10 Ways to Promote Your Teleclass
by Marcia Yudkin
More Etiquette
Articles

Published on this site: January 2004 - See
more articles from this month

With
the seminar business in upheaval and time slots available for educational events
in busy schedules shorter than ever, it's no surprise that teleclasses are surging
in popularity. Some individuals and companies offer free telephone seminars on
carefully chosen and strategically described topics to attract people who are
good prospects for their paid products and services. Others charge $19.95 to $195
for a seminar-by-phone session.
Most of the following promotional ideas
for teleclasses apply to both free and paid teleclasses.
I highly recommend
that you make arrangements for professional recording of your teleclass, so that
you can promote the teleclass before it takes place and promote the teleclass
CDs and audiotapes afterwards, for as long as the information on it remains current.
- Announce the teleclass in your own newsletter.
This is the primary way that Joan Stewart, veteran presenter
of dozens of teleclasses, gets paid registrants for her
sessions and sparks sales of the recordings. Stewart schedules
her sessions for Thursdays because her Publicity Hound Tip
of the Week newsletter comes out on Tuesdays. For best results,
plan to announce the class in more than one issue of your
newsletter.
- Tell other newsletter editors about your teleclass. Identify
ezines that reach your target audience and let them know
about your upcoming class.
If your event is free and promises valuable educational
content, editors may very well simply pass along the information
on it to their readers. If you're charging an admission
fee, you may have to offer editors affiliate commissions
on that fee for them to feel motivated to notify their readers
about your class.
- Buy ads in the best, most targeted newsletters you can
find. The editorial coverage referred to in tip #2 is valuable,
but iffy. Purchasing ads guarantees that you get a message
about your teleclass in front of your target market with
exactly the right wording at exactly the right time. How
to identify appropriate newsletters in which to place ads?
Asking Internet-obsessed people who belong to your target
market yields the best leads on this.
- Run pay-per-click search engine ads. The Google AdWords
program lets you stop and start ads on a dime, inexpensively
putting your brief message in front of people searching
for certain phrases that you define.
If you can time your teleclass for the period when people
are hunting down the same information in droves ("mold
prevention" during a widespread, prolonged rainy spell,
"last minute tax tips" in April), all the better
for pay-per-click search engine advertising.
- Post a notice at your web site. This relatively passive
method of promotion works well for high-traffic sites or
for teleclasses that regularly repeat. Make sure you call
attention to the timeliness of an upcoming event through
placing your teleclass announcement in a box on your home
page or otherwise emphasizing your listing visually. Try
not to leave outdated teleclass notices up at your site!
- Distribute articles related to your teleclass around
the web. If you do a web search for "submit article"
and add a word or phrase for your topic, you'll turn up
dozens or hundreds of web sites that welcome the posting
of relevant articles that may include a brief promotional
paragraph at the end with a link to your site. Use this
method to promote the recording of your teleclass rather
than the live session, since once posted, articles tend
to remain up for years.
- Investigate announcements in discussion lists and on
discussion boards. If you regularly participate in a certain
topical discussion group and have a free teleclass to promote,
ask the moderators if you can post an invitation for the
group. When I did this on one list where I'd been a long-time
member, registrations began arriving within minutes. For
a paid teleclass, it might be worthwhile creating a free
"lite" class that sets the stage for the paid
one in order to use this promotional method without complaints.
- Contact the media for publicity. Teleclasses count as
"events," which in turn may qualify as newsworthy
when the event content relates to the readers, listeners
or viewers of a certain media outlet. Research deadlines
carefully, and send a press release or flyer about your
teleclass before those dates.
- Offer a transcript as a free downloadable report.
Turn a transcribed teleclass into PDF format, and you can
persuade many of the above marketing channels to spread
the word about it. Try this especially for a repeated teleclass
that includes a hefty proportion of questions and answers,
so that people who read a particular transcript might still
want to sign up for a live session.
- List your class in teleclass directories. These include:
www.seminarannouncer.com
www.teleclass4u.com
www.teleclasslive.com
www.teleclass.com
The last of these requires you to take a 6-week training
class before the site will list your classes, and one of
my clients who did this found both the class and the listings
there worthwhile.

Marcia Yudkin <[email protected]>
is the author of 6 Steps to Free Publicity and 10 other books.
She runs a private member site, MarketingforMore.com, which
supports business owners who are growing their businesses
and includes a monthly member teleclass. Learn how to avoid
the most common pricing mistakes in her free report, "Charge
More & Get It," available from www.marketingformore.com/survey.htm
.


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