Expert Interview

    Finding Your Big Idea with Kelly Edmonds

    How to discover and validate the course topic that will resonate with your audience.

    Guest: Kelly EdmondsUpdated February 2026

    Interview with Dr. Kelly Edmonds

    Professional Instructional Designer

    Interview Summary

    Dr. Kelly Edmonds, a professional instructional designer with over 15 years experience at universities and corporate organizations, shares her expertise on finding your course's "big idea" and applying instructional design principles to create powerful learning experiences.

    Find Your Big Idea

    Kelly's central teaching: every great course needs a "big idea"—a compelling frame that's bigger than practicalities or technical details.

    For example, if you're creating a course on photography, don't just teach camera settings. Frame your course as being about "capturing light." Use that bigger framing to motivate and inspire your students. TED talks are excellent models for this—study how they concisely present compelling ideas.

    What's your big idea? If you're creating a course on photography, wrap your teaching into an idea that's bigger than practicalities. Frame it as being about 'capturing light.'

    Being Authentic Means Being Present

    For Kelly, authenticity isn't about sharing personal details—it's about being fully present in your course and truly caring for your clients and community. Take the journey with your students rather than lecturing from a distance.

    This presence transforms the learning experience. Students can tell when an instructor genuinely cares about their success versus when they're just delivering content.

    Being authentic means being fully present in your course and truly caring for your clients and community. Take the journey with your students.

    Chunk Everything Down

    From her instructional design background, Kelly emphasizes one critical principle: chunk down your content into bite-sized pieces. This is perhaps the most important takeaway from professional instructional design.

    Large blocks of information overwhelm learners. Small, digestible chunks allow for processing, practice, and retention.

    Chunk down your content into bite-sized pieces. This is a critical takeaway from instructional design.

    The Do, Know, Feel Approach

    Kelly introduces a powerful framework: Do, Know, Feel. Identify 2 or 3 actions or outcomes you want for students, and create content that supports these. Fight the urge to add extra information.

    This framework forces you to focus on what actually matters. Every piece of content should connect directly to what you want students to do, know, or feel.

    Use the Do, Know, Feel approach. Identify 2 or 3 actions you want for students, and create content that supports these. Fight the urge to add extra information.

    Courses Should Be Experiences

    Kelly reframes what a course actually is: your goal is to guide students by providing coaching, support, and activities. Don't just talk at your students—invite them to try things.

    The difference between information and education is experiential. Anyone can read a book, but a course should be an active, engaging experience that transforms through participation.

    Courses should be an experience. Your goal is to guide students by providing coaching, support, and activities. Don't just talk at your students—invite them to try things.

    Embrace the Reality of Adult Learning

    Kelly offers a realistic perspective: completion and participation will always be a struggle, especially in informal learning. But that's okay.

    Her advice: keep your course open and allow learners to come back. Adults are self-driven and know their own needs. They'll engage when they're ready, and return when they need a refresher.

    Dr.'s Action Steps

    Dr. recommends these 3 steps to improve your course planning:

    1

    Define your big idea

    What's the compelling frame for your course that's bigger than the technical details? Watch TED talks for inspiration on presenting ideas concisely and compellingly.

    2

    Apply Do, Know, Feel

    List 2-3 specific things you want students to do, know, and feel after your course. Audit every piece of content against this list.

    3

    Convert lectures to activities

    Review your course for sections where you're 'talking at' students. Transform at least one into an active exercise or try-it-yourself experience.

    About Dr. Kelly Edmonds

    Professional Instructional Designer

    Dr. Kelly Edmonds is a professional instructional designer with over 15 years experience working with universities and corporate organizations. She recently expanded her business to provide coaching to independent experts and entrepreneurs who teach online.

    PhD in Education
    15+ Years Instructional Design
    University & Corporate Experience
    Visit Website

    Resources & Links

    Topics:
    course ideas
    validation
    planning

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