How to Publish a Course Catalog in a Facebook Group

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Publishing the course catalog in a Facebook Group means sharing a structured list of available courses, guides, and learning resources within a community group so that members can easily discover and access training materials. In the Content Factory, this is a Post stage task that distributes educational content to an engaged audience that has already opted into your community.

Facebook Groups are one of the highest-engagement distribution channels available because members have actively joined and are expecting relevant content. Publishing a course catalog there drives enrollments, generates discussion, and creates a feedback loop where members request additional content. This guide covers the process for formatting and posting the catalog so it gets maximum visibility and engagement within the group.

Where This Task Fits in the Content Factory

Publishing the course catalog belongs to the Post stage alongside cross-posting and Instagram posting. The courses themselves are products of the full Content Factory pipeline—produced, edited, written up, and published on WordPress. Posting the catalog in the group is the distribution step that connects the courses with the community.

Prerequisites

You need admin or moderator access to the Facebook Group, the current course catalog with titles, descriptions, and links, and any featured images or graphics for the post. The catalog should be up to date with the latest courses available on the BlitzMetrics courses page.

Step-by-Step Process

Step 1: Prepare the Catalog Post

Write a clear, engaging post that introduces the course catalog. Start with a hook explaining why these courses matter, then list each course with a brief description and a direct link. Use formatting (line breaks, emojis if appropriate for the group’s tone) to make the list scannable.

Step 2: Post in the Facebook Group

Navigate to the Facebook Group and click “Write something.” Paste the catalog post. Add a featured image or graphic to make the post stand out in the feed. Tag any instructors or course creators mentioned. If the group supports it, pin the post so it stays at the top of the group.

Step 3: Engage with Responses

Monitor the post for comments and questions. Respond to members who ask about specific courses with direct links. Note any frequently requested topics that are not yet covered—this feeds back into the Produce stage as content ideas for new courses.

Verification Checklist

The post is visible in the Facebook Group. All course links work and point to the correct pages. The catalog is current and includes all available courses. The post has a featured image or graphic. Instructors and course creators are tagged. The post is pinned if the group supports it.

Related Resources

The course catalog draws from courses listed on the BlitzMetrics courses page. For other distribution channels, see how to cross-post content and how to post on Instagram. For the full Content Factory workflow, see The 4 Stages of the Content Factory.

Take the Next Step

Facebook Groups are where engaged communities discover your best training content. To build courses and manage the full content pipeline, enroll in BlitzMetrics courses or explore the Content Engine Package.

Dennis Yu
Dennis Yu
Dennis Yu is the CEO of Local Service Spotlight, a platform that amplifies the reputations of contractors and local service businesses using the Content Factory process. He is a former search engine engineer who has spent a billion dollars on Google and Facebook ads for Nike, Quiznos, Ashley Furniture, Red Bull, State Farm, and other brands. Dennis has achieved 25% of his goal of creating a million digital marketing jobs by partnering with universities, professional organizations, and agencies. Through Local Service Spotlight, he teaches the Dollar a Day strategy and Content Factory training to help local service businesses enhance their existing local reputation and make the phone ring. Dennis coaches young adult agency owners serving plumbers, AC technicians, landscapers, roofers, electricians, and believes there should be a standard in measuring local marketing efforts, much like doctors and plumbers must be certified.