When you check out a Skool community or creator, what actually makes you decide itโs worth your time follower count, quality of posts, engagement inside the community, or real results people are getting? Whatโs the real signal you trust before joining?
First and only thing you see is the about page (unless it's a public group). For me, it really comes down to the promise on the about page. Anything else doesn't really matter. However i tend to take paid groups more seriously, because of the quality of content and community. I'm a member of a few free groups, but it keep it to a minimum.
A structured challenge removes decision fatigue. Members do not have to ask, โWhat should I do today?โ You give them a clear timeframe, clear daily actions, and a simple path to follow. Six weeks. One plan. No guessing.
Great News !! Underwater Squad was selected as Skool of the Week and featured on Skool News. In this short clip, the Skool team uses the community as a live case study and walks through how a focused passion can be turned into a sustainable community.
Everyoneโs been waiting for this one ๐ Now the real question is are you sticking with a paid community, or testing out the freemium setup? what your plan is
@Zee Riter it's not easy to get paid members when you have not built credibility / community yet. Start with free, and build your group around the feedback you get from the free members. When you're ready, turn it into paid.
@Zee Riter when they rolled this out, i thought DRIP was awesome. But i never implemented it, and now i'm glad i never did. Unless you have a very specific reason, i wouldn't use drip.