenue pool for that payment period.

  • MichaelPog
    MichaelPog Posts: 992 rolemodel rank

    @Abbie
    thanks for the response. It makes perfect sense. And I like this attitude. I personally experienced this as a student, taking courses on Udemy that were so padded with none sense talking just to make them appear longer and more valuable... My time is more valuable to me than money.

    One other concern is currently based on my courses length and my calculations I am making about $1-$2 per student who watches the entire course on UFB. It's not a big deal for me now when it's just a supplemental income to Udemy Marketplace. But if the market place is replaced and my income per student is going to be the same then it is a big deal. So how will Udemy ensure that doesn't happen is very vague at this moment for me.

    If the math says that won't happen then that's great. But if the math is some instructors with 60 hour courses will make more but the rest of us will make less and the average will be the same as today then this is not great.

    Thanks again.

  • @Abbie
    Thank you for the reply. Take care, John

  • ba0708
    ba0708 Posts: 217 specialist rank

    @Abbie
    , how does the Personal Plan work in regards to instructor promotions? I understand that this is a pilot so it might not be set in stone for the long term. But for now, I assume that Udemy will not promote the subscription model to traffic sent by instructors through referral links and coupon codes? For the long term, I'm curious how the model would work with promotions, if at all.

    Also, the FAQ states the following:

    "For first-time subscribers, there may be an option to trial the collection for a limited time before subscribing."

    What happens if someone trials the subscription for a week and watches a lot of content, asks questions, etc., but ends up not paying? Are the watched minutes just not added to the pool, so the end result is similar to refunds (i.e. instructors won't earn anything)? Or are the minutes added but no dollars are added to the pool (i.e. the minutes are factored in, but the "pie" won't be larger)?

  • Hi, While I'm excited about the growth in Udemy in terms of Subscription and TV ads. I am a little concerned, Now I am a relatively new instructor with 2 courses , Neither of them are selected for Udemy for Business yet. So if a subscription model is rolled out and only UFB courses are made available there, would that mean , that a student who is using a subscription model , will never know about my course on the platform? Since they would only view the selected courses? Where would the new subscription model leave instructors like me who's content are not included in UFB or Subscription, as being selected is not exactly in our hands. One of my courses currently is a Best Seller but not selected in UFB. @Abbie
    I would be grateful for your advice on this. Thank you.

  • ba0708
    ba0708 Posts: 217 specialist rank

    @JasmineBayer
    My understanding is that this is just to limit the scope of the pilot, so if Udemy proceeds with the Personal Plan after the pilot, it won't just be UFB courses that are available.

  • JeffT302
    JeffT302 Posts: 27 storyteller rank

    Once again, Udemy is taking more of our money. Every year it's a new little change that continues to add up. Now people like me who make 99% of our sales from Organic are now going to make a lot less than what we were making before.

    It's such a trash change. Why do you guys do this and then lie about how it's with instructors in mind? Did you ever once ask me if I wanted to take a hit in my organic earnings? Of course not.

    With moves like this, you're going to end up with lower and lower quality courses since less and less people will commit the time to make quality courses with such low commission rates. It's just not even worth it anymore and I say that as someone who makes 1,000+ sales. Why should I try putting in the work when you keep taking more and more of my sales?

    Organic sales is something that should be given a high commission rate for the simple fact that it doesn't cost anything on Udemy's end to make the sale. Ads I understand the 25% rate. But like I said, 99% of my sales are from Organic. So stop punishing me.

  • LawrenceMMiller
    LawrenceMMiller Posts: 2,275 rolemodel rank

    Sorry, but isn't this getting a bit repetitive?