03-18-2021 07:38 AM
Hi!
Just signed up today to be an instructor as I want to create a course on creative writing for kids.
Do you find a course is more successful when the topic is pretty wide, like one course that encompasses the whole of 'creative writing' for kids, or narrow, where I might start with one course on something like writing vivid descriptions, and then add other courses on other topics as time goes by?
03-19-2021 06:32 AM
Wide topics work best on Udemy. This is what I noticed while working on Udemy. The more the topic is narrow, the less the number of students!
03-19-2021 07:37 AM - edited 03-19-2021 07:49 AM
It depends entirely upon the topic and your target audience.
Products in tight niches can be very successful for the fact that they can be filling a space that is in demand, yet barely occupied. In which case, competitive interest ensues.
There's often nothing that's already established for to use as a base of judgement. This is where market research (and subsequent marketing) proves its worth.
03-25-2021 09:30 AM
Thanks. The thing is that 'creative writing for kids' is such a wide topic that I feel completely overwhelmed trying to work out what to include. Writing descriptions is a really important part of creative writing for kids at school, and narrowing to that helps me create a course that's really good quality. But obviously not if that means I won't get any takers...
03-26-2021 05:15 AM
In cases like this, the best thing we can do is focus on the topic by means of a case study.
By doing so, you are showing the principles within the context of that project.
That gives you opportunity to create more courses for more case studies.
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