The most expensive mistake in online courses isn't picking the wrong platform — it's paying $150/month while building a course nobody buys. Here's the cheapskate's path from idea to first sale, in the right order, for $0-40 total.
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1. Step 1: Validate on Gumroad (or a waitlist)
Sell the course before you make it: a Gumroad pre-order, a detailed outline as a cheap 'early access' product, or a simple waitlist with a deposit. Ten real pre-sales is validation; a hundred followers saying 'great idea!' is not. Total cost: $0 plus ~10% of actual sales.
Visit Step 1: Validate on Gumroad (or a waitlist) →✦
2. Step 2: Build on Thinkific Free
Once validated, build the real thing on Thinkific's free plan — proper lessons, clean student experience, real checkout. Your buyers get a legitimate course; you still haven't paid a subscription.
Visit Step 2: Build on Thinkific Free →✦
3. Step 3: Email with a free tier
The list is the business. Kit (formerly ConvertKit), MailerLite and others have free tiers to ~1,000 subscribers — capture every buyer and interested visitor from day one. Your second launch sells to this list for free.
Visit Step 3: Email with a free tier →✦
4. Step 4: Upgrade only on signal
Consistent sales are the signal. Then either upgrade Thinkific (deeper course features) or consolidate on Systeme.io (~$27 for funnels + email + course together). Not before.
Visit Step 4: Upgrade only on signal →The full math
Validation: $0. Course home: $0. Email: $0. Domain for credibility (optional but wise): ~$12/year. Total to first sale: under $15, with roughly 10% fees only on validation-stage sales. Compare that against the standard mistake — $149/month × 6 months of building = $894 spent before proof — and the order of operations is the entire strategy.
Frequently asked questions
Can I really sell a course with no monthly costs?
Yes — Gumroad for validation, then Thinkific's free plan for the real course. Fees only when you actually sell.
Should I buy a domain for my first course?
~$12/year buys real credibility, so usually yes — but it's the only money that needs to leave your pocket pre-launch. (If you also want a simple site around your course, genuinely free hosting exists — our sister site HostMore explains when it fits.)
When is paying for Kajabi-style platforms right?
When consistent revenue exists and consolidation saves money or meaningful time. It's a scaling tool, not a starting tool.