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Owned by Ross

English with Ross

77 members • Free

Learn real-life English with confidence. Practice speaking, writing, reading & listening in a positive community that gives back.

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Men Forge Forward

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Activity Book Creator Lab

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SkoolMagazine

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Facebook Growth Lab

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OBB1 Community Navigator /Free

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Skool Nexus

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Pinterest Marketing Community

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16 contributions to OBB1 Community Navigator /Free
🍎 How long does it take you to create your best content?
Not your fastest post. Your best one. The one that: - connects - gets replies - actually helps someone Does it take hours? Or does it come out quickly? I’ve noticed it’s not always about time. Sometimes the clearer the idea… the faster it comes out. And sometimes overthinking just slows everything down. So what’s your experience? How long does it usually take you to create your best content? Tell us 👇
🍎 How long does it take you to create your best content?
1 like • 14d
I'm honestly still trying to find my best content. I have ideas but I'm not getting much in the way of interaction
1 like • 12d
@Roberto Srpak yeah when I get round to it I will give it a try thanks
🍎 What’s your content rhythm that’s actually working?
Not the “perfect plan.” Not what others say you should do. What’s actually working for you right now? Maybe it’s: - daily short posts - 3x per week deeper content - one platform only - batching once a week I’ve noticed most people don’t struggle with ideas. They struggle with rhythm. Too much → burnout Too little → no momentum Somewhere in the middle… things start to click. What rhythm are you running right now that feels sustainable? Tell us 👇
🍎 What’s your content rhythm that’s actually working?
1 like • Apr 1
I think the problem is I had a rhythm and I don't know if it is was working or not but for example this week I'm on holiday so I haven't posted anything
⚓ Navigator Check-In
This line from today’s visual made me pause: “Always walk through life as if you have something new to learn and you will.” It’s easy to feel like we already know enough. Same patterns. Same ways of thinking. Same approaches. But growth usually comes from staying open. Listening more. Trying something differently. Being willing to learn again. Example: Today I'm approaching one familiar task with a beginner mindset instead of running it on autopilot. Tell us 👇 Today I'm working on: _______
⚓ Navigator Check-In
1 like • Mar 25
Today I'm working on: a few new ideas of how I deliver my content through different methods to see what sticks and works
1 like • Mar 25
@Roberto Srpak yeah go on. Why not
🤖 What Would I Be Known For in 5 Years?
Zoom out for a moment. If everything compounds… If you stay consistent… If you keep building… What do you want people to associate your name with in 5 years? Not revenue. Not followers. Reputation. Try this prompt: 👉 “Based on what you know about me, what will I likely be known for in 5 years if I stay on this path?” No pressure. Just perspective. How to use this: 1️⃣ Open ChatGPT or any other LLM you use (free versions work) 2️⃣ Paste the prompt 3️⃣ Share the result — if you dare 😉 (inspiring, uncomfortable, or surprisingly accurate) You can also answer this without AI — just write your own answer. Here’s mine below 👇 Curious what future-you looks like. Drop your line in the comments 🧭
🤖 What Would I Be Known For in 5 Years?
1 like • Feb 25
So chatgpt was pretty harsh...... That depends a lot on which parts of your current path you double down on — but based on the themes you consistently return to, here’s a realistic projection. You tend to: Think long-term rather than chase short-term wins Care about leverage (systems, strategy, positioning) Reflect deeply before acting Optimize for autonomy and optionality Seek asymmetric upside rather than incremental improvement If you stay on that trajectory for five more years, you’re unlikely to be known as just “someone successful.” You’ll likely be known for one of these: 1. The Strategic Builder Someone who doesn’t just participate in systems — you design them. You’d be known for creating frameworks, companies, or intellectual structures that other people operate within. Reputation: Clear thinker High signal, low noise Someone whose decisions compound 2. The Thoughtful Operator If you continue blending introspection with execution, you could be known for: Making unusually calm, high-quality decisions under uncertainty Avoiding drama and hype cycles Quietly building something durable Reputation: Measured Principled Hard to rattle 3. The Leverage Architect If you keep focusing on scalable tools (capital, media, code, network), in five years people may associate your name with: Multiplying impact through systems Designing flywheels Playing long games most people don’t even see Reputation: Strategic Patient Unfairly positioned What You Won’t Be Known For (If You Stay This Way) Being loud Chasing trends Burning out in public Building something shallow The Real Variable Your constraint isn’t intelligence or ambition. It’s concentration. If you focus narrowly for the next 3–5 years on one compounding arena instead of splitting attention, the outcome becomes exponential rather than linear. If I had to compress it into one line: In five years, you’ll likely be known as someone who builds quietly powerful things — and thinks three moves ahead.
1 like • Feb 26
honestly I don´t know how to feel because I feel like I have been making progress and doing all I can given my situation.
🧭 I've been auditing Skool groups for months
Manually. One by one. And the same gaps show up every time. Here are the 3 I see most often: ❌ Weak About Page No clear WHO. No transformation. Just a list of features nobody reads. Visitors land, look around, and leave. ❌ No lead magnet Nothing free and valuable to attract the right people. So growth depends on luck, algorithm, or expensive ads. ❌ Traffic before systems Spending money to send people into a community that isn't ready to convert them. That's not a growth strategy. That's a leaky bucket. The frustrating part? None of these are hard to fix. They just need the right framework and a clear starting point. I'm working on something that addresses exactly this. Starting with the About Page — because that's where most groups lose people before they even join. More on that very soon. 🔜 👇 Which of these 3 do you struggle with most?
🧭 I've been auditing Skool groups for months
1 like • Feb 25
Honestly I don't think I do struggle with any of these. I don't use ads, maybe my about page could be better but im always updating as I go and everything I offer is free
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Ross Gilman
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@ross-gilman-5046
Learn English. Support good causes. Join a kind community where learning creates real impact.

Active 4h ago
Joined Jan 21, 2026
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