How to Create an Awesome Onboarding Experience

Written by, Glen Long on July 8, 2021

courses

You work hard to get people to buy your course.

But how much have you thought about what happens once they do?

As a course creator, each new student feels like a big win. And that’s great for you, but for the student, the journey has only just begun.

So what are students’ early impressions of your course? Are they delighted? Or disappointed?

Do they get moving quickly and painlessly, or do they struggle from day one?

If you want students to have a consistently great experience, you’d better starting thinking about your onboarding experience.

What is Onboarding?

In a nutshell, your onboarding strategy should answer the following question:

What are you doing in the minutes, hours and days after a customer buys your online course to ensure they take their first steps towards success?

(Another more hard-nosed but equally valid way to look at it is: what are you doing to minimise your refunds?)

Creating an onboarding strategy means designing the experience you want new joiners to have. A truly effective one will do three things:

  1. It’ll make them feel good about their decision to join your course
  2. It’ll get them comfortable with logging into and navigating your course
  3. It’ll help them get started on their journey and help them to stay in momentum

If you don’t have an onboarding strategy yet, you risk giving students a crappy first impression. And that may mean they never get started with your course.

It will also affect their perception of your brand as a whole. So you’ve got to get it right, right?

Where Does Onboarding Happen?

You might struggle to get an accurate fix on the onboarding process because it’s doesn’t happen in any one place.

In fact, there are three separate aspects to onboarding:

  1. What happens on your course site?
  2. What happens in the student’s inbox?
  3. What happens wherever else you connect with your students? For example: on Zoom calls, inside a students-only Facebook group or Slack channel, etc.

From your perspective, these are very different environments that you don’t fully control. From the student’s perspective, they’re all part of the overall experience.

Successfully integrating these three parts of the onboarding process is essential to creating an experience that sets students up for success.

The Three Most Important Time Frames for Onboarding

You can split the onboarding experience into three separate time frames, each longer than the last. And your onboarding strategy needs to cover each time frame to create a seamless experience.

Time Frame #1: Immediately After Purchase

This first time frame covers what happens immediately after someone buys your course.

It’s a critical point and emotions are high—your customer is excited about their purchase and the results it might bring but…

…they’re also nervous about the money they just spent and whether they made the right decision.

Your goal during this time frame is: CONFIDENCE.

You want to reassure students that:

Managing the student experience during this time frame helps to avoid any knee-jerk refunds. It also carries the positive feelings around their purchase into the next time frame.

Time Frame #2: The First Course Login

Some students will jump right into your course after buying it, others won’t get started until later.

Either way, we’re talking here about the first time a student logs into your course to get settled and do some work.

(Just imagine they’ve put aside an hour to get to grips with their shiny new training. It may not be the same day as they bought it, but it’s likely within a few days of purchase.)

Emotionally, the endorphin rush of making a new purchase has faded and reality is starting to kick in. They’re still excited about getting the result you promised, but they’re also thinking about the hard work ahead.

Your goal during this time frame is: ORIENTATION.

You want to make sure that students:

Managing this time frame successfully helps to cement students’ positive feelings about the course and builds their resolve to do the work.

Time Frame #3: The Rest of the “Honeymoon” Phase

After their first session inside your course, students are still in what you can think of as their honeymoon phase.

This is where belonging to your course remains a novelty and the thoughts and emotions behind their decision to buy are still relatively fresh in their mind.

While there’s no specific point that marks the end of the honeymoon phase, one milestone stands out as significant: the end of the refund period.

So if you offer a 30-day money-back guarantee, you can think of the honeymoon phase as lasting until the end of those 30 days. (But it may be shorter, such as 14 or even seven days.)

Your goal during this time frame is: MOMENTUM.

You want to help students:

Managing this time frame successfully means that once it’s over, students have made clear progress and feel confident of getting further results if they continue.

You’ll also have built positive learning habits that will carry them through the rest of the course.

A Practical Guide to Onboarding Awesomeness

We’ve talked about different time frames and where the onboarding happens, but let’s dig into the details.

What specifically can you do to ensure an unexpectedly awesome experience?

Read on for some practical ideas you can use to flesh out your strategy.

How to Make the Post-Purchase Experience Awesome

Your first chance to impress shiny new students comes immediately after they decide to purchase your course.

Here’s how to make the early experience awesome.

Do this on your course site

Do this via email

Do this elsewhere

How to Make the First Login Experience Awesome

Your second chance to make a great impression is the first time that students access your course.

Here’s how to make it awesome.

Do this on your course site

Do this by email

Do this elsewhere

How to Make the “Honeymoon” Phase Awesome

The time between the first login and the end of your refund period is the last phase of your onboarding experience.

Here’s how to make that time as positive as possible for students.

Do this on your course site

Do this by email

Do this elsewhere

Ready to Level Up Your Onboarding?

It’s such an easy mistake to make as a course creator…

You become so focused on what needs to happen before you get a sale that you neglect what happens after you actually do it.

So take some time to design the experience you want new students to have.

Your onboarding strategy doesn’t need to be complicated. (Just having one will put you ahead of most course creators!)

But since you worked so hard to get people into your course, shouldn’t you give them a smooth ride once they’re there?

Get it right and you’ll get better results, fewer refunds and more referrals.

Pretty sweet, huh?