The Complete Digital Marketing Course - 12 Courses in 1

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.

Master Digital Marketing Strategy, Social Media Marketing, SEO, YouTube, Email, Facebook Marketing, Analytics & More

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Taught by
Rob Percival

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Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 8 mentions • top 8 shown below

r/startups • comment
2 points • Soupppdoggg

https://www.udemy.com/course/learn-digital-marketing-course/

r/AskReddit • comment
1 points • _soch

You mean like available jobs?! Oh dude you can find these everywhere. ESP right now!! First, know your skill set. You need to deep dove into what digital marketing is, what the responsibilities are, and maybe even do a little research on the kinds of fields your interested in and how digital marketing works in that industry. KNOW the skill first. Then simply start searching. this place has some great resources to start

r/serbia • comment
1 points • mrm4rk0

Moja preporuka.

r/Bahrain • comment
1 points • Kniphe

There's a good number of really cheap courses on sites like udemy that go for like 5-10 dinars that lay out the basics and some advanced tactics of digital marketing. I did this one https://www.udemy.com/course/learn-digital-marketing-course/ and it has some things lacking but a good amount of content for 12$ (what I paid, the price fluctuates).

While not all of it applies to Bahrain, theres nothing stopping you from marketing across GCC, and i've found a good amount of helpful topics in that course

r/artbusiness • comment
3 points • Whimsicall

Hey! Glad to see you taking the first step. I'll drop a few resources, though they are pretty stream-of-consciousness! The ones that follow are tied specifically to business endeavors and mindset. If you want further recommendations in a more specific field, just let me know!

Before you start, I made a post a ways back. A user named u/LotusSloth made a very apt reply to it that applies here as well:

> To anyone reading this and feeling discouraged or overwhelmed, keep in mind that this is NOT an all-or-nothing situation. You can work a traditional job and moonlight as an artist, slowly building your audience and testing the waters (and learning) as you go.

> Make sure your pricing covers your materials and time, including workspace/rent, marketing and other costs.

> Things like branding, marketing strategy, etc., don’t have to spring forth fully-formed. You can test and learn as you go.

That post I mentioned was this one in r/ArtistLounge. I went over some of the fundamental skills a small business requires by linking them to their use in a business plan.

Speaking of which, you'll want to work on a business plan. It doesn't need to be complex (or even completed!), but you'll want an idea of how you intend to run the business.

But for that, you'll need knowledge. Here's my list of "small business fundamentals" from that post, it helps break down some of what you should know or make sure to learn:

Small Business Fundamentals

These include, but is not limited to:

  • Financial Management. You need to know how much you spend on art supplies, how much your living expenses are, how much income you are receiving right now, and your current savings balance. This will help you determine how actually feasible it is to pursue each idea you have, and when you are safe to make art a full-time career.

  • Project Planning. To make sales, you need a product. To make lots of sales, you need lots of products. I learned this lesson the hard way when I tried starting a diorama store on Etsy a few years back. With only 3~5 products up at any given time, I was rarely making sales simply because I was not stacking the deck in my favor. There was no marketing, and I wasn't managing my time correctly. Which leads me to...

  • Time Management. Estimate how long you can comfortably focus on each aspect of your business each week. Decrease each number by around 20-40%, and commit to this. Make a plan (in your business plan!) for when and how long you spend on producing products, when and how you market your business...

  • Also consider making a list of what you do not want to spend your time doing. You'll need to make sacrifices if you want to boost your productivity from where it's at. Maybe you need to limit how many shows you can binge-watch. Maybe reduce your time spent on video games each day.

  • Marketing. This is such a huge field with so many possibilities. Are you going to advertise on social media? Which one? Pay for ads to access a larger audience, or post frequently to build your own? Market yourself as a human being, or market yourself as an opportunity? What pain points are you solving, what benefits are your products providing?

  • Branding. What are you naming your business? Are you marketing yourself as an operation, or as a specific person? What ideals do you identify with? What rules and guidelines are you going to set for yourself when designing products, designing websites, creating a logo, etc.? Consistency is important, but avoid getting trapped in a niche too small.

Now, as for resources to get that knowledge... I'll just drop my top two for now. One for Marketing, one for Branding. If you want more recommendations for a specific field, let me know! This comment is long enough already!

Marketing. Arguably the most important field. It will determine how much attention you have, and is the main way to turn a business that makes paltry sales into one that makes a living. This is my number-one suggestion:

  • Complete Digital Marketing Course, 12-in-1 A fantastic and very comprehensive look into Market Research, Websites, Email Marketing, Copywriting, SEO, and 11 more full chapters focusing on individual social media platforms and tools.

Branding. You'll want to have a grasp on your branding early, but it doesn't ned to be

  • Crushing It!, a book by Gary Vaynerchuk, it discusses building your brand in away that helps you get discovered. It also gives actionable tips to build up your influence through different platforms.

A note on Online Courses

> If you're looking for courses, I love the more structured curriculum and better quality you get from UDEMY over Skillshare, even if it costs more. Do keep in mind, price can be mitigated if you wait for one of their very frequent sales before picking up a course. Don't buy them at full price when they're on sale what feels like 3 weeks of every month! You get an absurd bang-for-your-buck when buying the better courses.

I hope these help! This is mostly off the top of my head, so it's not as polished as I would have liked it to be. That said, let me know if you could use more specific recommendations.

r/relationship_advice • comment
1 points • MyWiddleSmushFace
r/rprogramming • comment
1 points • Jantzen123

There is a website called udemy where people can learn courses like marketing analysis at a really high quality with a low price. Here are some courses that might be what you're looking for:

If you're also looking to learn R programming udemy has courses for that as well. I'm currently learning R with a course from udemy and it's amazing as super helpful!