Start Coaching Website

How to Get Started on Your Coaching Website

It can be tough to get started on your coaching website.

There’s a lot is going on, from tech to content, to visuals and branding — you’ll go cross-eyed, freeze in place, or collapse from mental exhaustion. Also, the amount of information and the number of tools you can use is staggering.

Tips for getting started on your coaching website.

I knew this “failure to launch” frustration when I started designing my website around the turn of the century, 2000.

I’d overthink, overdesign, overdo the tech, and over-obsess about wording. At points, I thought my brain was going to explode.

  • It was hard to stay focused as ideas would come in a flurry.
  • It was easy to keep clicking away at technology with no real progress.
  • It was crazy how much time you could spend just looking for the right image.

But, I’ll tell you, you’ve got to keep steady progress and launch it if you’re ever going to succeed as a coach. Three tips below will help.

Hindsight is 20-20, yes. And over 20 years later, if I had to advise my younger self, I’d smack in the ass and give the advice below so he could sooner realize the dream — earning a good income, doing work you enjoy, and having the time-and-location flexibility to live it up.

I’d show him these pictures of life living on a beach, playing volleyball with good friends, warm weather, cool creative spaces, and plenty of adventure around (this is New Zealand, where many adventure films were shot).

Get your website done. Get clients in the door. Realize biz goals and life dreams.
For me, travel, the beach, games, and friends are a big part of that.

Here are some getting-started tips for your website, and ultimate business success.

To motivate you to get it done fast, remember this …

There are lots of clients are out there with life struggles and they seriously need your help. They’d hire you if only they knew about you, had a talk with you, and you invited them to work with you. So get your site launched and show up big for them.

Kenn Quote

… and this …

Your biz dreams are at stake. You owe it to yourself to walk the talk and pursue your important goals. Messing around with your website for months to years (I’ve seen it) is no way to go. So, find your simple solution to get it up and get it out there.

Kenn Motivation

And so, in this article, take heed of these three keys to getting started right — these have helped students and book-buyers launch in as fast as two weeks — and not as those crappy overnight sites, but as real powerhouse marketing machines.

Let’s dive in and start your website project on the right foot.

(Just remembered! I also put together a 1-page checklist with tick boxes that you can get when you hop on my email list. It’s over here: Join my list and get the Website Prep Checklist)

coffee drawing

Key #1 – Begin with the end in mind and create a sitemap.

I believe Stephen Covey gets credit for the quote, “Begin with the end in mind,” as it’s one of his seven habits of highly effective people.

But I bet you already know this from coaching your clients. In fact, how often have you helped clients get clear about their goals (dreams, vision, outcomes, call it what you want), and suddenly, they are unstuck and back in action?

Just the same, it’s a good move to get clear about what exactly your “goal website” will look like — all of it, including pages, tech, visuals, and functionality.

A rough idea of your website is better than no idea.

It’ll be hard to know when you’re done if you don’t figure this out.

It’ll also be challenging to make decisions along the way — on things like fonts, colors, software, and wording—the things you “could do” are endless.

You’ll get stuck trying to make it perfect. There will always be new things to add or tweak. And with all the attention grabbers out there (ads, notifications, emails, etc.), you can get sucked into another direction easily.

For coaches who want to build high credibility, attract good clients, and keep their practices full into the future, I use what I call “the expert website model,” which I wrote about in The Coaching Website Guide.

The expert website is structured to build your professional image, show the value of coaching, and lead the right people to contact you for support. It’s for generating leads both now and into the future.

I’ll leave the hi-def detail for the book and give you top items to get clear about on your website for a fantastic start:

  • details about the ideal person you want as a client
  • the way you want people to feel on your website
  • the pages you want to have
  • visuals and imagery needed
  • colors, fonts, and textures
  • the functional components like a blog, email list, and contact form
  • the platform to build your site upon, like WordPress, Wix, Weebly, or other
  • the strategy of the content and calls-to-action

Draw a diagram, make a list, sketch a map, and make it very clear with scribbled notes, arrows, and chicken-scratch.

Pen, paper, and a double-espresso work fabulously for this.

KEY #2 – Set a “Deadly” Deadline

Think about any college paper you wrote, a race you ran, or an art project you’ve completed.

They all had a due date, an event day, or an exhibition time. They all had deadlines.

Even though they induce stress (healthy stress), deadlines help you get things done — and your website project needs one too!

But there’s a little more to choosing your go-live date than marking an X in your calendar.

A self-chosen go-live date often fails because of a lack of accountability. It’s too easy to pick another date if things aren’t getting done.

It would help immensely to promise someone else that you’ll get it done. Someone who you would feel terrible if you let them down — like not showing up to your daughter’s graduation day.

Without this pressure, then procrastination, perfectionism, and shiny-object syndrome can easily take hold as you extend your due date with little consequence.

I should add that your coaching business dreams will fade away too. But that reason isn’t often good enough.

Here’s what I’ve done with course students, and it works like a charm …

So in order to reach a 99.9% chance of launching, make your deadline a “deadly” one. Build in extra accountability.

Students each declared their launch dates to each other and then to their Facebook friends (*evil grin*).

I also threw in some juicy rewards to those who get the work done -— and voila! — an unstoppable surge of energy and excitement set them off and running.

It works so well because of both:

  1. the social image hit if they didn’t launch, and
  2. missing out on special bonuses from Kenn

It was tough love for their own good. Your dreams are important. And when your website is up, launched, and things start happening, you’ll be thanking me forever.

Clients need your help badly. Let’s not let a little thing like a website stand in the way 😉

Set that deadline and slay it!

KEY #3 – Craft A Compelling Core Message

One foundational piece of your website and marketing, and business is your core message. It’s simply a few lines of text saying what you do in a compelling way.

This is a must-do, as all your copy, visuals, calls-to-action, blogs, and marketing messages depend on it.

Here’s an example from a past client:

“I help successful singles over forty and tired of empty, unfulfilling flings to find exciting, meaningful love that lasts.”

With a write-up like that, can you see how the rest of the website content can start taking shape?

Can you start seeing what topics for blogs might be on that website?

Can you see what colors and visuals might be there?

Can you start to “feel” something there?

That’s the power of a solid core message.

In addition to your core message, I go page by page and help you craft engaging copy in The Coaching Website Guide. So many find it handy.

Without some succinct centralized marketing essence, it’ll be hard to create and organize content.

Maybe you’ve run into these three common problems that stem from trying to write about coaching when there’s no focused message: 

  • you get too many ideas because you write about anything
  • you may get writer’s block because you don’t know where to start
  • you rethink and rewrite your content over and over to make it just right

A few good things to get into your core message include:

  • who you work with – some words identifying them
  • what struggles they face and desires they have (most important)
  • who you are like a “coach” or that you offer “relationship coaching”

Oh, by the way, I’ve got a pretty beef tutorial on this that I usually share with list subscribers only, but shhh, don’t tell them — it’s over here: How to Craft a Compelling Core Message.

Please hit LIKE and tell me what ideas are coming to mind for you.

Where are you at in your site creation process? Perhaps you have a domain name or are in the middle of researching different software platforms. Just post below.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

2 Comments

  1. This is a really useful article (and that’s coming from a web designer who moved into coaching!)

    A comment on beginning with the end in mind – I took this approach but I actually overwhelmed myself and ended up culling much of it back post-launch. Stephen Covey is right, of course, because you’ve got to have vision. But knowing that you need to *work toward the vision* rather than a) trying to do it all at once or b) never getting started is key. A big learning experience for me!

  2. Hi Kenn,

    Your link to a video called “Deeper Into Creating Your Core Message” returns an error message. Do you have a link to that video somewhere else on your site? I would really like to watch the video, as I am now at the point of preparing to create my core message. Please email me the link to that video, if you still have it live online somewhere. Thank you very much,

    Elyse