When I started looking into selling an online course, I did what most people do. I searched for the easiest way to get it done.
Kajabi. Teachable. Thinkific. Those were the learning management systems (LMS) that came up immediately, each with the same script: all-in-one tools, no tech skills needed, and promised a quick launch.
At first, all that sounded great.
But once I got past those beginner-level appeals, I started asking the โwhat comes nextโ type of questions, like:
- What happens when I want to add more courses, offers, or pricing tiers?
- Does this platform offer the tools Iโll need beyond course building? If not, what are those extra costs going to look like?
- What if my business looks completely different in a year? In five years? Can these platforms keep up with my growth ideas?
- And most importantlyโฆ What am I trading to get that โeasyโ setup?
With a bit more research, I came to a simple conclusion:
Hosted platforms are designed to get you started fast.
WordPress is designed to help you build something that lasts.
In this article, Iโll walk you through what led me thereโ covering where hosted platforms fell short for me and why WordPress ended up making more sense for the kind of course business I wanted to build.
1. I Wanted Full Ownership of My Course Business
There’s a difference between building on a hosted platform and building on WordPress, and it comes down to one word: ownership.
When you build on Kajabi or Teachable, you’re renting. You’re building your course library, your student relationships, and your revenue streams inside someone else’s infrastructure.
That’s fineโฆ… until it isn’t.
The difference starts to show up pretty quickly once your business is actually in motion and things beyond your control change on you, such as:
- Platform policies change. Features you rely on can suddenly move into higher pricing tiers or disappear altogether, forcing you to either pay more or rebuild parts of your business.
- Content can be removed for policy violations. Even unintentionally crossing a guideline can result in lessons, pages, or entire courses being taken down, leaving you with an incomplete curriculum full of broken page links.
- Accounts can be restricted or flagged without clear reasoning. That can mean limited access to your dashboard, paused payouts, or even temporary removal of your contentโoften with little explanation and no fast way to resolve it.
- Platforms donโt last forever. Acquisitions and shutdowns happen, and when they do, youโre left scrambling to migrate your content, your students, and your revenue under pressure.
None of that is hypothetical. It happens. And when it does, course creators who built everything inside a hosted platform have zero control over what comes next.
Building my course business on WordPress flips that dynamic completely. Iโm not working inside someone elseโs systemโIโm running my own.
- No platform policies shifting under me. Whatever WordPress plan I choose is based on what I need right now. As my business grows, I can upgrade and get access to more tools and features without rebuilding my entire setup or being forced into a new structure.
- No content restrictions or takedowns. If I want to say it, teach it, or publish it a certain way, I can. Itโs my course material, my teaching, and my siteโnothing gets removed, restricted, or questioned by a platform monitoring my every word.
- No risk of losing access to my own business. My WordPress dashboard is mine. Thereโs no platform that can flag my account, lock me out, or limit what I can access. I log in, I manage my site, and everything Iโve built is fully in my control.
- Iโm building on a foundation that isnโt going anywhere. WordPress powers more than half of the internet. Itโs established, widely supported, and built to lastโso Iโm not tying my business to something that could disappear overnight.
That level of control doesnโt just protect what Iโve builtโit gives me the flexibility to grow it without limits.
2. I Can Grow My Course Business Beyond Just Selling Courses
Speaking of growth, a course business rarely stays โjust coursesโ for long.
But most hosted platforms are built around a single model: build and sell courses. The infrastructure assumes thatโs as far as your business will go.
Real businesses donโt work like that. They evolve. And when they do, those platforms start to feel less like tools and more like limits.
I didnโt want to build my business around a platform that assumes Iโll stay in one lane. I needed something that could support what Iโm building nowโand still make sense as it grows into something bigger, more layered, and maybe completely different over time.
WordPress, paired with the WishList LMS plugin, doesnโt force me into someone elseโs idea of what a course business should look like. It lets me build mine.
WordPress + WishList LMS = Unlimited Growth Opportunities
- I can sell courses while also giving members access to a private community that keeps them engaged long after they finish the materialโturning one-time buyers into recurring revenue.
- I can package my offers however I wantโcombining course content with coaching, memberships, or bundled experiences that increase my average order value.
- I can expand into selling digital downloads, templates, guides, or one-on-one coaching sessions without duct-taping a bunch of different ecommerce tools together.
This isnโt about planning for some far-off future. Itโs about building on something that can support where my business naturally goes nextโwithout forcing me to rethink or restructure everything every time it grows.
3. I Keep My Course Platform Costs Low from the Start
The cost of building an online course business can look wildly different depending on the platform you choose.
One of the biggest surprises when building my course business on WordPress was how little it actually takes to get up and running. At a baseline, youโre covering:
- a domain
- hosting
- your LMS plugin
WordPress itself is free. From there, itโs just about setting up the pieces that support your site.
For me, that’s paying around $12/month through Hostinger for hosting and my domain, plus my WishList LMS Plus plan at $499/year. All in, that puts my total at around $650/year to run my course platform.
Here’s how that compares to the base cost of a few big-name hosted LMS course platforms we’ve mentioned so far:
| WishList LMS | Teachable | Kajabi | Thinkific | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Platform | $499/year | ~$1,600/year | ~$2,300/year | ~2,388/year |
| Hosting & Domain | ~$144/year | Included | Included | Included |
| Approx. Base Cost | ~$650/year | ~$1,668/year | ~$2,388/year | ~2,388/year |
That difference shows up immediatelyโbut it doesnโt stop at the starting price.
Hosted platforms often layer in additional costs as your business grows, whether thatโs transaction fees on each sale or higher pricing tied to how many courses or students you manage.
With WishList LMS on WordPress, the setup stays consistent.
There are no limits on how many courses I can create or how many students I can enroll. And with the Plus plan, Iโm not losing a percentage of each sale to transaction feesโwhat my course earns is what I keep.
4. I Built a Course Website that Looks Like My Brand
Spend enough time browsing courses built on osted LMS platforms, and you start to recognize the patternsโthe layouts, the navigation, the checkout pages. Theyโre polished, but theyโre also the same.
That sameness becomes a problem when youโre trying to build a brand that stands out.
Instead of working within a fixed system, WordPress gives you control over the entire structure of your siteโfrom the theme you choose to the way your courses, pages, and content are designed and displayed.
- I choose the foundation of my site. With thousands of WordPress themes available, Iโm not locked into a look or layout. I decide how my site is structured, how it looks, and how it feels from the start.
- WishList LMS LaunchPadโข handles the structure, while I control the design. Key course pagesโlike lesson pages, member dashboards, and core student areasโare built automatically, then fully customizable so layout, content, and styling align with the rest of my site.
In a space where thousands of creators are selling courses, how your site looks directly affects how your offer is perceived.
Once someone has gone through a few courses built on the same hosted platforms, the flow starts to feel familiar, and nothing about the individual creator really stands out.
When youโre running your own site, that pattern disappears. How your course looks, how it operates, and how everything is presented is entirely your ownโso your offer doesnโt fall into that same predictable experience.
5. I Can Connect My Course Platform to the Tools I Already Use
Lastlyโand probably the biggest limitation of working with a hosted LMS platformโdoesnโt show up until you actually try to do something around your course.
Thatโs when it becomes clear that you often have zero say in choosing the tools that support your business. The platform decides what it connects to, how it connects, and in many cases, whether it connects at all.
On WordPress, that limitation doesnโt exist. Your site becomes the hub for whatever tools your business needs:
- Email marketing. With platforms like ActiveCampaign or ConvertKit, you can run full campaigns, build automations, and segment your audience in ways that go far beyond basic course notifications.
- Customer relationship management (CRM). Tools like HubSpot or Salesforce connect directly, giving you full control over how you track leads, segment users, and manage customer relationships from first click to purchase.
- Referral marketing. With Easy Affiliate, you can launch a full affiliate program where students, partners, or your audience promote your course and earn commissions on every sale they generate, creating an additional revenue stream managed directly from your WordPress dashboard.
- Website analytics. By connecting tools like MonsterInsights, you gain full visibility into how your site is performing, including traffic sources, user behavior, engagement, conversions, and revenueโnot just course-level data.
- Forms and lead capture. With tools like WPForms, you can create opt-ins, surveys, applications, and contact forms that feed directly into your marketing and CRM systems, turning every interaction into actionable data.
- Scheduling and booking. Tools like Simply Schedule Appointments or Amelia allow you to offer one-on-one coaching, group sessions, or consultations directly through your site, creating a smoother user experience while opening up additional ways to monetize your time.
Everything connects the way it should. The tools that support my business work together inside the same system, giving me a setup that reflects how I operateโnot how a platform expects me to.
In Conclusion
At some point, every course creator has to decide where their course is actually going to live, where it grows, and what itโs tied to long-term.
Hosted platforms make that decision easy in the beginning. Everything is set up for you, and you can be up and running quickly. But that same setup is what you stay inside as your business evolves.
WordPress, paired with WishList LMS, is a different kind of decision. It gives you a system you own from day oneโone that can support the way you want to build, sell, and expand your course business without having to rethink your foundation later.
If youโre putting time into creating something valuable, it makes sense to build it somewhere that can support it long termโnot just somewhere that gets it live quickly.
๐ Skip the platform limitations & build your course business with WishList LMS.




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