How a creator built and launched a full course in two weeks
The full context behind the claim in the reel — who did it, the day-by-day timeline he published, which parts he handed to AI, and where the time actually went versus where it didn't.
Two primary sources sit behind this breakdown. Both are the authors' own writing — a personal blog post and an expert newsletter — not aggregators. Every figure below is linked to its original.
- Darius Foroux — writer and online course creator. "How I Created an Online Course With AI in 2 Weeks (Step by Step)", published February 12, 2025. A first-person account with a day-by-day timeline and the tools he used.
- Dr Philippa Hardman — learning-design scholar who runs an AI bootcamp for instructional designers. "AI-Powered Development & Implementation", published February 27, 2025. Time-reduction figures drawn from her work with creators.
One is a single creator describing one build. The other is a practitioner describing a pattern across many. Neither is a controlled study — read them as that.
Five things the sources actually say
- Foroux says he built and launched a full course — idea to live sales page — in two weeks, against the three-to-six months it normally takes him.
- He didn't speed up everything. The video editing he still did by hand, in Final Cut Pro, with no AI involved.
- The time collapsed in the same places for both sources: outlining, scripting, slide copy, and sales emails — the production scaffolding around the content.
- Hardman puts numbers on the same shift from the design side: editing time down 50–70%, scripts from days to hours, prototyping from weeks to minutes.
- Both treat AI as a drafting and structuring assistant under human oversight, not as a replacement for the teaching or the judgment.
Darius Foroux — the two-week build, day by day
Foroux's account is specific, which is what makes it worth reading. He built a course called "AI Basics" and walks through the whole thing — from defining the idea to a live landing page — in two weeks. His own framing of the contrast:
By using AI for outlining, writing, editing, and promotion, I reduced months of work to two weeks. But the biggest surprise? AI made me more creative. — Darius Foroux, February 2025
He normally puts a course at three to six months. The numbers that matter most:
The reason the claim holds up is that he breaks the two weeks down step by step rather than rounding to a slogan. As he lays it out:
The tools he names: ChatGPT (including its voice mode) for outlining, drafting, and copywriting; PowerPoint with the Office 365 Designer for slides; Kajabi for hosting, the landing page, and the email sequence; Canva for visuals. The notable exception is the video editing, which he did manually in Final Cut Pro — no AI in that step at all.
This is one creator describing one course. He doesn't publish sales numbers, completion rates, or how the course performed after launch — so the two-week figure is a production claim, not a results claim.
Dr Philippa Hardman — the same shift, from the design side
Where Foroux describes one build, Hardman describes a pattern. Her post lists where she sees AI compressing the work most, with figures drawn from her bootcamp and her work with creators:
She frames these as practitioner observations, not research findings — the post cites no external study, and she presents the figures as what she has seen working hands-on with creators. The recurring condition she attaches is expert oversight: in her telling, AI handles the structural and first-draft work, while the designer keeps judgment over what's correct and what belongs in front of a learner.
These percentages come from experience, not a controlled trial. They line up with Foroux's account, but two sources agreeing is a pattern, not proof.
Where the time disappears — and where it doesn't
A creator and a designer, describing the same shift from two angles.
Read side by side, the two sources point at the same thing. The time isn't vanishing from the parts that need a human — the thinking, the teaching, the judgment about what's worth saying. It's vanishing from the scaffolding around the content: the outlines, the first drafts, the slide copy, the sales emails. The parts that used to quietly eat weeks.
The tell is in what didn't get faster. Foroux still recorded his own lessons over two days and edited the video by hand. Hardman keeps the designer in the loop on every AI draft. In both accounts, the human stays on the parts that are hard to fake — presence on camera, the call on what's accurate, the decision about what the course is actually for.
So the two-week number isn't really a story about AI writing a course. It's a story about which half of the work compressed and which half didn't. The drafting collapsed. The teaching stayed where it was.
Prepared by the Kinescope team
Kinescope is a video hosting platform built for course creators, online schools, and businesses running educational content. The team focuses on three things:
- Host your course videos. Fast adaptive streaming worldwide, on a global CDN tuned for long-form educational content.
- Protect them from piracy. DRM, dynamic watermarking, and download prevention — so your content doesn't end up on pirate sites the day after launch.
- Integrate into any platform. Embed your videos into Teachable, Thinkific, Kajabi, Moodle, Open edX, or your own custom site — through a single embed code or API. No migration required.
If AI is compressing the part of your build that's drafting and scaffolding, the recording and the video are the part that's still yours — Kinescope is the layer underneath that handles hosting, delivery, and protection so you can focus on it.