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    How to Focus and Validate Your Online Course Idea

    Four frameworks for focusing your course idea, plus a 3-step validation process to confirm demand before you build. Free validator tool included.

    Abe Crystal, PhD8 min readUpdated March 2026

    You have a broad topic you're passionate about. But a course about "everything I know about photography" or "all aspects of leadership" won't work. It needs to be focused. Here are four expert frameworks for narrowing a broad course idea into something specific and compelling.

    Framework 1: The Story Method

    From Pace Smith, course creator and coach: Stories are what make a course engaging and focused. If you can tell a compelling story about the journey your students will take — from where they are now to where they want to be — your course has a clear narrative arc.

    The exercise:

    1. Write down your student's "before" state in 2–3 sentences. What are they struggling with? What have they tried?
    2. Write down the "after" state. What does their life or work look like when they've completed your course?
    3. List everything you'd need to teach to get them from before to after.
    4. Now cut ruthlessly: remove anything that doesn't directly serve the journey from before to after. If a topic doesn't advance the story, it doesn't belong in this course.

    The story method works because it forces you to think from the student's perspective, not from your own expert perspective. Experts want to teach everything. Students want to get from A to B.

    Framework 2: The Big Idea

    From Dr. Kelly Edmonds, instructional designer: Instead of organizing your course around a list of topics, organize it around one big idea — a concept compelling enough to anchor a TED talk.

    The exercise:

    1. Ask yourself: "What's the single most important insight I have about this topic?"
    2. Frame it as a provocative statement. Not "photography basics" but "Capturing light is the only photography skill that matters." Not "time management" but "You don't need more time — you need better decisions."
    3. Test it: Does this idea make people curious? Does it challenge conventional thinking? Could you build an entire course exploring its implications?
    4. Build your modules around different facets of this big idea, not around a topic checklist.

    A big-idea course is more memorable, more marketable, and more focused than a topic-survey course. It gives students a mental framework they'll carry with them long after the course ends.

    Framework 3: The Client-Centered Approach

    From Breanne Dyck, course strategist: Spend less time in your head and more time with your clients. The focus comes from understanding their "core burning desire" — the real underlying need that drives them.

    The exercise:

    1. Talk to 5–10 potential students. Ask: "What do you care about most when it comes to [your topic]?"
    2. When they answer, dig deeper: "What have you already tried? Why didn't it work?"
    3. Keep going: "What would it mean if this problem disappeared? What would change in your life?"
    4. Listen for the pattern. The surface answer is rarely the real answer. Someone who says they want to "learn photography" might really want to "capture their children's childhood before it's gone." That's the burning desire your course should address.

    For a deeper dive into audience research, see 10 Ways to Research What Your Students Actually Want.

    Framework 4: The Skill Level Filter

    From Charlie Gilkey, productivity expert and author: Focus comes from asking the "minimum" question: What's the minimum students need to learn to get from where they are to where you're taking them?

    The exercise:

    1. Define your student's current skill level precisely. Are they true beginners, or do they have some foundation?
    2. Define the specific outcome you're guiding them toward.
    3. List every concept and skill needed to bridge that gap.
    4. Now ask for each item: "Is this the minimum? Could they achieve the outcome without this?" Remove everything that isn't strictly necessary.

    The skill level filter is especially useful when you're an expert who tends to over-teach. What feels like "essential background" to you might be an unnecessary detour for a student who just wants to reach the next level.

    Putting It All Together

    You don't need to use all four frameworks. Pick the one that resonates most with your thinking style:

    • If you're a storyteller, use the Story Method
    • If you're a big-picture thinker, use the Big Idea
    • If you're relationship-oriented, use the Client-Centered Approach
    • If you're analytical, use the Skill Level Filter

    All four roads lead to the same destination: a course that's specific enough to promise a clear result, focused enough to deliver on that promise, and compelling enough to attract the right students.

    How do you validate your course idea?

    A focused idea is necessary but not sufficient. You also need to know that people will pay for it. I've watched creators spend months building courses based on desk research — checking Google Trends, browsing Udemy, reading Facebook groups — only to discover that nobody wanted to buy what they built. That's useful context, but it's not validation. Real validation requires talking to real people.

    Here are three tests, in order of effort and strength of signal:

    Test 1: The Conversation Test

    Talk to 5-10 potential students. Not a survey — actual conversations. Ask one question: "If I created a course that helped you [specific outcome from your focused idea], what would need to be in it for you to sign up?"

    Listen for specifics. If 3 or more people can articulate what they'd want — the format, the topics, what they'd need to see — you have a validated idea. If they give you polite but vague responses ("Oh, that sounds interesting"), that's a signal to keep refining.

    Test 2: The Pre-Sell Test

    Create a simple registration page describing your course and its transformation promise. Share it with your audience and see if people sign up. You can do this on Ruzuku's free plan — no investment required. If people register (even for a waitlist), you've confirmed demand beyond just polite interest.

    Test 3: The Pilot Course Test

    Run a small version of your course with 5-10 people. This is the ultimate validation: you're delivering the transformation and seeing whether it works. You get real feedback, real testimonials, and real data on whether your idea delivers results. This is the pilot course approach — the fastest path from idea to validated course.

    Your Next Step

    Choose one focusing framework and spend 20 minutes working through its exercise with your course idea. Then run it through the Course Idea Validator to check your readiness. When you're confident in the idea, build a quick outline using the course outline tool. A focused idea, validated demand, and a concrete outline is everything you need to start building.

    Topics:
    course ideas
    focus
    expert advice
    planning
    validate course idea
    course validation

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