One of the many things I love about my daughters:
They have skills and talents I couldn't acquire in three lifetimes.
For example: Veronica, 15, taught herself animation through some software I got for her. Then she taught herself sewing and the rudiments of fashion design. (You may have seen me post pictures of her work on Twitter.) Oh, and sketching, too. And now crocheting.
To learn crocheting, though, she took an online course. She has an account at Skillshare, and she told me that after she'd exhausted what YouTube could teach her, she went to Skillshare and got some really systematic instruction on the particular things she wanted to know.
So look:
Even my 15-year-old daughter takes online courses.
And as you can see, they don't have to be on history or economics. They can be on anything.
If you don't think you know something that other people would want to learn, you're not thinking hard enough.
Creating a course is a great entry point into building an online income, because you don't have to solve the traffic problem: course sites like Skillshare and Udemy already attract more than enough traffic without your help.
CourseReel is the easiest platform I've seen for creating courses, because it does so much of the work for you: converting your voice to text, creating slides, etc.
And during this special launch period it's much less expensive than the -- I'm not kidding -- $300 I spent on every single Liberty Classroom faculty member to buy them Camtasia.
Start doing something to insure yourself against the shut-down-your-business crazies, and create something they can't shut down.
Step one:
Tom Woods