Friday, July 15, 2016

How to get better audio, tips by Udemy instrutor Scott Duffy

Scott Duffy said

I just got done recording a new course, and have been continuing to struggle to get the audio just right. Today I thought I would summarize my best tips for recording audio for your courses, in the hopes that it would help someone.



  1. One of the keys to good audio is having a quiet place to record. If your house is in a quiet part of town, that's a good start. We all sometimes have to deal with construction or one time events. But if you live in an extremely noisy part of the city, you will find yourself being only able to record late at night.
  2. Another key is the type of room you are recording in. In order to avoid echo, it needs to have lots of soft surfaces like furniture and carpeting. Some people record sitting inside a clothes closet because the clothes absorbs all the sound. Others record with blankets hanging around them. Think about how sound bounces around, and you want more things that absorb sound and less things that reflect sound around you as you record.
  3. If you have both of the above, it almost doesn't matter what microphone you have - expensive, cheap, condenser, dynamic. Microphones pick up sound, and so if there are no other sounds other than your voice, that's the ideal state.
  4. If you make a mistake during recording - say something incorrect, or find yourself making an error - stop recording and start the lesson again. I have seen programming courses on Udemy where the instructors code wouldn't compile and then spent 5 minutes searching around to find the error. I do every lesson 2 or 3 times, and my delivery of the material gets better each time. It's worth it to re-record when you catch yourself making a big mistake.
  5. You can't take echo out in editing. If your sound comes back with too much echo, you can play with the levels, add some soft music to the background to disguise it, but ultimately it's not easy to remove.
  6. Clean your audio using a tool like Audacity. Do noise removal, boost the volume, and clean up the ums, ahs, long pauses, stutters and mistakes if you can. Students will appreciate a mistake-free lesson and not an instructor that says "uhhh, uhhh, uhhh" a lot. My recent course had 120+ lessons. Every one was cleaned manually in Audacity, and yes it's a lot of work.
  7. In general, don't have music playing constantly behind your talking. I use this for my promo video and my introduction lesson only to inject some energy, but 99% of the course does not have music playing throughout.




Sam Chifley added the following



  • Tip 1 - Without stating the obvious. You need to go ahead and run a few tests with your microphone before hand in order to make sure you can actually remove the sound from your audio. Don't record the whole course and then find out that your audio doesn't cut it. All audio can be repaired but the time it will take to repair will likely make it worthwhile recording again with different settings. (You can remove echo just it isn't worth your time and effort! Your not on a film set)
  • Tip 2 - Know your microphone! Don't talk into a condenser microphone directly (The opposite is true for dynamics get as close and personal as you can and use a pop filter) Likewise know if it an end-address microphone or not. 
  • Tip 3 - Avoid increasing the volume in editing as you will learning fairly quickly that your microphone has these limits for a reason (Background noise and clipping) 
  • Tip 4 - Sound is a funny thing and you can not hear noise and it can exist it is just outside of the range of your computer aside from paying a few hundred dollars for a sound card zoom in and look at the recording.  
  • Like wise them $2 earbuds don't cut it! Get some studio headphones (Sony and Bose are personal favorites of mine!)

My two cents


  • I sit in a corner facing towards the intersection of walls. Right now my corner has got a wooden closet. The sound goes through the TV first & then the plywood before hitting the wall.
  • About background noise or birds chirping outside, I think if the sound wave produced through your mouth is significantly stronger than the noise; the microphone will vibrate to your sound and effectively cancel the noise.
  • Plus, I use an entry level dynamic microphone(Samson Q1U) with a pop filter.

David Winegar Said

My suggestion for audio would be

  • To pick up a good mic, it saves tons of time in messing about if you have good quality to start with.
  • I bought from ebay a BM-800 mic for about $20 and it is very high quality, USB mic. Don't plug into the mic input on your computer, but use a USB adapter - it make a huge difference.
  • Then use a program like WavePad sound editor (Windows) to fix your audio a bit more. You can reduce background and hum and also cut out those "ummms" from your audio without having to re-record.

Roma Connie Waterman said



  • I will add this from my experience- you don't need a program like audacity if you have a good mic to start work- it will eliminate a lot of issues just to start with a good quality mic (obviously if a noisy venue is an issue you are going to have trouble regardless tho). You will also find the sound of breathing is normal and often editing is not needed as its not as noticeable. Pop screens and filters go a long way in helping with this.
  • The other thing I do at the beginning of every lecture is I say the title of the lecture then Count from 5 backwards, making the 2 and the 1 silent- why? Because in editing I know what I'm editing if I have a lot of audio and video to edit, and also the countdown helps me know where to start the editing process (I talk really fast and often there's no gaps!)
  • I've also found editing is actually quicker if I make a mistake somewhere to keep going but do the Count again so I know there is an edit when I come back to it- I'm finding I'm recording less and editing more- but it's much better content than trying to do a whole lecture again.

Enough horsing around, I must get back to work.




Saturday, July 9, 2016

Dreams, Strartups, Entrepreneurship: Words of Wisdom by Farhan Masood, Pakistani tech Entrepreneur


Words of wisdom by Pakistani entrepreneur Farhan Masood, CTO & Chairman Soloinsight.

When I founded my startup with zero capital and no background but just a dream to build a globally significant company out of my motherland specializing in our own face recognition systems and the whole world of Internet of People around it, I was declared a maniac and a fool... I was never taken seriously... Everyone laughed at my crazy self and no one helped...


I was told the companies who were working on such things were both 1) Jewish and 2) have hundreds of millions of dollars as grants and funding. 3) Fingerprint systems had already taken over the world by storm and even if I did succeed in building such technologies which one doesn't even can find a book or a research paper on, I was way too late to enter and wont be able to make any difference...

I am glad I did not listen to any of the naysayers... I am glad that they did not help me and with persistence I proved them wrong... Today I have a company that is spread across 3 continents... Our 3D Face, Iris and Palm Vein recognition technologies are well received in States... and we are on a path to become a globally significant company...

How many other unrealized ideas, half-finished inventions, and great works are in the graveyard, given up on before they were fully pursued?
Are you chasing your dreams?... Everybody has a dream...

Dreams manifest when you are a child, before the burden of responsibility and worldly problems are cast upon your shoulders... We dream of the stars, of the great big world, of making a difference...
You can tell when someone is talking about their dreams because there is always an unsatisfied fire in their eyes. It’s something you can’t hide...

It’s different now. There is a sickness in the world and it is called mediocrity...
People will tell you to grow up. They will tell you that pursuing your dream would never feed your family or pay your bills. When you were growing up, they asked you what you wanted to be, then told you what not to be...

You were told that you must become what you are not, sacrifice who you are to embrace the identity that society wants to give you.

As you grew up, your dreams were lassoed back to Earth and when you said you wanted to explore the stars as astronauts or become Steve Jobs, they’d tell you: “Choose something realistic.”
When did you give up on your dreams? Don’t fall into the hype...

As per Theo Taylor, here is what you should do !
1. Realize what it is that you were put here to do...
What is your dream?
Remove money from the equation and ponder for a moment what it is that you would love to wake up to and go to every morning...
2. Figure out how you can turn that into a career...
Whatever it is that you love to do, there is a very good chance that you can make money doing it...
You have to go after your dream like your life depends on it, because it does...
Condemning yourself to security and a nine to five is the easy route. It’s the route that most people will take, either because they don’t realize how to pursue their dreams or they’re too afraid to go after it...
Do not become one of these people...
3. Take the first step
Don’t quit your job. Don’t move across the nation, but make moves that will take you closer to your dream...


Whether it’s reading a new book on how to start a new business, or take a class that will get you closer to the degree that you need...
You need to make every single day an effective day of action...

“It is never too late to be what you might have been.” – George Eliot

Write these steps down. Look at them every day. Remember them, memorize them, and live them. Don’t buy into the hype. Whatever your dream is, you can have it...
You have one chance. You have one shot here in this world, and I’m here to tell you, no matter what dream you have, you can do it. When you dream big, most people will react negatively because chances are they aren’t chasing their own dreams...
Remember this, if nothing else, if you try and fail, you will live your life knowing that you gave it everything and more. If you never try, it will be a mistake that will hang in the air for the rest of your
life...

I’m chasing my dreams. Now it’s your turn. Never Give Up !!!

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Mark Price, top Udemy instructor's advice about online course building and marketing

Mark Price, top Udemy instructor



This post is 90% advice and 10% gloating. Just being real
Coming into Udemy - especially on a subject that was being lead by a powerhouse instructor, I knew I couldn't just "throw" a course up.

Here is some advice:

1) Don't create Junk

 Find the best course that you will be competing with and analyze everything about it. Make sure that whatever you like best about that course, that you work to create something even better. If you have cut corners for any reason, you have already failed yourself.

2) Invest in your equipment. 

Do NOT settle for lesser equipment to save money. Save money first then get the right equipment. You cannot go wrong with: Blue Yeti Mic, Logitech 920c HD Webcam, Screenflow (Mac)/Camtasia (PC). You've lived in the world long enough to know that presentation is everything.

3) Just like Udemy does, do A/B testing and make immediate improvements. 

If your students are complaining about something, fix it asap. Treat your course like a business and less like an personal appendage that keeps you emotionally bound to it. Treat it like a product. This will allow you to make the necessary changes with the least amount of pain when those bad reviews come in (and they will).

Mark Price, top Udemy instructor

4) Learn everything you can about marketing.

Especially online marketing and growth hacking. I promise if you did this, you would never again ask the question, "How do I market my course". I knew nothing about marketing and now know a lot just by studying what others are doing.

Closing comments


I know I probably sound like a d-bag here - but seriously aim to be the best. Don't produce something that is worse than what is already out there. I would not personally release any course if I didn't think it could be better than what is already out there.
Every customer asks themselves, "Why should I buy from you instead of the competition?" You need to give them that reason.

Links to the online courses being instructed by Mark are given below.

https://www.udemy.com/ios9-swift/
https://www.udemy.com/apple-tv/
https://www.udemy.com/react-flux/

Note:
Mark posted these thoughts in Udemy Studio group on Facebook. I thought this stuff is too good to be lost in social media noise and saved it as a note for myself.
Naeem.

Monday, August 31, 2015

How to teach online courses and earn money from home

Udemy Course Earnings
My earnings for the past three months, based on one course

A few days ago a curious friend approached me with some questions about how I teach online and make [some] money? How do I prepare courses? Where do I get the materials? And many other things.
I wrote an e-mail in response and long before the end of the e-mail I knew I was writing a blog post in hind site. 
The e-mail turned blog post is given below for you to enjoy.


Dear Friend,
How do I sell my courses?
Udemy.com is an online course market. It allows you to create video courses on various topics and sell to millions of people.
There is a 30 days money back guarantee, but none of the 100 students who have paid for my course ever claimed it. If your stuff is good enough, most of the people will not try to be clever.
I am selling one course through Udemy at the present moment. I created it in November 2014.
How can you create your own course?
Udemy.com itself offers free courses about how you can create your own video courses and those give newbies a good head start.
A link to one of such courses is given below:
https://www.udemy.com/official-udemy-instructor-course/
It is not necessary to show our face on the screen. I haven't done so for my first course, won't do it in the second one either.
Recording the screen:
I just record my screen using Camtasia Studio and edit it using the same tool. You can get one month free trial of Camtasia to learn and put together your first course as well.


The microphone:
For my first course I used the microphone mounted on my USB headphone. For second one I've spent a 400 rupees to buy a USB mic since the old one is broken.
The mic mounted on laptop does not work well since its 'omni-directional' and captures all sorts of unwanted sounds.

The slides:
Fancy slides take a lot of time to create and they distract the students as well. Its highly recommended to create simple slides instead.
I'm using the same template for my second course.

Do take a look at the slides I've used in my first course.
https://www.udemy.com/tcpip-socket-programming-for-coders-using-csharp-net
Redeem the coupon code PAKISTAN to get 100% discount on my first course and check things out. Notice that the audio quality is just average but still the topic is evergreen and people are paying.
Money matters:
Udemy keeps 50% of the cash generated by the sales of your course. I believe they rightfully deserve it since they've built such a market and they do a lot of publicity as well.
In Jun 2015 I made a $98.88 which is almost 10000 rupees. In July I've made $77.5 and the figure for August is $57.58. I hope it will cross the $60 mark in couple days.
The money is transferred using Paypal. You'll be able to use your husband's account.

My Personal Strategy:
I have three course ideas in my head right now. I am working on one of those. The plan is to put at least two out on the market by first week of November 2015. Combined, three evergreen courses will yield a healthy $150/month on average for at least 3 years(I hope). Noticeable thing is, I won't have to move a finger to make the money, all effort will be done upfront. It will be possible to pump things up through marketing efforts, but that's an option not an obligation.

If you've made it so far, perhaps you've recognized that in lieu of an e-mail for you, I'm actually writing a blog post which I will publish on my blog(without your name). That's just the way a content creator's mind works.
Please feel free to ask more questions and discuss ideas.
Sincerely,
Naeem.




PS: Link to my course about TCP/IP socket programming: 
https://www.udemy.com/tcpip-socket-programming-for-coders-using-csharp-net/?couponCode=FOUR

Monday, July 6, 2015

Udemy Mobile App: Searching for an instructor's course is impossible

Udemy Mobile App Search By Instructor Name
Search results, first page
Little while ago I asked my respected friend, top Udemy instructor Len Smith to share a coupon code of his course (How To Make Talking Head Videos with Ease). He being a generous gentleman created a coupon specially for me and sent me the link.
My laptop was turned off so I thought maybe I could join the course through my iPhone.


Searching for instructor

I opened Udemy smart phone app and searched for "Len Smith".
Udemy Mobile App Search By Instructor Name
Search results, going deep
First few items of the list that showed up were Len Smith's courses, but the one I was looking for was not included. I kept swiping down, but I couldn't just find the course I needed. Instead, courses by other instructors kept showing up as I went deeper.

Before I proceed further, I must say this post won't be all about bad things, I will put some actionable items by the end of this post.


 

How would I perform the same action Udemy website?

When searching on Udemy website, I would click any Len Smith course and then click his photo, another small pop-up would show up. I would click it and reach Len's profile page. From that page I will be able to click any of his courses. The pop-up in the middle is kinda extra, but still the overall process is simple.

What happened when I clicked "Instructor" tab on Udemy mobile app?

Blank instructor page
Nothing happened, the page remained blank. I would expect to see instructor bio text and perhaps a list of courses. Maybe its just a bug in Udemy app.

Searching by course name

Good courses
Guess what, it didn't work either. A lot of courses including some interesting ones by other top instructors like Alun Hill were shown, but I was not looking for those.

Enough problems, I better put forward a few solutions I believe.

...
...

Search by exact instructor name

  • A user comes to Udemy.com
  • In the search text box, she provides some text and hits search
  • The Udemy system checks if this is an exact instructor name
  • If that's the case, it will return a full list of searched instructor's courses.
  • A link to similar courses or similar instructors can be tucked on screen as well.

Search by URL

A user comes to Udemy.com
  • In the search text box, she provides some text and hits search
  • The Udemy system checks if it starts with http://
  • If that's the case, it will run a search on course URLs
  • The system will strip any coupon codes or tracking information before searching the database
  • Exact course will be shown on screen
  • A link to similar courses or similar instructors can be tucked on screen as well.

Hire Me!

Remember the $65 Million headline, the cash Udemy raised recently? I am an expensive professional but with that kind of money they can hire me for a couple hundred years!
Udemy can dive into the professionals acting as instructors and ask them for (paid) help. These people got excellent knowledge of Udemy product, I'm sure these people can contribute a lot to make Udemy a better course market.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

oDesk Top Rated Freelancer Program


Just yesterday I got an e-mail with the image shown above. The e-mail also broke the happy news that I was also included in the club. Reason being above 90% project success ratio.
A screenshot of exact e-mail is shown below

What was the most important part of my success?

I have turned down a lot of project offers on oDesk, eLance, and in real life as well. Declining projects carefully and selecting projects intelligently plays a key role in a freelancer's success.
You MUST say NO, otherwise you will get stuck in hordes of sub-par projects and a death by suffocation is imminent.

What are important factors to bring you in Top Rated Freelancer Club?




First of all, I made a 4 digit dollar number in a year. The amount was not grand, I hardly paid the bills. The most important thing is that all of my clients provided feedback, and 60% of my clients came back to me with repeat work.

Respond to invitations immediately


I decline most of the invitations that come my way, but even declining is a response and it shows you keep an eye on your freelance account.
It is also helpful for the clients since they are able to forego and move on to other freelancers.

You will also see that when I got interviewed, I almost always got hired.
Why did this happen? I am very selective about applying to jobs, and when a client gets in touch with me they mostly pick me for the job.

Final words

  1. Don't post bids for any and every open project you come across. 
  2. Respond to job invitations quickly.
  3. Be decisive, and learn to say NO
  4. Make sure 90% of the projects you undertake end up in success

Monday, January 12, 2015

Promote Udemy Online Course on Social Media and get 1500 plus students, no e-mail list



How I promoted my Udemy Online course and got 1500 plus students in a few weeks

  1. I joined several topic related Linkedin groups, posted in discussion section and got some hits from there.
  2. Looked up Google AdWords for hot keywords, and added those strategically to my course landing page.
  3. Also added description for every lecture. Students might not pay attention to descriptions but search engines do see and scan those to rank your content higher among other topic related items. This is hard work so don't write description before recording lectures, I would listen to my lectures again and quickly jot down points. These points would become lecture description afterwards.
  4. I added two quizzes to my course. I then took quiz questions, put those in a blog post as "interview questions for TOPIC" and posted at my programming blog on Blogger. Of course there was a link to my course saying "get the answers here!".
  5. I searched Youtube for topic related videos, posted feedback on those videos along with link to my video.
  6. Searched Yahoo for topic related questions, and posted answers along with the link.
  7. Searched "Stack Overflow" for topic related questions and posted answers with link to my course.
  8. While the course was unpublished, I shared it on facebook and sent custom messages to my friends specifically requesting them to share the course with their friends.
  9. I also took one of my coding demo course vidoes and edited it specifically with promotional material. I posted the video on YouTube and Vimeo.
  10. Last but not least, Twitter can also get you some traffic. There are bots out there that automatically re-tweet if they every find a certain keyword in a tweet. A few examples are #udemy #discount #free #course. You can also directly include various coupon vendors in you tweets. A few examples are  +Coupons.com and +CouponCabin and +CouponIgniter .



Demo TCP/IP Sockets Read and Write in C#, Free Udemy Course from Naeem Akram on Vimeo.
Apart from these "tactical moves" you also need to do some due diligence about what you can teach well and whether someone wants to study it or not.
In case of my first course a lot of people told me that nobody wants to study this topic but I knew there's a market out there since I've seen a lot of people struggling with the "TCP/IP Socket Programming using C# .Net".

In the end it's going to take time, patience, and hard work. I wanted to say "blood, sweat, and tears" but that sounds romantic although these ingredients are also essential to create any masterpiece be it an online course or a sound track.

List of visitor sources along with visitor count

  • Google Traffic    274 (36.8 %)
  • Linkedin Traffic 105 (14.1%)
  • Facebook Traffic 51 (6.9%)
  • Others Traffic     283 (38%)
  • Youtube      3 (0.5%)
  • Yahoo      5 (0.7%)
  • bestblackhatform      11 (1.5%)
  • live      4 (0.5%)
  • Bing      4 (0.5%)
  • tekacademy      4 (0.5%)

Oh by the way, here's a link to my first online course which I plan to keep free until it reaches 3000 students.

https://www.udemy.com/tcpip-socket-programming-for-coders-using-csharp-net