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SaaS Pricing: 1 Sale Then $5M on Udemy

Episode 149 Published 8Β years, 5Β months ago
Description

Rob Percival launched his first online coding course for $199 and got exactly one sale in the first 24 hours. Then the buyer asked for a refund. That SaaS pricing lesson changed everything. Instead of quitting, he made the course free, got 2,000 students, and built the social proof needed for selling high-ticket products on Udemy.

Rob's SaaS pricing breakthrough came from flipping the pricing model - give it away free first, build reviews and credibility, then let the marketplace reward quality. His pricing strategy generated $15,000 in the first real month after promoting to his web hosting customers. Udemy's marketing machine kicked in once the course showed strong conversion, and the product eventually earned over $5M across 500,000 students.

Rob Percival is a former high school math teacher from England who runs Eco Web Hosting alongside his course business. He spent five months building the most comprehensive web development course on Udemy instead of shipping an MVP.

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • πŸ’° Use free SaaS pricing to build social proof before charging: Rob got zero paid sales at $199, but making the course free attracted 2,000 students in days. Those enrollments and reviews created the credibility needed to start selling high-ticket products.
  • 🧠 Ignore MVP advice when completeness is your competitive advantage: Rob spent five months building a comprehensive 20-hour course covering six technologies. Competitors offered narrow, dry courses. His completeness became the reason students chose his product.
  • πŸš€ Leverage marketplace distribution instead of building your own audience: Rob could not drive traffic to his own site but knew Udemy had millions of students. Once his course showed strong conversion, Udemy's paid ads and email campaigns did the marketing.
  • 🎯 Cross-sell between recurring and one-time revenue with smart SaaS pricing: Rob offers a free year of Eco Web Hosting with his web developer course, funneling students into a recurring revenue product. His hosting customers became his first paying course audience.
  • 🀝 Partner with experts to scale across topics without mastering every one: Rob acts as a publisher - finding expert instructors, improving their content, and promoting to his 500,000 students. This pricing model scales production without requiring deep expertise.

Chapters

  • Introduction
  • What drives Rob Percival - doing things that scare you
  • Overview of online coding courses on Udemy
  • Why Rob partners with other instructors
  • Building Eco Web Hosting over a decade
  • Running a hosting business alongside courses
  • Team size and time split between businesses
  • Launching the first course - 1 sale and a refund
  • Four months building the most complete course on Udemy
  • Losing everything to a Dropbox sync disaster
  • Was it really full-time effort for five months
  • The first course generated over $1 million
  • Why Rob made the course free to build social proof
  • How Udemy's marketing machine kicked in
  • Building the most comprehensive course vs MVP
  • Why naivety can be an advantage
  • The iOS Swift course and timing
  • The Apple Watch course disappointment
  • Learning Swift while recording the course
  • Can anyone learn to code
  • Coding skills for non-technical founders
  • Lightning round

Resources

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