If you’d told me a few years ago that one of the most successful figures in the WordPress LMS space would be a former sled dog guide from Alaska… I’d believe you. Because that’s the beauty of the internet—and the power of owning your knowledge.
In this Kinsta Talk, I sat down with Chris Badgett, CEO of LifterLMS, to unpack how a background in anthropology and a deep love for people turned into a thriving tech business.
Chris shared the 3 + 1 traits he’s observed in the most successful online course creators:
- They’re already monetizing their niche.
- They genuinely care about helping others succeed.
- They’ve built some technical fluency over time.
- (Bonus) They take forward imperfect action—no perfection paralysis allowed.
We also talked about ethical sales, dogfooding your own platform, and how anthropology informs great marketing.
Want to launch your own course? Start with LifterLMS and host it with Kinsta.
Full Transcript
Roger Williams (00:00)
who are the people that you see that have the most success setting up an online course
Chris Badgett (00:06)
Well, first, I believe there’s a course inside all of us. Like part of my job is just to, you know, help unlock, remove bottlenecks and help people do it. Like I’m sure you, Roger, could teach on a lot of different topics, but the people that are the most successful pattern recognition is something that happens when you spend a lot of time in a niche. I’ve been in this niche for 20 years and
I’ve seen a lot of success. I’ve seen a lot of failure. I’ve seen some modest wins, some decent wins, and the people that really do well. I actually identified three factors that the most successful people always have in common.
Roger Williams (00:42)
Hey everybody, it’s Roger with Kinsta. I’m joined today by a new friend, Chris. Hey Chris, how are you doing?
Chris Badgett (00:48)
Good, thanks for having me, Roger.
Roger Williams (00:50)
Yeah, man, it’s great to have you here. We met at PressConf this year. I think you were coming back from a hike. I was going out or something anyway. And we hit it off really well, I thought. I didn’t hear really your background story and what got you into WordPress and then Lifter LMS. So can you kind of start us off there? How did you get into doing websites and the web in general?
Chris Badgett (01:14)
Well, I’m an unlikely person to end up here. And what I mean by that is I studied anthropology and philosophy in college. I moved into the back of my car and traveled around the country in Canada and did a bunch of rock climbing and mountaineering and long distance hiking. I’m a big outdoor guy. It’s no surprise to me that I met you on a hike. that’s what keeps me sane. But to condense the story,
Roger Williams (01:21)
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (01:39)
I moved to Alaska, spent a decade up there running sled dogs. And then after the birth of my first daughter, I decided to, you know, try to figure out this location independent work online thing. And while I was in Alaska, I started my first website. I learned how to use WordPress following YouTube videos.
And I created a blog about outdoor leadership. So I managed a sled dog tour business on a glacier that you can only get to by helicopter. We had a couple hundred dogs up there and I ended up, I started as a guide, but I ended up becoming a manager for the operation, which is, and I just discovered that I liked management. liked leadership and I was passionate about it and I wanted to write about it. that’s, that got me into WordPress.
And then as I left that world in Alaska, I started building sites for clients and I started teaching how to build sites on with WordPress and YouTube. And my clients just came from watching my videos like, Hey, tutorial is awesome. Can I just hire you to build a website? I also started side hustling and
I fell in love with information products and coaching and stuff. This is way back in like 2008, early days, 2010 period. So I made my first courses in the organic gardening and permaculture niche. My wife’s more expert in that area and we ended up partnering with the top permaculture book writing authors around the world. I would drive, fly.
Roger Williams (03:04)
Peace.
Chris Badgett (03:14)
or hire somebody to go film these in-person workshops. And I was like digitizing it, doing these business partnerships with these experts. And that launched my course creation journey. You know, one of those took me all the way to Costa Rica. I was in the jungle and just filming a permaculture design workshop with one of the top guys in the world. And it just kind of snowballed. And again, I started writing about it on my web design blog. And then people started hitting me up.
Like, how’d you build an online course with WordPress? And I just did it with a theme off of ThemeFar’s that had some basic course functionality. So long story short, I started getting a lot of clients in the online course, LMS space. There wasn’t a good tool to, you know, combine everything we needed to do without stringing together a bunch of different plugins and stuff. And that was the birth of Lifter LMS.
Roger Williams (04:10)
Okay, awesome. All right, so much to unpack here. We’re gonna dive deep into this. Anthropology, that is not a major that you hear often, except where I live in Four Corners, Colorado, we have Mesa Verde, and it is like a magnet for anthropology people. What took you into that as a course option?
Chris Badgett (04:33)
Um, so I’m a big picture thinker and I like looking at macro. So I’m a cultural anthropologist, you know, and I like, you know, I went to the Himalaya. I lived in Nepal when I was in college and got deep into, you know, some of the different cultures over there. I did. I went on a archaeology field trip to Mesa Verde, Four Corners area, Chaco Canyon, Canyon de Chey and all this stuff.
Roger Williams (04:52)
Sure.
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (05:03)
So cultures of the past, cultures of the present, where are we going in the future? What is technology’s place? Tools have always been a part of humanity. These are questions that I get excited about. And I’ve always been that kind of guy and a pro tip out there and kind of an interesting character thing. I kind of became a natural at marketing and sales.
Roger Williams (05:15)
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (05:27)
But I’m not like an aggressive guy that all the stuff, all my marketing and sales ability and even product design comes from my fascination with people and culture, social psychology. And that’s what allowed me to be like, hey, how does this climbing bum anthropologist get involved in tech and online business with no formal training? Well, it’s because I’ve been studying people. love people.
And that’s my skills kind of come from that background.
Roger Williams (05:56)
Yeah, no, I mean, I really dig it. All right, so now we’re segueing into let’s talk about sales and marketing a little bit. I feel a kinship with you here. I’ve had sales positions where it’s been a requirement to be very aggressive. They’ve taught you all of these techniques for tricking people. And there are times where persuasion is needed. You need to close the deal. But I’ve always taken the approach of, hey, you know,
what do you need? Let me offer you something that you can actually benefit from. I’d love to hear more your philosophy about how you approach sales and marketing, whether it’s for Lyft or LMS or life in general.
Chris Badgett (06:35)
Well, I mean, I see marketing and sales as two very different things. There is an overlap, but at a high level, you know, starting with marketing, I made a conscious decision when I started getting into the whole online business world to just be a human on the Internet and, you know, kind of inject my personal brand with just being me. I’m not manufacturing a character. You see me in a conference. I talk the same. I have the same shirt on, same hat.
I’m still fascinated about the same stuff, but, you know, putting the human into marketing, I think is really important. Like we always put like lots of faces on our website of real people, not stock photography. I’m constantly interviewing my customers on our podcast. I do, you know, just regular customer interviews. I’m like an in the trenches kind of guy. So like when it comes to like, Hey, what feature in the product do we build next? I know.
because I’ve been talking to these people for almost two decades and I’m one of them. you know, as a culture and as a subculture, one of the things that happens is we kind of quote, find the others. And that’s what happens at WordPress. It what happens in the course creator space or the coaching space. We’re in all these little subcultures, right? So if you want to get good at marketing, these are anthropology concepts. You got to learn the language, the lingo.
You have to know how tools are used here. What are the cultural artifacts in this community? Like you and I are podcasters, so I have fancy audio equipment. You got your headphones on. You know, we go to a conference, we wear our tech t-shirts and stuff. Like this is all part of the culture. And what I found when from a marketing angle, if I ask them, like, why’d you buy a Lyft or LMS? People will say, oh, well, I just felt like I could trust you guys.
I always want to hear, it’s the product, it’s amazing. But no, they always say, I just kind of want to do business with you folks. I like your style, which means your vibe attracts your tribe. So that’s marketing. And I can go into sales too, but do you want to jump in there?
Roger Williams (08:37)
⁓ nice.
Yeah,
no, think that’s great. I love the tribe and vibe. man, that’s that you got to be using that with all this vibe coding thing that’s going on. I think you’ve got a little meme you can jump in on there. I love it. Yeah, please expand on your approach to sales then.
Chris Badgett (08:55)
So I’m a big learner. Like learning is really important to me. So I’ve read all the sales books. I mean, not all of them, but I’ve probably read hundreds of sales and marketing books and took courses. I understand the classic objection handling and future pacing and all the, you know, kind of techniques. But at the end of the day, what I found
And I also advise my customers all the time on sales and marketing, because it’s one thing to build a site, it’s another to sell your courses. And so they’re constantly asking questions. We’re big on community and stuff. But the biggest sales advice I have is really that sales gets really easy when you have an almost moral obligation to help people. So if you come from a place of service and you believe in your product,
Roger Williams (09:27)
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (09:43)
or your service, the first sales you make to yourself. So if you really truly believe in that, you’ve qualified the lead and this is the right person for this. Selling is just a conversation and a lot of it is actually education. And it’s a lot of listening and helping somebody achieve what they want to achieve. And if they’re a good fit, it’s all about just removing friction, greasing the skids, know, making an offer, being sensitive to
sensitive things like budget or, you know, concern or, you know, perceived risk and just stepping through all that in a non-aggressive way and the sales just come from that and then they tell their friends and word of mouth takes off.
Roger Williams (10:27)
Absolutely. No, I love it. And I think you’re hitting on a key thing there was listen, right? It shocks me how often salespeople are not listening. The customer is going to tell you exactly how to close them, right? They’re going to give you everything you need. And if they’re not, right, if they’re not talking to you, then that’s not a good customer. That’s not a good prospect. Like you need to, you know, come back to them later or something or just move on. But
you know, listening and then responding to what they’re telling you and giving them what they’re looking for. I think you nailed it on the head. I absolutely dig it. Switching course again. Dog sledding. How did you get into dog sledding, man? That’s so awesome.
Chris Badgett (11:10)
well, I was just being my travel around climbing bum living in the back of my Suzu trooper. And it’s really random. Actually, I ran into somebody who I who was on the same international studies program. I was in Nepal on the streets of Boulder, Colorado, and I was just camping up in the hills behind Boulder and I came down the town and I ran into my old friend and she asked if.
Roger Williams (11:28)
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (11:36)
You know, I wanted to come up to the mountains in Leadville and maybe live there. I was like, sure. And that’s the way I rolled back then. And so I moved in with them and I was trying to get a job as a snowmobile guide. And I never guided before. I mean, I’ve done a lot of stuff, but I’ve never been a guide. And then randomly some dude rolled up and was like, hey, I just bought a sled dog team from Idaho. Idaho. I have no idea what I’m doing. Do you want to be?
Roger Williams (11:43)
you
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (12:04)
one of our guides. I was like, sure. And that’s how it started. Long story short, I learned the basics of sled dogs in the mountains of Colorado, gave tours. And then at the end of that, I was actually trying to get into graduate school for a ethnographic filmmaking degree, which is like a specialty in anthropology, cultural anthropology. And they shut down the program. So I had to pivot.
Roger Williams (12:23)
Whoa.
Okay.
Chris Badgett (12:31)
So I just opened up a dog mushing magazine and there was a job ad for guiding in Alaska applied. And then I was on a plane in a couple of months. And then I fell in love with it up there and I stayed for a decade. And I did the guiding and managing that tour business. But my boss was the Iditarod sled dog racer. So in the winter, I would help him train for the Iditarod. And then, you know, I did some races myself and
I really learned from the best in the world, how to run sled dogs and understand dogs and do that. And I met my wife up there. That’s how I met my wife. There’s a saying in Alaska for women, the odds are good because it’s a more male population. The saying is the odds are good, but the goods are odd. And luckily,
Roger Williams (13:10)
Yeah.
Yep.
Chris Badgett (13:24)
You know, we hit it off and went on our own adventure and, you know, to this day, so.
Roger Williams (13:30)
Yeah, man. That’s beautiful. That’s amazing. And I think, you know, maybe this is also tying in with maybe an ethos of like just showing up, right? And like being present and being ready for whatever life kind of throws at you. And you just don’t know where exactly it’s going to take you. You know, as we kind of get wrapping up here, because I like to keep these pretty short and sweet. Let’s talk about today, present day stuff, Lifter LMS. You know, it seems like
This is a great opportunity for people to be able to find alternate forms of income, find ways to really dive into something they know really, really well. In your experience, who are the people that you see that have the most success setting up an online course and really turning it into something that sustains itself?
Chris Badgett (14:18)
We’re asking a guy who studies people. So I have this answer fully ready for you. Well, first, I believe there’s a course inside all of us. Like part of my job is just to, you know, help unlock, remove bottlenecks and help people do it. Like I’m sure you, Roger, could teach on a lot of different topics, but the people that are the most successful pattern recognition is something that happens when you spend a lot of time in a niche. I’ve been in this niche for 20 years and
Roger Williams (14:23)
Yeah.
Chris Badgett (14:47)
I’ve seen a lot of success. I’ve seen a lot of failure. I’ve seen some modest wins, some decent wins, and the people that really do well. I actually identified three factors that the most successful people always have in common. So the first one is that you’re already in some way making money with your expertise and like a full-time income level. So for example, I have a customer named Angela Brown.
She currently has a huge business teaching house cleaners and maids all around the world how to, you know, start, grow and scale their companies. She’s been in the house cleaning niche for a lot of her adult life. She was a house cleaner. She became like a leader in the space, was paid to speak at house cleaning entrepreneur conferences. So she’s like, check the box. Like she’s already, she really knows the niche. makes it. The second thing.
is what I call, it’s more of an internal motivation. So there’s two sides. One side is I want to make money online. I want location freedom and personal freedom in my life. That’s fine. The other side is the people that get really focused on serving and helping other people. It’s like that old Jim Rohn quote.
If you help enough people get what they want, you’ll get what you want. So if you come from a place of service and really care about your, you know, your community and getting them results as quickly and easily and painlessly as possible, those people with that passion and that care do the best. And it’s okay to also want to make money and stuff. But if, if that other piece isn’t there, then it’s the odds are way less. And then the final third piece is
The people that are most successful have at least a couple of years in technology. Like they’ve been playing around with, you know, CRM’s marketing automation, WordPress. You know, they’re not brand new to tech. So the tech doesn’t become this huge roadblock. And then the fourth bonus thing that I’ve seen over and over and over again is forward and perfect action. Cause we get a lot of imposter syndrome, failure to launch.
you know, the course creator cave, I call it, where people disappear for like two years working on this project and never launch. The people that make it like it’s not perfect. They’re not happy with the sales page. They’re like, my God, my video is terrible, but they just do it. And then they do it again. And over time, they just keep refining. So those are the factors that give you the highest odds of success.
Roger Williams (17:25)
Okay, excellent. That’s fantastic in a nice nutshell there. When people start using Lifter LMS, do you have tutorials or courses to help them figure things out along these lines, I would imagine?
Chris Badgett (17:41)
Yeah, mean, fu bu for us, by us. Like we, use our own product, you know, like our internal training for our team is we have like ways to turn Lifter into an intranet for like a company to do internal training. So all that’s powered by Lifter. We have a public facing Academy. Well, my biggest pro tip there, and I think every software company should do this no matter what they do is we have.
the Lifter LMS Quickstart course, which is about 15 lessons. It shows the 5 % essential parts of how to get set up and use the product that everybody needs to know. That one course, you know, has had somewhere around 50,000 people sign up and it is doubles as both a marketing asset for people who like, hey, let me see if this is right tool for me.
They take a course as a student. They also learn how to use the tool to answer the fundamental sales question, which is, will it work for me? And they get it, and then they buy it, or they get the free plugin. But it also doubles as an onboarding customer success tool. So someone just bought, take the course, and our support volume is much, much lower, because we have a resource that’ll show you how to do it on your own time with no wait time.
So yeah, we use Lifter ourselves constantly.
Roger Williams (19:01)
Awesome, awesome, that’s great. Dog fooding is the only way to go. Chris, I really appreciate this conversation. I’m gonna have you back on board at some point, talk more about learning management and all this fun stuff. In the meantime though, if people wanna get in touch with you, if they wanna use Lifter LMS, if they wanna just talk with you about dog sledding or ultra-marathoning, what’s the best ways for them to contact you?
Chris Badgett (19:24)
I will just go head on over to lifterlms.com if you’re curious about learning management systems and WordPress. And then I’ve been podcasting for over 10 years. So I have over 500 episodes on LMS cast. So if you want to kind of nerd out on this course creation and WordPress LMS website building thing, we have a ton of stuff over there. And if you want to connect one-on-one, I’m the most active on Twitter, which is just at Chris Badgett.
Roger Williams (19:53)
Excellent, awesome. Chris, great talking with you. This was a lot of fun. I look forward to speaking with you again soon.
Chris Badgett (19:59)
Thanks, Roger.