How to Turn Your Fashion Book into an Online Course

books to courses planning
Fashion Book into an Online Course

Do you have a fashion book published or one in the making? Have you got a manuscript that you have finished but never got around to actually publishing it? Would you like to generate extra income from the content of your fashion book?

In this post, I share with you some advice on how to take your fashion book and turn it into an online course and use this to generate extra income.

Creating a course is a way of “repurposing content”, to recycle something already written in a different format so that you can squeeze additional income out of the same piece of work. 

If done well, it can be highly profitable for the fashion author.

There are numerous ways to repurpose your fashion book content and build upon your expertise and experience. For example:

  • Selling related services.
  • Selling software relevant to the topic, including apps.
  • Consulting / Coaching on the topic of your book.
  • Speaking at events.
  • Facilitating workshops on your book's topic.
  • Creating and selling an online course.

All of these are ways to develop further income off the back of your book.

But creating and selling an online fashion course is by far the fastest and most scalable approach to generating extra income from your book's content.

And the great thing is that it doesn’t rely on your personal time in the same way that offering services, consulting, and speaking does. You don't need to be there in person to make the sale or deliver the service.

Why Authors Create Online Courses From Their Books

Online courses are the top medium for learning today. 95% of all US universities offer some online learning.

Forbes projected that online learning would soon be a $107 billion/year industry. It is growing rapidly and will continue to rise for the foreseeable future steadily.

For the fashion author, there are three key reasons why it makes sense to repurpose your book and create an online fashion course from it.

  1. It's a profitable revenue stream.
  2. It positions you further as a subject expert.
  3. It adds value to the readers of your books.

 

As an author, you’ll make more money per course than per book. So it’s a great additional income stream that could easily end up eclipsing your book sales.

Financial Incentives to Creating Books and Courses

OK, let's look at some basic numbers to give you an idea of the impact of offering courses alongside your book.

These are to illustrate the point. I have no idea what your personal book sales are, so; please use the logic to apply to your own situation.

  1. Let’s say you get 3,000 downloads from your book upon its launch.
  2. Then afterwards, 500 are sold per month.
  3. Let's assume that 20% of those book purchasers also check out the link mentioned in your book that promotes your course (read later in the post for ideas on how to do this.)
  4. Assume 50% of the people who visit the link submit their email address to get access to some free additional materials related to your book's content.
  5. And then from that list, 10% go on to purchase your course.

The benefits are:

  • You have 300 more people added to your email list at launch.
  • Plus, you have 100 more people per month added to your email list.
  • 30 people buy your course during the book launch.
  • 5 more people buy each month.
  • If your course is priced at £299 ($390), then that is almost £27,000 ($35,000) in additional revenue in the first year and then £1500 ($2000) per month thereafter.

Use the book to power your course sales. Use the content you've already created for your book as the key materials for your course. Can you see how re-purposing can be so rewarding for you?

Use the spreadsheet below to play with the numbers and vary the assumptions based on your own data. You can download the spreadsheet too.

What You Should Try to Achieve When You Create Courses

The goal of online learning is to create short online courses that deliver just-in-time learning or micro-learning. Of course, you're going to find masterclass programs like our own one, which teaches you how to earn extra income from creating your own online fashion. Courses. You will even see full degree programs from universities, but most courses are shorter with fewer lessons.

As an author re-purposing your book, you aim to provide your students with nothing more than what they need to achieve their transformation. Surplus content gets in the way.

Making your course very specific and outcome-oriented is key to successful student engagement and learning. It will inevitably require that some of your book's content never gets used. I know. I know. You sweated for hours and burnt the midnight oil to get everything into the book. 

But your students don't want to know how deep your knowledge is.

They aren't thinking about you. They're thinking about their issues.

Drop the surplus, and then make sure the remaining parts of your book get treated with techniques to bring the material alive and deliver it as learning material.

Don't think of regurgitating your book's content simply as an online version of the same material. See your aim as using your book's selected content to deliver a transformation for the student.

OK, but why would someone buy both the book and the course?

That's a great question.

Before we look at some tips on creating your course from your fashion book, it's worth taking a moment or two to consider the differences between a book and a course and why a student would be prepared to buy both.

10 Differences Between a Book and an Online Course

  1. Traditional paper books are not interactive. It's difficult to make a non-fiction subject come alive with just words and the odd picture.
  2. Books don't allow engagement between the student and the author, whereas an online course can.
  3. Books are difficult and costly to update, and they quickly become out of date. In contrast, courses can be modified quickly and cheaply so the material can always include your latest information.
  4. It's difficult for a book to offer additional resources such as templates, worksheets, and other downloadable resources. But this is easy to do with your course.
  5. Books might be convenient and handy, but so too can online courses, which can be taken on any device from computers to tablets to phones.
  6. It takes a lot of effort to apply what you learn in a book, whereas an online course can deliver easier transformations and apply what's been learned.
  7. You can learn "handless" with an online course (while washing dishes, eating, walking, running etc...) by listening to the instructor.
  8. Great courses are built around learners; books normally aren't. Normally with a course, you find out what your learners want to learn. You pre-sell the course to your mailing list, run a beta test and get their input. You engage with the testers make changes based on their feedback, etc. When done well, your audience is very engaged during the creation of your online course. This doesn't usually happen with book authoring, so the material is far more relevant for the audience with a course.
  9. Even if the book does give you activities to help you learn topics, there is never any feedback between the reader and the author, and there can be with courses.
  10. Books are passive, courses are dynamic and are therefore far more likely to engage and keep students' attention. For example, consider the difference between watching this video compared to reading about the topic.

 

 

How to Build an Online Course From a Fashion Book or a Manuscript

The very fact that you have taken the time and effort to write a book on your topic suggests that you have what it takes to be a successful course creator. You've already cleverly articulated your knowledge of a topic, and you have tenacity and self-motivation, persistence and the ability to try new approaches to generating income in your life.

These are all excellent qualities that will help you plan and develop your first course.

Thankfully you don't have to have a PhD or be officially recognised by the fashion industry as the go-to “expert” to create a course.  Truly, all you need to do is bring together relevant and valuable information and then present it to your students in an engaging way that helps them achieve their goals, overcome their challenges or remove the issues and pains they are facing.

 

OK, so here are some general tips when creating your course.

  1. Work in bite-size chunks of content. Keep in mind that people are busy, so break down your modules into bite-size chunks for easy consumption. Your book chapters can be considered as modules of the course, to begin with, so that will give you a sense of the overall course structure. Each module should bring people through a major transformation milestone on their journey. But maybe a single chapter could be a course on its own, so be prepared to chunk things down.

  2. Begin with a smaller course of three to six modules long, with each module offering four to five video lessons. Keep videos ideally between five to ten minutes long MAXIMUM. Any longer and theirs a risk you’ll lose your audience’s attention altogether. 

  3. Choose your course format. There are many ways to build a course. You can build a text-based course, a video-based course that focuses on live filming, or on recording your screen while you teach someone to program, or by recording slides as you teach. Don't be afraid of mixing it up to add variety and help keep engagement levels high. 
  4. Turn the manuscript into a course script. This means cutting out the surplus material and changing the overall feel of the content so that you get to the heart of the learning as quickly as possible. Background information relevant to the book may not be as relevant for your course's narrow focus.

  5. Turn the script into a slide plan. The slide plan is an overall plan of the key points that you want to cover in your course. Take your script and then pull out the key messages that you want to communicate with your student. Write these down as slide headings.

  6. Turn the slide plan into a slide deck. Now create your slide deck following your slide plan. Create a slide template that you like, then customize the slides to match your slide plan. Or better yet, outsource this process to a professional.

    Each slide in the plan should have no more than three bullet points per slide and, for good measure, no more than 7 words per bullet point. This keeps the slides clean and uncluttered. It's better to have more slides with less content per slide. It makes for a more engaging presentation.

  7. Record the scripts as an audio file. Sit down and read your script as enthusiastically as possible with energy and variety in your voice. See my post called 4 Easy Ways To Get Ready Before Recording Your Online Course Videos for further advice on setting yourself up to present on camera or record your voice.

  8. Combine the slides and audio file into a video file. This is best done by a professional for speed, accuracy, and quality. It's well worth the investment in professional editing.

  9. Add extra materials and learning resources. Things like PDFs, check-lists, aide memoirs, expert interviews, templates, spreadsheets etc. Always be thinking about how you can help the student apply what they have learned.

  10. Clean up, edit and structure everything into a finalized course. Keep all your files well organized. Review everything through the student's eyes so that you have a logical flow of content and resources. Tidy everything up, and get ready to upload your course to your favourite platform.

  11. Upload the course to your course platform. We use Kajabi. It's the ultimate in an all-in-one course creation, hosting, website and blog platform package. But there are numerous options available and if you want the simplest option of all, then take a look at our done-4-you service where we develop your course for you. Or you can join us as one of our tutors and publish your course on The Fashion Student Hub free of charge.

Promoting Your Course Within Your Book

Obviously, with your book going into circulation, it makes sense to promote your course within the book itself. I've seen this done in several ways.

  • Print a link to your course within the book's pages at the beginning of the front-matter, somewhere near the middle and then in the resources section at the end.
  • Directing readers to a landing page or mini website offers them additional resources and downloads for free once they've submitted their email address. You then add them to a follow-up sequence that introduces them to the course and shares the benefits of purchasing and following the course.
  • Using QR codes within the book as a more interactive way to get readers to visit your promo page.
  • Offering the course and the book as a bundle to purchase.

Next Steps

If you'd like to explore the opportunities further for turning your fashion book into your own online fashion courses, then email [email protected] and ask your questions, or you can sign up to receive a series of four FREE training videos that take you through the following:

  1. The massive opportunities for creating your own online fashion course.
  2. How to choose what subject to teach from your experience in fashion.
  3. What other people have achieved with their own online courses.
  4. How to get further help.

Click the button below and sign up.

Join over 1 million people making a living with online courses!

Sign up to get more information about how to teach online, how to pivot your lectures to include online sessions and how to coach students online using the latest technologies.

Get our free training today. 

We hate SPAM. We will never sell your information, for any reason.