Here Are Four Options for Creating An Online Fashion Course. Which Should You Choose?
You will have heard lots about creating online courses as a means to generate income or build your brand. In the current situation, it may well be something you are thinking seriously about to make an income, whether you are sitting at home unable to work or still working but remotely.
But what are your options for making it all happen? If you've been following us for some time, you'll know that we've written extensively advising you about the nitty-gritty, of course, creation. Just take a look at our blog.
In this post, though, we're zooming out and giving you the broader options so you can see what choices you have apart from the DIY route. We're not going to be selling you on the idea of creating online fashion courses or highlighting all the benefits for you or your business. If you've still need convincing, we'll leave that for another time.
Read this post for some great advice to determine the best route for you to take if creating an online fashion course is on your agenda or might be in the future.
First, we're going to tell you about the four types of people/businesses that create online courses. Then we'll look at the four options you can choose from for getting your course created. And finally, I'll tell you how to get some further advice if you need it and have any other questions answered.
Whose Creating Online Courses Anway?
Based on our own experience and the research we've done, there are four categories.
1. Owners of Fashion Subject Content
These are people who already have some intellectual property (IP) and want to re-purpose it and leverage further value. For example, fashion book authors, university lecturers, universities, colleges, trade organizations and professional bodies.
Each has its own IP, which can be broken down into smaller elements and then re-purposed into further material that forms the basis of an online course and bite-sized micro-courses.
I also include here fashion journalists and blog authors who have amassed material that can also be reused. A series of blog posts on a particular fashion topic, for example, can form the basis of course content and vice versa.
Among this group, we find part-time lecturers who may have a combination of work steams - lecturing, their own design studio, private classes and coaching, etc. and are now looking to add online courses.
2. Fashion Industry Professionals
This category includes individuals with fashion industry expertise but hasn't yet created any 'material' from their expertise. In other words, their IP exists only in their minds and has yet to be articulated into a product.
Unlike those in the first category, they have yet to take the step of creating or writing anything that is based on their experience. They have no material as such, only their experience working in the industry (which shouldn't be underestimated as to how valuable this is.)
However, they do see the opportunity to generate additional revenue by selling their expertise online. These are seasoned professionals with a wealth of experience already under their belt, confident of their message being a valuable asset to monetize online.
3. Fashion Businesses
Whether in HR or training, marketing or sales, creating an online course can save businesses considerable time and expense in on-boarding employees and customers, developing staff and assessing new candidates.
On-boarding customers help to reduce customer churn, i.e. losing customers to competitors. Informed and educated customers are more likely to stay with you as they build up confidence in your product or service. Increasingly we see businesses using free online courses to help educate both prospective customers, new ones, and existing ones. For example, companies such as Gerber using online courses for training end-users on their software.
And onboarding employees have a similar benefit too. It enables recruits to get up to speed and be more productive quicker and with less cost than traditional face to face training.
4. Fashion Consultants, Trainers, and Coaches
Finally, consultants, trainers, and coaches are now using online courses to generate additional revenue, expand their service and product portfolios and expand their brands. Just as books can position the author as an expert in a particular field, too can online courses. Having a world-class online fashion course in your field of expertise positions you as THE expert in that field. You become the 'go to' expert and consequently can increase your audience and sales revenue.
Offering free online courses is a fantastic tool for lead generation and can lead to opportunities for further consultancy work, speaking gigs, writing etc.
What then flows from a position as THE expert in your niche can be extensive and worth far more than the revenue generated from the course sales alone.
Four Options for Creating an Online Course
OK. Let's assume that you fall into one of these four categories. Now what? How do you go about creating your course?
The four choices you have are:
- Do It Yourself (DIY)
- Use a Course Creation Consultant
- Hire a Team of Freelancers
- Use a Course Creation Business (such as We Teach Fashion)
Option 1 - DIY
Here you get to do everything yourself. It can be gratifying going through the learning curve and developing new skills. You'll have to buy a course that teaches you how. Like the masterclass we have created for the DIYer. To stand any chance of success, you'll need to learn about the five stages of course development covered in this masterclass or get started with the first step with our planning course.
This option is great for subject experts that have lots of free time or can make the time, and don't mind if it takes several months to build their course. Although it's possible to get your first course up and live within a month, it takes discipline and following a strict process plan to make it happen.
You may need to invest in equipment and software, but you can get your course up and publish with a minimum outlay. In fact, in the masterclass, we tell you what you need and where to get free software if you need it.
Though they already have sufficient tools with the latest generation of phones for filming video and software on their computers for creating slide shows and editing, most people already have sufficient tools for creating slide shows and editing, so the outlay is usually minimal.
The DIY approach has the lowest overall initial investment. Still, you need to factor in your time to figure out the real investment you are making and be happy with the fact that it may take you several months to complete as you slot the activities in and around your usual routine of life.
Pluses
- Least upfront cost
- You learn some great new skills.
- You are in total control of everything.
Minuses
- It takes time.
- There are lots of things to learn.
- Normally takes longer to do than you think, so hitting deadlines can be difficult.
Best For People Who...
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Want to try their hand at course creation and find the quickest way they can to produce a course so that they can expand their subjects and add further courses if it works.
- I like to learn new things.
- Want to generate some passive income with low risk.
- Have time available without disrupting their normal routine significantly.
Worst For People Who...
- They are already super busy, and taking time out of their business for anything costs them significantly in lost sales and other business opportunities.
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Want their course up and running within a few months.
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Prefer having done-for-you services rather than DIY.
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Just want the course and not develop new skills and invest in items they may never use again.
- Need a quality course completed within a few weeks.
Option 2 - Hire a Course Design Consultant
This option gives you a helping hand, a bit of a leg up.
Once you've dug around Google searches and found someone you feel comfortable working with and paid them a retainer, they'll design the strategy map for you and tell you what you have to do and in what sequence.
But it's you has to do the execution work now. Their skillset is in instructional design, and it's not guaranteed they'll have all the other skills required to develop your course.
You get to save yourself some time and get some advice on the overall approach, but you still have to do all the hard work and pretty much learn everything as if you were choosing the DIY option. We're happy to work with you as your course design consultants if this options suits you best.
Pluses
- Shortens your learning curve.
- Access to personalised support compared to following a course that teaches you what to do (unless it has support forums as we have built into our masterclass.)
- You will have someone who can give you different course format perspectives, what works best, and how to go about things (as you will find in our masterclass.)
Minuses
- Difficult to know a good one from a bad one until you start using them. Many online course creation consultants are coming out of the woodwork either as marketing consultants adding a service to their pot or as graphic designers starting to do video recording and slide presentations and promoting themselves as course creators. They may lack the instructional design concepts that you'll need for effective course design in either case.
- More expensive than the DIY route.
Best For People Who...
- Want a lot of personal support.
- Want to get involved in building the course itself and learn as they progress getting one to one support.
- Want the DIY option but also want their hand being held along the way.
- Have a healthy budget to pay for the support they need.
Worst For People Who...
- They are already super busy, and taking time out of their business for anything costs them significantly in lost sales.
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They want their course up and running shortly.
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Prefer having done-for-you services rather than DIY because there's still a lot of work you need to do yourself.
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Just want the course and not develop new skills and invest in items they may never use again.
- Need a quality course completed within a few weeks.
Option 3 - Hire a Team of Freelancers
On the face of it, this sounds like a smart move because you can hire the skill sets you need. For example, a course design consultant for curriculum design, a graphic designer to manage the look and feel of your course and generate all your graphic elements, someone to edit video and audio, a content writer to develop your content and everything the student will use as they progress through the course.
Whilst there are plenty of people to hire in these fields, you have the added responsibility of finding them, choosing and hiring them. You have to onboard them and manage them as a project team to make sure your project gets done how you want it, by when, and within budget.
The chances are you'll be hiring generalists rather than freelancers with expertise in working with online courses. As much as we recognise the value of diversity, you have to manage the project, and when the team is new and working on your first course, the results will not necessarily be the best they can be the first time around. It will take a lot of your time, and that's when everything goes to plan!
A good freelancing team is worth its weight in gold, but you normally have to go through some pain before getting the right mix of individuals and forming a team that delivers the results. And for consistent results, you need one that is stable enough to stay as a team and get your project done.
Pluses
- Great if you've already created several courses yourself, know the ropes and now want to scale up your course creation process.
- Ideal for people wanting to develop an online school or 'academy' with a suite of different courses.
- You do the minimal implementation.
Minuses
- It Will be very time consuming setting up the team (find, recruit, onboard, manage, pay etc.)
- Freelancers will be specialists in their own fields and typically not expert in course creation. This means you have to train and manage them to get to the point where they deliver what you want. Writing blog posts is not the same as writing lesson content. Creating lesson videos is not the same as graphic design.
- Freelancers can be unreliable and leave holes in your project if they leave.
- Egos can get in the way of relationships with negative impacts on productivity and results.
- It can be more expensive in the long run than using a course design business, especially when you factor in your management time.
Best For People Who...
- Want to scale up their courses regularly.
- Don't want to do any implementation.
- They are used to managing teams of freelancers.
- Already have a great team of freelancers they use for similar projects and that have course creation experience.
Worst For People Who...
- Have difficulty managing people.
- We are only creating 2 -3 courses per year.
- Have a limited budget for time and finance.
- Have never worked with freelancers before.
Option 4 - Work With a Course Development Business
This option provides the optimum balance between investment and your time. This is where you SAVE the most amount of time, follow the smoothest and shortest path to success with the least amount of stress and disruption to your day job.
Like We, Teach Fashion, a course development business provides the strategy, the resources, and the expertise to manage the whole course development project for you. Your involvement is still key, BUT the time you spend on tasks is kept to the bare minimum.
We estimate that you'll only need to find between 2 - 4 days of your time over a 12 week period. That's for calls with us to talk through your content and then for you to record your voice narrating the script for your course. We do all the other work whilst keeping you in the loop to rest easy, knowing all are on track.
We work with SME's (subject matter experts) to get their message from their minds (their combination of experience, know-how, and skill around their subject) and into a curriculum.
We do this by a series of interviews using carefully crafted questioning that distils the content required for the course.
Knowing what to ask, when to probe, what is key information and what is supportive is a skill we have developed based on our extensive background in learning and development, instructional design and course development over many years.
Pluses of Working With We Teach Fashion
- Massive time-saving for you.
- Highest quality course.
- The best solution for your students.
- Quickest turnaround and completion (within 12 weeks.)
- You still keep all the assets that have been created for you.
- Releases you to focus on other areas related to the course such as marketing and promotion, building your audience before launch etc.
- Allows you to remain focused on your main responsibilities for your business with no negative effect.
Minuses
- Higher up-front outlay initially compared to the other options. But remember, with the DIY, normally, time = money. For example, if you work as a consultant, trainer or coach, then you must factor in the lost opportunity cost of not being able to work on income-generating tasks elsewhere in your business.
- You will learn some details about course development but never enough to create your next course alone.
Best For People Who...
- They are very busy most of the year and can't take on another sizeable project themselves.
- Want a great course but can't wait for months and months to have it published.
- Like to delegate tasks to experts because they know it delivers the best value for them.
- Already have a book or other IP asset and want it transformed into a course quickly and to a high standard.
- Don't need, want or have the patience to learn new course creation skills.
Worst For People Who...
- Have a limited budget. In this case, choose either Option 1 or consider hiring us for Option 2 to work with you to develop your course curriculum, but then the implementation is done by you.
- Perfectionists and micro-managers like to have total control over what's going on every step of the way. If this is you, then you'll probably struggle unless you get stuck in and get involved in the detail.
Summary of Your Four Options
Option 1 - DIY
If you have a minimal budget, want to learn new skills and have plenty of time on your hands or find it, choose the DIY route of option 1. Remember, we can help you and guide you to a certain extent through our masterclass support forums. But how quickly it takes you to complete your course is dictated by how much time you take to learn the ropes and execute and implement the course creation steps.
You'll need to learn the process too. Course fees for the masterclass start at £349. Our mini-courses cover the individual phases of course development at £35.
Option 2 - Hire a Course Design Consultant
It is great for when you want to implement most of the work yourself but need to have some early guidance and involvement in structuring your course, defining learning objectives, and the course's overall layout. It's more expensive than Option 1 but quicker to implement, and you'll learn through 1:1 guidance too.
We offer course design consultancy at £950/day.
Option 3 - Hire a Team of Freelancers
Now your workload shifts from implementation to managing freelancers. There's a lot of setting up time first off, but once your team is up and running, you can make good progress, providing they understand and have experience of course creation; otherwise, you'll spend more time teaching them (assuming you know yourself) about the difference between what they do on other non-course projects and what you need them to do.
You'll find plenty of freelancers with rates from £25 - £100 per hour, but you'll be at their mercy as to how long things take to get done, so their hourly rate is only part of the equation. Would you really know how long it should take to write the content for a 15-minute video lesson?
Option 4 - Work With We Teach Fashion
We proved a complete done-4-you service, taking your expertise and creating a first-class course from it. Your initial outlay is higher, but your downtime is the lowest overall so think about how much you value your time and factor that in. We give you the fastest turn around time and the highest quality.
We work on a retainer of £3000 deposit and then £3000/month over four months.
We manage the entire project with our own team of instructional and graphic designers, video and audio editors, each hand-picked for their experience working on course development.
We interview you (the subject expert) over several weeks to distil the content for your course. We build the curriculum around the course objectives and use your 'material' to create the content for your lessons. Beautiful graphics, beautiful video, beautiful handouts.
We only need you for the interviews done by Skype or phone and record the narrative for each lesson. We'll give you advice and guidance on how to do this too.
Your completed course is then packaged ready for publishing to your preferred hosting platform.
What to Do Next
We're betting that you fit into one of the four categories above for the type of people creating their own online courses?
We're also betting that if you read each of the options above for getting your course built, then you'll recognise which is a route best suited for you?
Now's the time to decide which route to take.
If you have any further questions, then I recommend you read our FAQs page for our done-4-you service, which you'll find here, or you can schedule a call with us by clicking the link below, and we will happily talk you through how we can help.
We call these Clarity Calls because that's what they promise to give you.
Book a Clarity Call now!
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