Schools, instructors and workshop creators often need a public catalog before they need a full learning platform. The first problem is showing what is available and how someone can enroll.
A course catalog website can organize classes, modules, schedules, price references, audience level, location or online format and contact actions.
That gives the business a stable public structure for discovery, while enrollment, payment or onboarding can continue through the channel the team already uses.
Publish each course as a clear item page
A good course page should explain who it is for, what the person will learn, duration, schedule, format, prerequisites and how to ask for enrollment.
Group offers by level, topic or format
Categories such as beginner, advanced, online, in-person, workshop or professional training make the catalog easier to scan and support search visibility.
Use articles to answer enrollment doubts
Blog content can explain how to choose a class, what to prepare, which level to start with and how the schedule works. That helps the visitor feel ready to contact the school.
See how this structure looks in a real demo.
Compare segment demos and choose the path closest to your business before creating the catalog.