How to create an online course landing page that converts

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Someone clicks the link in your email. They land on your page. They scroll past the headline, skim two sections, and close the tab eleven seconds later. You paid for that click with weeks of content and a dozen messages. The page failed, not the audience.

An online course landing page is a focused web page built to explain your course and move visitors toward enrollment. Every section has one job. Remove distractions. Make the promise clear. Show proof. Make buying easy. If you are preparing a course launch, this page is the destination every promotional channel should point to.

What belongs on a course landing page?

Start with a headline that states the outcome your course delivers. Not the number of modules. Not the word "comprehensive." The result. "Launch a profitable freelance writing business in ninety days" tells a visitor what changes in their life.

Follow with a short subheadline that names who the course is for. Then explain the problem you solve in plain language. List what is included: modules, formats, bonuses, and support. Add social proof through student quotes, completion numbers, or short case studies.

End sections with a clear call to action button that says what happens next. "Enroll now" or "Start learning today" works better than vague labels like "Submit" or "Learn more" on a sales page.

How do you write copy that builds trust?

Speak to one person. Use "you" and describe the situation your ideal student faces before taking the course. Acknowledge their frustration or goal before you present the solution. Readers should feel understood within the first screen.

Be specific about what changes after enrollment. Vague promises like "transform your mindset" sound empty. Concrete outcomes like "write and send your first client proposal" give visitors something to picture.

Address the top three objections directly. Common ones are price, time commitment, and whether the course fits their skill level. A short FAQ section near the bottom handles these without cluttering the main narrative.

What design choices affect conversions?

Keep navigation minimal. A sales page is not your full website. Remove menu links that send visitors to your blog or about page before they enroll. One page, one goal.

Use readable fonts, enough white space, and images that show real course content or real students. Stock photos of smiling strangers in headsets do not prove your course exists. Screenshots of lessons, your face on video thumbnails, or student work samples build more credibility.

Make the page fast on mobile. Most course research happens on phones. A button that is hard to tap or text that requires horizontal scrolling costs you enrollments you will never know about.

How do you test and improve your page?

Before launch, ask three people in your target audience to review the page. Watch them scroll. Note where they pause and where they look confused. Fix those spots before you send paid or organic traffic.

After launch, track where visitors scroll and where they click. If everyone drops off before the pricing section, your proof or curriculum section may be too weak. If clicks cluster on the FAQ, move those answers higher. Our blog on how to run an A/B test explains simple experiments you can run on headlines and button text.

Pair your landing page with strong follow-up through email marketing so visitors who leave without buying hear from you again.

Frequently asked questions

How long should a course landing page be?

Should I put pricing on the landing page?

Where should I build my course landing page?

Do I need video on my landing page?

What is a good conversion rate for a course landing page?

Should my landing page mention a money-back guarantee?