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Re: How to start your own Correspondence Course...
Hi Gordon,
> You need some information that people want > and are already paying for. How to find it? > Yesterday I spent my two hours of sucking > dust mites in the Akron Library doing some > EZ research. > I checked in two magazines, FATE and NEW > AGE...got the current issue, got Jan/Feb/Mar > of 2001/2000/1999... > and COMPARED ads. If a company was running > an ad for the entire time, I went back FIVE > years to see if it was running an ad all > that time. > Many were. It told me people are RESPONDING > to the ad. So, I sent away to a few of the > listings to find out what PROMOTION they > were going to send me back. I know that it > is making them money, somehow, or else they > are just nuts about advertising. > Anyhow, YOU can do the exact same thing for > any interest or passion you have. Like to > fish? There are a dozen magazines on > fishing. Get the current issue, go back a > year, then two years and compare the ads > that are running. Thanks Gordon, by the way, regarding the correspondence school ad I mentioned earlier (here in Oz), I sent away for the info so I'm interested to see what I'll get.... :) Personally, I really love the idea of having corrspondence courses. I guess I just enjoy being in education to some degree.... It's nice to be able to share whatever knowledge you may have with others.... :) > Do the same for anything that interests you. > We call it research. Now I'd be willing to > bet just about anyone that I can find a > CORRESPONDENCE course on just about any > topic or interest. > And if I can't, then I can find the > opportunity to do one. > Think about it. You'll need a MASTER set of > the course, that you can print on demand. It > isn't too much different than a newsletter, > except you can start lesson ONE at anytime, > and have a continuity program...where you > charge the credit card or wait for the next > check to arrive before you send out the next > lesson. > NOW, you've got to offer some sort of > CERTIFICATE. When you take a class at New > Horizons Computer Training Center, you walk > out with a nice certificate you can frame > and hang on your wall. YES, I think this is an important part! It's a big benefit for people to be able to point to the certificate on their wall and say to their friends, "Look what I've achieved!" I think that's immense added value, and it takes so little extra to add it to a course.... :) > So, you have a subject that you know well, > or can research on, then you put together > lessons, then you offer a FREE lesson, maybe > via classified ads (how about that place > that you get millions of readers for only > 180 bucks...to test in). > So, does anyone have any thing to add? I > think there is a lack of knowledge on the > correspondence course. > And for you Dien, here is a little something > of interest too: > ************** > Dr. John Smith, physics professor, and how > he's been "teaching" via CC since > 1968. From "> Gordon, thanks for this article.... I found it interesting too.... Yes, the thought of offering a physics-based correspondence course DID cross my mind! I'll have to see what Dr. John Smith and his buddies are doing.... :) - Dien |
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