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How to Outline Your Very Own Webinar Training Course

When you run a live webinar, that means you are broadcasting your computer screen and your voice to anyone who joins that webinar. That means you can use webinars to teach and demonstrate any skill you want. But with just a one-hour or a two-hour webinar, you can't teach very much. You need multiple lessons. You need a webinar class.

When you're thinking about the webinar class you're going to offer, decide on how many weeks the class will run for, what weekly training you will deliver, and what will be the format for that training. You can argue with me all you want, but the best classes are the ones that have an end date.

Think about school. Classes end after a quarter or semester. If you've ever attended a seminar or boot camp, that kind of training ended after three to five days. When you set an end date for your class, your students will be able to see the light at the end of the tunnel and you'll be able to give people a clear start and a clear finish of your training.

I recommend you run either a four-week or eight-week class. First, try to outline eight weeks. Think of eight different lessons you can teach the people starting from the easiest going to the toughest and what kind of a challenge you could give at the end of each work to make sure they apply the things you teach. If you have trouble filling up all eight weeks, then a four-week course is best for you.

It's important that when you deliver these lessons, every week has a clear focus and a clear goal. You can't just call each lesson Week 1 , Week 2, Week 3, Week 4. Theme each of the week.

Let's say you are running a webinar class about how to write and market articles. Week 1 might be about to flesh out the idea for your articles; Week 2 might be about writing the article; Week 3—editing the article; and Week 4—submitting the article.

It's very clear what the assignment should be at the end of each week and it's even more clear what Brazil people will have at the end of the four-week course. They will have a live article published on the internet.

Now that you know how many weeks your webinar role last and what you will teach, what format will you deliver the training in? Are you going to deliver a live or a recorded webinar? If it's live, will you take questions throughout the presentation, or have a specific "question and answer" session? And when you do present, are you going to simply present on a PowerPoint, or are you going to demonstrate or deliver a mixture of both?

Now that you've answered all these questions—will it be a four- or eight-week class, what will the topics be, and what will the format be—you are ready to put together and start looking for students for your next multi-week webinar course.

Find out everything you need to know to teach your own webinar course at www.webinarcrusher.com.

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17. Sep, 2010
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