Course Lab
Interview with Anke Herrmann
Author, CourseBuilder & Flamenco Dressmaker
Interview Summary
Anke Herrmann was a software developer in London who moved to Granada, Spain, to pursue flamenco dressmaking. She built what may be the only English-language course on the topic and discovered a worldwide audience she never expected — from China and Japan to Canada and across Europe. Her self-study courses sell for 150 euros in a market where competitors charge five dollars, and she pre-sold before building. The episode is a case study in the hidden depth of ultra-niche markets and the viability of passion-driven course businesses.
From Software Developer to Flamenco Dressmaker
Anke was working as a software developer in London when she took Spanish lessons for a trip to Peru. Two trips to Spain later, she fell in love with Granada and flamenco culture. Rather than wonder what life in Spain would have been like twenty years later, she moved — with a business plan that was essentially "let's see what happens." She had sewn all her life, taught herself pattern-making, and traded her first flamenco dress: she made one for a guitar teacher's wife in exchange for the woman explaining what a flamenco dress needed. From there she learned by doing, taking in alterations from other dressmakers and absorbing technique through observation and practice over four to five years before she began teaching.
I thought, I want to know what it's like to live here. I don't want to look back 20 years later, wondering what life in Spain would have been like.
The Market Nobody Knew Existed
Anke started a blog about flamenco dressmaking assuming it was a tiny niche with just a few enthusiasts. She did not pay much attention to it. Then one day she noticed her mailing list had reached 2,000 subscribers without any real marketing effort. It turned out that flamenco has enormous global passion — she had shipped custom garments to China, Singapore, Japan, the Americas, and all across Europe. People passionate about flamenco cannot simply go to a local dressmaker, which creates real demand for detailed instructional content. The key lesson for course creators in seemingly narrow niches: the addressable market may be far larger than you assume, especially when you are the only resource available in a major language.
Little did I know, there's an enormous passion for flamenco, literally worldwide. I mean, when I made things I shipped literally everywhere in the world.
Pricing Above the Market and Pre-Selling
In the craft course space, where platforms like Craftsy sell courses for five dollars and memberships for a year, Anke prices hers at 150 euros — and maintains that price without discounting. She learned from her physical dressmaking business that making something cheaper does not make it an easier sale. When she tried Black Friday discounts, sales did not increase. When she priced her handmade skirts higher, they sold better because customers assumed the cheaper versions used inferior fabric. She also pre-sold her first course before building it, which was critical given the enormous production effort: she had to physically make each garment while recording everything. Selling first validated that people would pay before she invested hundreds of hours in production.
Making something cheaper does not make it an easier sale. I've really learned that the hard way.
Sharing Every Secret and Shortcut
When students asked for advice on teaching craft courses, Anke's answer was counterintuitive: be generous with every trick, shortcut, and technique you know. The instinct to hold back proprietary knowledge is strong, but what students value most is the feeling that the course is more helpful than a random YouTube video. Anke's courses walk through making a garment from scratch as if the student were in her studio — explaining why she does each step, what the pitfalls are, and what shortcuts save time. The approach works: students with no prior sewing experience have sent her photos of elaborate garments that look professionally made. She provides email support and occasional Zoom calls, but the detailed instruction reduces the need for individual help.
Any sort of secrets, any tips that you can give that you might be tempted not to want to share? I think, yeah, go share them.
Anke's Action Steps
Anke recommends these 3 steps to improve your course planning:
Validate your niche by looking for hidden demand signals
Do not assume a narrow topic means a small market. Check your email list growth, blog traffic, and social media engagement for signs of organic interest before dismissing a niche as too small. If you are the only resource in a language, the addressable market may be global.
Pre-sell before you build, especially for production-heavy courses
If creating your course requires significant physical production — making garments, building projects, recording demonstrations — sell it first to validate demand. This is not just about revenue; it protects you from investing hundreds of hours in something nobody will buy.
Price for value, not for the lowest competitor
If your course provides unique, detailed instruction that cannot be found anywhere else, price it accordingly. Discounting does not necessarily increase sales and may signal lower quality. Test your pricing, but do not start from a position of fear.
About Anke Herrmann
Author, CourseBuilder & Flamenco Dressmaker
Anke Herrmann is a seamstress, course builder, and author who moved from a software development career in London to Granada, Spain, to pursue flamenco dressmaking. She created what may be the only English-language course on flamenco dressmaking, attracting students from around the world through her site Flamenco Dressmaking. She also helps online entrepreneurs tackle their overwhelming tech through her brand Taming Tech Monsters.
Listen to the full episode
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