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What is this?
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Owned by Marama

Eaborn Living

185 members • Free

Move from guessing to grounded knowing. Restore ancestral food intelligence, make botanical remedies, and build healing autonomy from seed to table.

Memberships

The Heart Song of Creation

12 members • Free

The Banner Grange #627

9 members • Free

SkoolHers

537 members • $9/month

Break Free and Thrive!

261 members • $47/month

3 contributions to What Is Skool?
How Growth Boost Attribution Works Between Multiple Communities
There's been some confusion around how Growth Boost attribution works between multiple communities, whether that's free to paid or low ticket to high ticket. One question that came up was: If someone joins a community through Growth Boost, does Skool get attribution for every community that person joins afterward? The answer is no. According to Sam, attribution is per community and uses last touch attribution for that specific community. Here's a simple example: Let's say someone discovers your free community through Growth Boost. They join and show up as a Skool Network member in that community. Later, while they're inside your free community, they see a post about your paid community. If they click a direct link to your paid community's About Page and join from that link, the paid community signup is attributed as Direct Traffic, not Skool Network. What matters is how they arrived at that specific community. The original Growth Boost attribution does not automatically follow them everywhere else. The same concept applies if you have: • A free community and a paid community • A low ticket community and a high ticket community • Multiple paid communities Another thing worth knowing is that owners and admins should use their community links when promoting their own groups. Affiliate links are no longer used for owner attribution the way they were in the past. This allows traffic sources like YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Direct Traffic, Search, Discovery, and Skool Network to be tracked correctly. The main takeaway: Growth Boost attribution is community specific. Just because someone originally joined one community through Skool Network does not mean every future community they join will also be attributed to Skool Network. In the video, I walk through examples and show exactly how this works. To help all other Skoolers understand this, please feel free to share! My goal is for everyone to have the answers they need about Growth Boost, so that they can optimize for it and this Skool project succeeds!
Poll
24 members have voted
3 likes • 1d
@Ren Tyler What do you see as the issues? I am curious, as I am still freemium, and was about to shift
2 likes • 21h
@Ren Tyler Yes, planning to grandparent the people with free membership. Higher price point, as in? I am thinking $9
Tomorrow We Are Reviewing Cover Photos 👇 Drop Yours Below
For tomorrow's show we are going to be looking at cover photos as if they were in a Skool Ad to see if they would make sense just from looking at it. Drop yours below and we'll make sure to review yours and give feedback :)
2 likes • 28d
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Why I Made My Skool Community Public
When I decided to make my community public, I got a lot of questions. But the main one was always the same. Why? 🤷‍♀️ The answer is that there are several reasons. I wanted to explain them, especially if you are thinking about whether you should have one too. I have always recommended having a public Skool community alongside whatever you are doing on Skool. Whether you are running your own community or supporting someone else, it is something I genuinely believe in and have told people to do for a long time. Especially now that we have the option of a $9 hobby plan community, but even when there was only the $99 option, I still saw it as one of the cheapest forms of SEO and marketing you could invest in. Do you know how much it costs to have someone do SEO for you? A good one can cost a lot, so this is super affordable. But at a certain point I realized something. Even if I understand how valuable it is and can explain what to do and how to do it, a lot of people need to actually see it. They need a real example. Something visual and hands-on. I get it.. I learn better that way too! 😅 Why am I so sure everyone should have one? I have tested the power of a public community on Skool, and I also know how powerful SEO is from long before Skool even existed. That combination is what made the decision obvious for me. Let me ask you this.. If you saw what YouTube looked like before it got big, or what TikTok looked like before it took off, and you understood the potential back then, would you not lean into it and tell others to do the same? That is where I believe Skool is at right now, and where the real opportunity is with AI discoverability. You're not too late to the game and you don't need to feel FOMO, because you're here right now. Another big reason is time. ⏳ I only have so much time in a day and everyone wants some of it, and I genuinely want to give it. But I am still only human with life happening. I am a single mom, I homeschool my little one, and I am everyone’s go-to person.
Poll
34 members have voted
Why I Made My Skool Community Public
1 like • Feb 4
Thanks for this. I have been pondering it. I'm looking forward to your next posts on this .
1-3 of 3
Marama Elizabeth
2
9points to level up
@marama-elizabeth
Helping seekers reconnect with nature, healing & spirit through courses in herbalism, permaculture & frequency, no homestead necessary.

Active 28m ago
Joined Feb 1, 2026
Grass Valley, CA
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