Sign up for Teachable
Join more than 100,000 creators who use Teachable to make a real impact and earn a real income.

How to pre-sell your online course before you build it with Jack Appleby

Published:
Mar 21, 2025
Updated:
How to pre-sell your online course before you build it with Jack Appleby

What if you could launch your course and start earning revenue while building a community of excited learners—all before you ever hit “record” on your first lesson?

More and more creators are turning to pre-selling as a smarter, leaner way to validate their course ideas and generate real income upfront. Instead of spending weeks (or months) building a course that might sell, they’re flipping the script—using surveys, social content, and strategic offers to get paid before they build.

In this guide, we’re breaking down how to pre-sell your course using Teachable.

You’ll hear directly from creators who’ve done it—some making up to $45,000 in pre-sales alone—and we’ll walk you through the exact steps they followed to make it happen.

We’re keeping it real, practical, and packed with takeaways you can start using today.

Let’s dive in.

{{trial-component="/blog-shortcodes/blog-cta"}}

Why creators are turning to pre-selling online courses

Let’s be honest—depending on brand deals and ad revenue can feel like a rollercoaster. One canceled partnership or slow month, and suddenly your income takes a hit. 

That’s exactly what happened to creator Jack Appleby.

So he tried something different: he pre-sold a course—and made $45,000 in just 30 days.

Pre-selling gave Jack financial freedom, creative control, and proof that people wanted what he had to teach. That’s the power of selling before you build.

Why pre-selling online courses works:

  • It validates demand before you spend time creating content
  • It generates income upfront to fund production
  • It reduces refund risk (you’re setting expectations early)
  • It builds community and buzz before your course even launches

Action step:

  • Choose a course topic based on your existing content or expertise
  • Set an early-bird timeline and discounted price
  • Offer something extra—like a bonus lesson or live Q&A—to encourage early signups

How to figure out what course to create (without guessing)

Creating a course can feel overwhelming—especially when you’re stuck asking, “What should I even teach?” The good news? You don’t have to guess.

The smartest creators don’t start with a finished product—they start with a conversation.

Jack Appleby, didn’t brainstorm in a vacuum. He went straight to his audience and asked them directly.

And it worked. By crowdsourcing course ideas from his community, Jack made sure his offer was something people were actually excited to buy.

Here’s how you can do the same:

Ask the right questions: Instead of saying “What should I teach?” focus on questions that reveal real behavior, preferences, and needs.

Think about asking questions such as:

  • What’s your biggest challenge right now in [your niche]?
  • Have you ever purchased an online course before? What made you buy it?
  • What kind of learning format do you prefer—video, PDFs, live sessions?
  • How much time can you realistically commit to learning each week?
  • What price point feels reasonable for a course on this topic?

Make it easy to respond: Use tools your audience is already comfortable with: Instagram polls, LinkedIn surveys, Google Forms, or Typeform. Keep the questions short, focused, and easy to complete in under 5 minutes.

People are more likely to complete your survey if they get something in return. You could offer:

  • A free digital download
  • An exclusive guide or cheat sheet
  • Early access to the course
  • A discount or limited-time bonus

Start spotting patterns: Once your responses start rolling in, look for recurring themes. 

Is everyone struggling with time management? 

Are most people new to your topic? 

Does your audience lean toward self-paced formats over live workshops?

This is where things get exciting—because your course idea starts taking shape based on real data, not assumptions.

Action step:

  • Share it on your most active platforms and email list
  • Offer a simple incentive to encourage responses
  • Block off 30 minutes to analyze the data and sketch out your course outline

How to turn your existing content into a pre-sell-ready course

Creating a course doesn’t have to start with a blank Google Doc. In fact, the course you’re trying to map out might already exist—in your content archive.

If you’ve ever posted a short explainer, a how-to tutorial, or a behind-the-scenes breakdown, guess what? You already have the bones of a great course.

Jack realized that one of his most popular videos—something he'd already shared publicly—could be reworked into a full, in-depth curriculum. All it took was expanding on what he’d already taught in short form.

Here’s how to reverse-engineer your best content into a course your audience will pay for:

Break it down into modules: Take a single how-to or educational post and split it into 4–5 core sections. Each one can become its own lesson or module inside your course.

Add depth and exercises: What would you really say if you had more than 90 seconds to teach that concept? Use examples, templates, scripts, or assignments to build out the content.

Use Teachable’s draft mode to build as you go: You don’t need to publish all your content right away. You can keep lectures in “Draft” status during the pre-sale period—and add a “Welcome” module to greet early students and set expectations.

Action step:

  • Identify 1–2 high-performing content pieces that could become your course foundation
  • Use those pieces to outline your modules
  • Load the structure into Teachable—even if the content isn’t finished yet

How to sell your course with stories, not hard sales tactics

The biggest misconceptions about selling online courses? 

You need to become a full-time marketer to make it work. Not true.

Instead of hard-selling, Jack used personal stories—some funny, some emotive, all true—to highlight the value of his course and connect with potential buyers.

Here’s what worked:

  • Sharing a real story about how personal branding got him a $200K job offer
  • Mentioning that former coworkers, friends, and even old teammates were buying his course
  • Telling his audience why he believes in the product, not just what it includes

Most importantly, Jack shared authentic moments that led people to say: “I want that result too.”

Action step:

  • Brainstorm 3–5 short stories tied to your course topic
  • Turn each one into a post, short video, or email
  • Include a link to your course and a reminder of any early-bird offers

You don’t need slick marketing tactics. You need stories your audience will relate to.

Why preselling your online course builds loyal customers

Sure, pre-selling helps you generate income upfront—but the benefits go beyond just making money.

When you invite people into your course early, you're actively inviting them to build with you. In a very real sense, you’re bringing them behind the scenes into your creative process and allowing them to shape your products with you.

Customers from your pre-sale period will give you feedback, ask questions, and cheer you on before the course is even live.

What preselling creates:

  • A built-in feedback loop while you’re still building
  • Higher engagement because students are financially (and emotionally) invested
  • Momentum on launch day, with students who feel like insiders

And when you're using a platform like Teachable, it’s easy to set this up. You can create a private Slack or Discord group for early adopters, send out weekly updates as you build, or even host a live check-in before launch.

Action step:

  • Add a community element to your pre-sale strategy
  • Set expectations for how students can connect or provide input
  • Use feedback from this group to improve your course before it launches

Start pre-selling your course using Teachable

Pre-selling flips the traditional course launch on its head. You don’t need weeks of content ready. You don’t need a massive audience. And you definitely don’t need to do it all alone.

You need a validated idea. A plan. And a willingness to build in public—with your audience right there alongside you.

Begin pre-selling your course and start a new income stream today on Teachable.

{{trial-component="/blog-shortcodes/blog-cta"}}

Chris Chan

Chris Chan is the Staff Writer and Producer at Teachable, where he mixes his combined experience writing for creators and marketing agencies to bring fresh content to Teachable. Chris writes the weekly Teachable newsletter—check it out here if you haven't already—and has written copy that has produced multiple 7 figures for online creators. When he's not busy cranking out a new piece of content, Chris enjoys chowing down on Sushi and jamming out to Gospel music.

Jack Appleby

Jack Appleby is a social media strategist and creator behind Future Social, a newsletter empowering marketers with actionable content strategies. With over a decade of experience working with brands like Beats By Dre, Microsoft, and Twitch, Jack’s viral insights have earned him recognition across platforms like Twitter and LinkedIn. When he’s not strategizing, Jack pursues his passion for basketball, traveling the U.S. as a semi-pro player.

In this article
Sign up for Teachable
Join more than 100,000 creators who use Teachable to make a real impact and earn a real income.
Start for free

Create and sell
anything Teachable

30M+ products have been sold on Teachable.
Ready to launch yours?