There's two sides to building a business online: Tools and Training on how to use those tools. The problem with training is opinions. There are so many opinions, they contradict each-other, and it's hard to know what to do. If only there was a way to see what's working now in realtime... Introducing The Skool Games — a fun way to build your own business with other people — where the training comes from the winners fresh every month. Here's how it works: 1. Skool group owners that want to play can join The Skool Games group 2. You drive traffic to your group, get customers, and grow your MRR 3. Leaderboards show who's adding the most New MRR each month in realtime 4. The top 10 on the leaderboards win 1-day with @Alex Hormozi and me at his Vegas HQ where we share what we did to win and collaborate to find ways to improve (we'll record the whole thing) 5. Everybody who gets 3 paid members to join their group will unlock the 1-day recordings so you can hear directly from the winners and be a fly on the wall so you can up your game 6. Every month theres a new chance to win. If you don't win the first month, you'll learn from the winners in the 1-day recordings where they share exactly what they did to win We're basically crowdsourcing the best strategies and tactics to make money online doing what you love. We're not telling you what to do, we want you to be creative and try new things. We're all playing the same game. Different people are good at different things, let's see who can figure out each part of the equation and come together to form the ultimate way to play. If we evolve the training and the tool (Skool) in a constant monthly improvement loop, this industry will innovate at a pace we've never seen before. I can't wait! We know people are using Skool in different ways, and that's awesome. Keep using Skool however you want, The Skool Games are totally optional and the discussions will happen in a separate group.
Now you can explore all the communities on Skool! This has two benefits: 1. Members can find communities that interest them 2. Communities get found by members (free advertising) Open your switcher (cmd + k) and click "Discover communities" to explore. You can search for anything, browse categories, and filter by free/paid, and private/public. We rank communities by an engagement/quality score. The more engaged your community is, the higher you rank. This means the better you make your community, the more members you get. Watch the video below for more info. Enjoy 🎉
Hey gang, I figured this might be a great way to contribute. I run a $3M (and growing) per year Skool group and I am now helping more of my client use Skool as a way to enhance their communities. I had a client ask for some tips in moving their members off of FB groups into a Skool group so I recorded the answer but I figure this might be really useful here as well. In this video, I'll be sharing some valuable tips on how to entice your members to join and engage in your new Skool community. I'll discuss the importance of making Skool the primary option, using welcome emails with invite links, creating a welcome video, and pinning important posts. I'll also explain how to add existing members via email, overlap with Facebook groups, and gamify engagement with points and levels. Additionally, I'll touch on the significance of being an engaged leader, giving likes, and dishing out points to boost their levels and reward them for engaging. Lastly, I'll mention the benefits of setting up auto DMs, sending email notifications, and recognizing members. By implementing these strategies consistently, you'll see a thriving and active Skool group. So, let's dive in and boost member engagement together! 🚀 I've gotten lots of good out of this group so I figured I'd try to give back however I can. Enjoy and hope it's valuable.
Sometimes you want your members to take action. For example: Introduce yourself and share a photo of your workspace, or... Play this song on the guitar and share a video of you doing it. Simple actions make your community more interactive and fun. Remember the ice bucket challenge? Action posts — Describe the action you want your members to complete. When somebody comments, the action will be marked as complete. Pinning posts to modules — Now you can pin posts to course modules to make them more practical and interactive. For example: Your first module could be "Welcome! Start here" and give a quick overview of how things work with a call to action at the end to introduce themself and share a photo. You can pin any post to a module, it doesn't have to be an action post. You could pin posts relevant to the module, or a post with the title: "Module XYZ - Questions/discussion here" and use it as a comments section. Your turn: Complete this action by telling us what you think?
Now you can charge money for membership to your community! Skool replaces your landing page, order form, merchant account, and everything else — it does everything, end-to-end, seamlessly. You add a price, share a link, get members, and make money. Watch the video to see how it works. Questions? Check out this Skool payments FAQ. Enjoy 🎉
@Jeff Ziegler you can make different products in the classroom for sale, but then you have to use a payment system if you are not monetizing your entire community. And then you can open that 'course' for the ones who pay through a link. If that make sense