Summary
Reach out to your existing network to share about your course.
Personalize Maven's outreach template.
Why you should start with your existing network
You have valuable knowledge to share, and prospective students are eager to benefit from your expertise. Now the question is: How do you find students for your course?
The best place to start is within your existing network. Why?
It’s much easier to reach out to people you’re familiar with than ping strangers.
These people already trust you and know your work to some degree, so it’s easier to show your value.
Each person in your network is connected to hundreds–if not thousands–of prospective students.
The goal is to create an email list of folks you can contact. Aim for 50 people to start, but once you get going, you may find that your list grows to 100+ people pretty easily.
As you build this list, a good guiding question is: Who in your network might benefit from your course? Who would know someone who could benefit from your course?
How to export your contacts
Hear from our CEO, Gagan Biyani, on how to export your contacts list and start your course outreach.
Here are some additional categories to help you brainstorm:
Family members
Friends from college
Former coworkers or direct reports from each company you worked at
Former and current clients
Mentors or mentees
Organizations or industry groups you’re a part of
Online communities you’re a part of
Most friends/colleagues will be glad (or neutral) to hear from you, so don’t feel self-conscious about reaching out. Be liberal and inclusive with the names you add to your list.
What to say when you reach out
Your message should make it easy for your network to do two things:
Think of people who might benefit from your course
Forward your note to those people
It should include a brief overview of who you are and your course and a clear ask: “Can you forward this to anyone you think would benefit from this program?” This framing is important: instead of asking them to market your course on your behalf, you’re giving them a chance to add value to their network by sharing a relevant course.
Here’s a checklist of questions your note should cover:
What is your course called, and who is the target student?
What’s the value-add of your course? What outcome can students expect to achieve?
What expertise do you have that makes you the best person to teach this course?
What is your “ask” to your network? What action do you want people to take?
🔖 Here’s an outreach template:
Hi ____,
Hope you’re well! I’m reaching out because I recently launched a new course and wanted to see if you’d be up for sharing it with folks who would find it valuable. The course is called [course name] for [target student].
This course is for non-technical professionals looking to break into a role at a high-growth startup. We’ll cover topics like structuring your resume, nailing the interview process, and acing your first 90 days on the job. These are the frameworks I developed over more than a decade running teams at startups and that I wish I had access to earlier in my career. I’ve already coached hundreds of professionals to find jobs at Google, Amazon, Airbnb, and many top-level venture-backed startups. Now I’m looking to share this knowledge with a wider audience.
If you know folks who could benefit from this course, please forward this note. Or they can email me directly at [email protected] and I’m happy to share more. Thank you for your help!
The above is an email template, but you can reach out via text or DM too. If you do text or DM, shorten the note by a lot–it’ll look more casual and personal, and be easier to read on the narrower form factor of a phone.
How to follow up
Once you’ve sent out your messages, make sure to follow up with anyone interested. If you don’t get a reply, follow up after 3-5 days to give a gentle nudge. Most people are busy and appreciate a bump. After 3 bumps, you can assume they’re not interested at the moment, and that’s totally okay.