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Owned by Alyssa

Best community for women who need to build muscle & lose fat. Systems that get your time + body back. HOLISTIC Fitness, strength & nutrition made fun!

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1 contribution to What Is Skool?
How To Catch Spammers Fast In Skool Membership Requests
When you are on any online platform, we all know by now there is bound to be spam. People talking about dropshipping, asking you to move to WhatsApp, saying “Hello dear,” and sending messages that clearly do not belong in a real community space. Some of the common questions Skool community owners and admins have about dealing with spam are: How do I stop spammers in my Skool community? How can I tell if a Skool membership request is fake? What is the best way to prevent spam DMs in Skool? How do I use Skool’s features to reduce spam? Well Skool just released a new feature update that helps community owners spot spam accounts directly inside Skool membership requests. You can now see when a profile is marked as high risk for spam before approving them, which makes protecting your Skool community much easier. Before this update, one of the best ways to identify fake accounts was by checking location details through chat. Many spammers say they are from one place, but their profile data shows something completely different. That extra step worked, but it took more time. Now the process is faster and clearer. See the photo to see how the locations do not match. This is a simple example of how spotting these red flags early can help you stop spam accounts before they ever get inside your community. You can also put smart systems in place alongside this new feature. Setting level requirements for things like sending direct messages or posting in your Skool community helps reduce spam and protects your members. Requiring people to reach a certain level before they can message others or post gives you more control, saves time, and keeps your community focused on real conversations instead of cleanup. Personally, I recommend setting the chat level to at least 4. This gives you a better chance of spotting accounts that try to comment back and forth quickly just to level up and unlock messaging. It also gives real members time to get to know each other inside the community before moving straight into private messages.
How To Catch Spammers Fast In Skool Membership Requests
9 likes • 24d
I received a recommendation to auto accept all new members in order to keep momentum high, which so far, has not given me problems. I think I don't have much traffic to have bots/spam which is a good/bad sign. I monitor everything closely. Is it bad practice to auto accept and then ban members who don't fit my female only criteria? I don't have this problem yet.
1 like • 22d
@Jenna Ostrye Ok thank you this is helpful. So far, so good. The auto accept (with appropriate screening questions in place) solved the problem of women who feel they don't have the time/energy to click and wait.
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Alyssa Furukawa
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11points to level up
@alohaalyssafit
Strength+Nutrition Coaching for WOMEN, Build muscle+ lose fat. Evidence based health & fitness. Get your Time + Body Back System. High ROI habits only

Active 1h ago
Joined Jan 2, 2026
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