How to Convert Any YouTube Video into a Profitable Online Course Without the Fear of Wasting Time…Guaranteed.
💫 Let’s convert your YouTube into your next online course — and we’re going to remove the guessing game of “Is this course going to work??”
I took my most popular YouTube video with over 100,000 views and turned it into my first $1,000 as a course creator. People try to make the act of creating an online course to be this BIG thing. It’s no different than making YouTube videos.
Unfortunately…people forget to test their ideas along the way.
🧯 Here’s how MOST people launch a course (and why they fail)…
❌ You pick any random topic you like
❌ You spend $$$ on camera equipment
❌ You spend hundreds of hours learning how to edit
❌ You launch your course to crickets.
😡 You give up and say online courses are BS!
But what if you could skip this painful journey?
🌱 Step 1: Start with YouTube Shorts
You are planting 1,000 seeds into the ground.
With YouTube Shorts, you are creating 20–40 second videos that get sent out all across the world. These videos focus on topics you’re passionate about and have some minor level of expertise. This is a very low commitment.
💥 Eventually, one or two of those YouTube Shorts are going to pop!
🌼 Step 2: Create 3 Regular YouTube Videos
You’ve seen a few Shorts bloom. Now let’s make a deeper commitment.
I want you to create 3X 5-minute YouTube videos on the one topic that bloomed. Record them all in one batch and release all three over the next two weeks. Engage in the comments, and take notes on what your audience is saying.
🎲 Step 3: Repeat Steps 1 & 2 until you find a Winner.
Every step is a testing ground for your next online course.
You are constantly assessing — is this something that people want? Try to figure out why these YouTube videos blew up.
Once you’ve figured it out, create a 3-part video series, upload it to YouTube unlisted, and then add it to your course platform like SamCart.
Eliminate the guessing game. Have full confidence that your course is a winner BEFORE you launch — not after.
This post was created with Typeshare