Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Matthias

How To AI

15 members • Free

Take your first confident step with AI in 14 days. Personal, but not alone. Practical, no generic tutorials. Regardless of where you are right now.

Memberships

Personal Growth Skool

127 members • Free

AI Automation First Client

1.7k members • Free

Roast & Promote 🔥📢

219 members • Free

Dan Mo's AI Skool

317 members • Free

True Vine Business Alliance

109 members • Free

AI Vibe Coding DACH

324 members • Free

The Gem Vault

162 members • Free

16 contributions to Roast & Promote 🔥📢
Roast request 🔥 A Page in my Class
I’d love feedback on this specific lesson inside my classroom: https://www.skool.com/the-prosperity-ascent-lab-7188/classroom/5b8494ef?md=09f1b66cbc1b4322bd9697d3da6debcd This is not the first lesson people see. It comes a little further down in the Coaching Centered Business Starter Kit course. The purpose of this lesson is to guide people toward two next steps: 1. Check out the FAQs 2. Book a short call if they want to explore the business path more seriously 3. What I’d love roasted: Does that journey feel clear, natural, and helpful? Or does it create confusion because people are being sent from a lesson to FAQs and then to a call? I’m trying to make sure the path feels supportive, not pushy or scattered. Please roast the clarity of the journey and whether the next step feels obvious.
Roast request 🔥 A Page in my Class
0 likes • 3h
Thanks for sharing that specific example! 😊 Sticking specifically to your question and the two steps you have in mind, I can't see it directly in the page. Under "Step 2: Choose your next step." you say "Pick one:" and list 7 different points. Next comes Step 3, 4 and so on, but for me it feels they aren't a chronological order. If I "pick one" for example the FAQ, Step 3.1 is the relevant link, but not the others and not Step 4. While the visual structure will help to guide the reader for sure, the logical order needs some changes too in my opinion.
Roast my classifieds educational post about AI creativity!
https://www.skool.com/classifieds/how-i-use-ai-for-creativity-post-efficiency-and-making-a-fun-group By the way, Panda is the CRM tool I talk about it. It's helping me tremendously on making those daily posts. Both on drafting, scheduling and also on keepint the scores for the Roaster of the Week competition. If you subscribe using my link, you can get free premium access here for no additional cost. It's so much worth it if you own a community!
Roast my classifieds educational post about AI creativity!
1 like • 4h
The post and community look great! I like the BBQ posts, I do like how you mention other people, highlight what they do good. A really solid post! One tiny thing I recognized reading the post: Small typos. It's nothing people wouldn't forgive or so. I thought it could be easy with for example a Claude skill to let it prove read. Not to change any words to keep your tone and style, but just remove the 1-2 typos.
0 likes • 3h
@Paulo Costa, The Roaster I made a similar experience too with images 15 months ago. It was with ChatGPT as well. Now, when I do my cover images for YT, I use e.g. NightCafe for free, giving it a start image as reference and I'd say that's very helpful. I guess ChatGPT reached a similar level, even I'm using now only the free version of it. For Claude I specifically like the "skill" function. I use it to e.g. create my prompts for the images or proof read my song lyrics. I haven't checked it for your use case, but it could be worth trying it. If I can help you, let me know.
Please roast my about page!
Feel like you’re “not artistic enough” to create? Or maybe life is busy, your confidence is low, and every blank page feels intimidating. You do NOT need hours of free time, expensive supplies, or natural talent to start creating art. This community helps beginner and creatively blocked artists loosen up through simple mark-making exercises, guided prompts, and lessons that fit into real life. Using kitchen tools, everyday objects, or basic supplies, we create simple marks first — slowly develop them into meaningful artwork over several sessions. 𝗪𝗵𝗮𝘁’𝘀 𝗜𝗻𝘀𝗶𝗱𝗲 ✅ Beginner-friendly courses ✅ Mark-making warmups ✅ Theme & prompt libraries ✅ Short step-by-step videos ✅ Downloadable pdf worksheets ✅ Creative challenges ✅ Feedback & encouragement ✅ Advanced paid courses ✅Art Gallery of my work I’ve spent 14 years teaching art to students, running workshops and Paint & Sip events, exhibiting my own work, and continuing to study art myself so I can teach in a way that actually supports beginners. My link if anyone interested: https://www.skool.com/wish-to-be-an-artist-4546/about
0 likes • 3h
I do like the "What's inside" section with the icons. The rest of the text feels like it could need more of that as well. It's a lot of text, little formatting/space. Some headlines and more structure helps. The text reads very soft, maybe on purpose then it's good, yet especially the start is three lines on the negative aspect. In my opinion the first question is good enough to be there on it's own and it could be followed by how a visitor could overcome the hurdles they may already know. Practically instead of "You do NOT need hours...", why not say "With only 1h a day you can..." or a similar phrase, that shows the key details right away. Not over promising, but from your experience.
I Can't Find my Original Post - About Page Updated.
I got some flack from @Lion Fludd about poor eye contact in my first video on my About Page. He didn't "Feel it". So this may seem like a call out, but it's not. I just want his honest opinion now. I fixed the video and want to know, do you feel it now? And everyone else can join in too! AI Storytellers
2 likes • 1d
Great video! I really like it! The only one little thing I recognized was the audio seemed to be at different levels. Maybe it was because of the music in the background? However, I like watching it, having music in the background, clips and the calls. Very well done!
2 likes • 23h
@Nick Nebelsky you're welcome!
Roast my Niche Idea: Affiliate Marketing and how to make passive income from it.
Affiliate marketing is a way to earn money by promoting other people’s products or services and earning a commission when someone buys through your link. Here’s how it works in simple terms: You join an affiliate program (like Amazon Associates, ClickBank, Digistore24, or software companies), and they give you a unique tracking link. You then promote that link through content—such as TikTok videos, YouTube videos, Instagram posts, blogs, or email. When someone clicks your link and makes a purchase, you earn a commission. The best part is you don’t need to create a product, handle customers, or deal with delivery. Your job is simply to connect the right people with the right solution. Affiliate marketing can become “passive income” because content you create once can keep generating traffic over time. For example, a YouTube video or blog post you made months ago can still bring in clicks and sales while you sleep. To get started, you typically: 1. Choose a niche (something like fitness, AI tools, business, or software). 2. Pick affiliate products that match your niche. 3. Build a traffic source (short-form content, YouTube, or a blog). 4. Create helpful content around problems and solutions. 5. Place your affiliate link where people can easily find it. At the beginning, results are usually slow because you’re building content and trust. But with consistency, it can grow into a strong income stream over time. The key mindset is this: affiliate marketing is not about pushing products—it’s about recommending helpful solutions to the right audience. If you’re willing to start or want to learn more about getting into affiliate marketing, feel free to comment below and I’ll point you in the right direction.
3 likes • 1d
Great idea! I heard it several times before, seen the good and bad about it. The first question that comes to my mind is, how would you make sure it's not about the affiliate, but honesty first? For me I like seeing people sharing value in an honest way, but often when some kind of affiliate comes along the way it gets dirty. I was just scammed again these days. As long as it's not only me, that might be a serious point to deal with. Personally I like recommending stuff for free. I really had to get used to Skool and sending out referral links my own.
1-10 of 16
Matthias Schweiker
3
2points to level up
@matthias-schweiker-3619
I meet people where they are. Whether you've never touched AI or you're stuck mid-project - I'll help you move. See it yourself: How To AI

Active 5m ago
Joined May 17, 2026
Aargau, Switzerland