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You are here: Home > Writing and Speaking > Teleseminars > Part 2: Designing Virtual Classes Your Students Will Rave About! |
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Answer Upon - Part 2: Designing Virtual Classes Your Students Will Rave About!
Increase Web Site Traffic – 4 Easy Steps s one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too:It’s not as hard to increase web site traffic as you might think. Mostly, it’s a question of getting your web site known. Imagine for a moment, that instead of a web site, you were trying to increase traffic to your retail store. What would you do?The first thing you’d do is to make sure your store is attractive and alluring as possible to people walking buy. In web terms this means your home page has to be as interesting and “teasing” as possible. The vast majority of first views are followed by hitting the ‘Back’ button! Make sure that your home page has interesting click-thru content to draw visitors deeper into your site.The second thing you’d do for your store is to adverti * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offeri Finding a Real Estate Agent In Part 1 of this series, I offered various ideas for designing your live classes to offer maximum value to your students. Beyond just learning the concepts, students have a much better chance of actually applying your wisdom in their business. If you provide these three important elements in your classes:Finding your Real Estate Agent is like having a relationship. You want to get to know your Real Estate Agent. How is that Real Estate Agent gonna be able to get a long with you.You should be in a position to feel secure that they are gonna be there for you 24/7. His not doing Real Estate on a part-time basis. Just like having a relationship with somebody you want them to be committed to you the whole way and not on a part time basis.Make sure he/she is REALTOR, they follow the National Associations of REALTOR ethics. Have the Agent give you a copy of the Code of Ethics to make sure he/she abides by them. Making sure his morale ethics are good.Check his background. Why did you * a schedule to do the learning (structure); * a modest work assignment each week, and a place to post completed assignments (accountability); * and a rich network of fellow students to share with and learn from (community). Applying these elements in self-paced classes (i.e., written, audio and video content available to the student on their own schedule) is quite different, and perhaps more challenging, than in a live, scheduled environment. A further challenge is that often, you’ve designed these courses to be hands-off for you – truly passive. On the other hand, your self-paced classes could be a funnel to more intensive, live classes or coaching/consulting – in which case a dose of you, live, could be the tipping point. He.re are some suggestions you can incorporate into your own course design; most can be automated, although they may require some intervention or assistance from your VA. Structure Live classes come with their own built-in structure, in the for.m of a fixed schedule. However, the student purchasing a learn-at-your-own-pace course has to make a real effort to schedule time to read, listen to the audio, or review the video -- and resist the temptation to do something else instead. As the course designer, how can you build in structure for your customers/students? * Release the content on a schedule; i.e., don’t give it all to them at once. This is the concept behind an ecourse – delivering a little bit at a time. * Send scheduled follow-up emails. In the introduction to the course, you can suggest a schedule (one chapter a week?), then follow up once a week with a tidbit about that chapter – a case study showing actual results, a teaser, etc. I’ve seen this done by one of the big internet marketers…I signed up, and once a week I got a nudge email, something like “Have you checked out this technique in chapter 14; it could triple your sa.les!” * Help them commit to a schedule. At purchase, ask them to commit to a time/day each week to cover the content of the course. Then, send them an email with an attached Outlook recurring appointment with that schedule! They open the attachment and save it to their calendar, and viola’, it’s scheduled for them. All of these techniques can be easily automated with an autoresponder! Remember to customize the messages to make them more personal. And be prepared to respond if they reply – or have your VA ready to handle this responsibility. Accountability Getting folks to read/listen/view/study the material is one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too: * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offeri The Beauty of a Coaching Niche more challenging, than in a live, scheduled environment. A further challenge is that often, you’ve designed these courses to be hands-off for you – truly passive. On the other hand, your self-paced classes could be a funnel to more intensive, live classes or coaching/consulting – in which case a dose of you, live, could be the tipping point.Financial success in a coaching practice comes down to two primary things -- how successfully you market to one narrow coaching niche or target market and how you value yourself, time and services. That's not to say that it's not also important that you are a skillful coach and have integrity in your coaching relationships. But these other factors weigh in more heavily with regard to sustained financial success. We'll talk about valuing yourself in a future edition. Today's focus is niche marketing.Why Choose One Niche?I know that you became a coach to coach, not to market, right? You want that freedom in lifestyle of working for yourself, with an unlimited income, wh He.re are some suggestions you can incorporate into your own course design; most can be automated, although they may require some intervention or assistance from your VA. Structure Live classes come with their own built-in structure, in the for.m of a fixed schedule. However, the student purchasing a learn-at-your-own-pace course has to make a real effort to schedule time to read, listen to the audio, or review the video -- and resist the temptation to do something else instead. As the course designer, how can you build in structure for your customers/students? * Release the content on a schedule; i.e., don’t give it all to them at once. This is the concept behind an ecourse – delivering a little bit at a time. * Send scheduled follow-up emails. In the introduction to the course, you can suggest a schedule (one chapter a week?), then follow up once a week with a tidbit about that chapter – a case study showing actual results, a teaser, etc. I’ve seen this done by one of the big internet marketers…I signed up, and once a week I got a nudge email, something like “Have you checked out this technique in chapter 14; it could triple your sa.les!” * Help them commit to a schedule. At purchase, ask them to commit to a time/day each week to cover the content of the course. Then, send them an email with an attached Outlook recurring appointment with that schedule! They open the attachment and save it to their calendar, and viola’, it’s scheduled for them. All of these techniques can be easily automated with an autoresponder! Remember to customize the messages to make them more personal. And be prepared to respond if they reply – or have your VA ready to handle this responsibility. Accountability Getting folks to read/listen/view/study the material is one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too: * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offeri Page Rank - A Quick Overview for Beginners schedule time to read, listen to the audio, or review the video -- and resist the temptation to do something else instead. As the course designer, how can you build in structure for your customers/students?Page Rank (PR) is a specific value for a website page given by Google. It is Google's measure of the importance of a certain site page. The scale is between 1-10. Google gives your website high PR if it is popular. It's based on the number of votes other websites give for your website.Those websites give votes to your site by putting a link to it on their websites. When you link your site to another website, that means you vote for it.From this information, if you want your site to have a high PR, then you have to get as many votes as possible from other websites. In other words, make as many links as possible to your site and you will have higher PR!This is important because P * Release the content on a schedule; i.e., don’t give it all to them at once. This is the concept behind an ecourse – delivering a little bit at a time. * Send scheduled follow-up emails. In the introduction to the course, you can suggest a schedule (one chapter a week?), then follow up once a week with a tidbit about that chapter – a case study showing actual results, a teaser, etc. I’ve seen this done by one of the big internet marketers…I signed up, and once a week I got a nudge email, something like “Have you checked out this technique in chapter 14; it could triple your sa.les!” * Help them commit to a schedule. At purchase, ask them to commit to a time/day each week to cover the content of the course. Then, send them an email with an attached Outlook recurring appointment with that schedule! They open the attachment and save it to their calendar, and viola’, it’s scheduled for them. All of these techniques can be easily automated with an autoresponder! Remember to customize the messages to make them more personal. And be prepared to respond if they reply – or have your VA ready to handle this responsibility. Accountability Getting folks to read/listen/view/study the material is one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too: * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offeri Develop Your Curiosity And Increase Profits ke “Have you checked out this technique in chapter 14; it could triple your sa.les!”If anyone was to ask me what my greatest strength was I'd say curiosity. The reason I would say that is because curious people learn a lot. On the internet there is stacks to learn. Curiosity will help you learn what you need to know.Here's some of the common things internet business people want to know:- How can I get more traffic to my site? - How can I get more sales from my site? - What can I do to make my site successful? - How can I convert more browsers into buyers? - What are my competitors doing that I can learn from?As an internet marketer I'm curious about how to answer these and other questions. You should be too.Curiosity can give you * Help them commit to a schedule. At purchase, ask them to commit to a time/day each week to cover the content of the course. Then, send them an email with an attached Outlook recurring appointment with that schedule! They open the attachment and save it to their calendar, and viola’, it’s scheduled for them. All of these techniques can be easily automated with an autoresponder! Remember to customize the messages to make them more personal. And be prepared to respond if they reply – or have your VA ready to handle this responsibility. Accountability Getting folks to read/listen/view/study the material is one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too: * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offeri Debt Consolidation Loans - How they Can Help You Find Financial Freedom s one thing; getting them to apply it in their business is quite another. Some of the techniques mentioned for live classes will work he.re too:You've probably heard of a debt consolidation loan. Just what is a debt consolidation loan, and how can it help you improve your financial picture? A debt consolidation loan is basically a secured loan taken out to pay off many other financial obligations, typically unsecured debt, such as credit cards or store accounts. Credit cards and store charge cards tend to have comparatively high interest rates. In addition, many of these types of accounts have annual or monthly fees associated with them that raise the cost of your credit even further.Because they are unsecured debt, credit cards have to charge these higher interest rates. By using a loan that is secured by a stable, high value asset * Ask them to sign a statement of intent to do the homework (this can be an automated part of the purchase checkout process, for instance). * Follow up with encouraging messages via autoresponder. * Offer something extra for a limited time after their purchase: a fre.e review of their homework; fre.e laser coaching to help them overcome a roadblock or problem; a regular live call where they can ask ques.tions. * Provide an incentive. Encourage the student to complete the course by asking them to send you their completed worksheet(s) and offering a fre.e report, audio, or even a rebate or coupon. Tie this in with structure by giving them deadlines for sections of the work. Again, your VA can handle fulfillment of these incentives. Community Providing peer support can be much more challenging when there are no live classes where folks meet each other, but with the proper encouragement from you, I believe it can be done! * Set up a bulletin board (or listserve) for all purchasers. You’ll need to be more active, especially at the beginning, to encourage folks to join and share with strangers. Autoresponders might help; but they may not be enough. This is one area where you might need to be involved directly in answering ques.tions and providing feedback, although as your board/list “ages”, peer leaders may emerge naturally (you may even want to approach a few of them to provide continuous, paid support instead of doing it yourself.) * Offer a fre.e/trial membership in your existing community. This adds value to the course; you are already interacting with your community so it’s not extra work. If this is a limited time offer, you can even upsell to your monthly community at the end of the trial. * Mastermind calls. Again, this requires your time…unless you can hire it out. Either way it can be very effective. Summary All of these techniques still require commitment on the part of the student – you can’t force students to do the work, and you also shouldn’t take it personally if a significant number of your purchasers ne.ver follow through. But you can make it easier, and going that extra mile will set you apart as a supportive, caring individual that they might want to buy from again. If you have used or experienced a creative approach for self-paced classes that addresses these three elements, or any other comments or suggestions about building valuable classes for virtual students, please send me an email. We may include it in a future newsletter!
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