Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Michael

Gemeinsam Kanäle aufbauen: Technik, Strategie, Motivation! Für Neueinsteiger & Erfahrene - werde Value Creator – hier unterstützen wir uns dabei 💪🎥

Memberships

Voicery Community

25 members • $29/month

n8n KI Agenten

9.9k members • Free

n8n KI Business Agenten

246 members • $97/month

The RoboNuggets Network (free)

37k members • Free

Level 9

6 members • Free

Meetup in Frankfurt 🤝

62 members • Free

Vibe Coders

952 members • Free

Die KI-BUSINESS Lounge ...

4.1k members • Free

Erfolgreich Frei Online

236 members • Free

8 contributions to What Is Skool?
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
5 likes • Feb 2
I am wondering what the REAL risk might be to go public. Many hesitate to do so. Even members can easily get into panic mode asking "why are we now public??" But hey - where is the real problem (to most communities) at all? If it´s not a real private topic to discuss...something that is hard to share with the public - why dont we go more public then...taking into consideration that only a public comm will gain from the SEO algo?!? What do YOU 🫵 think about this question and what do you say could be a potential downside of going public? 🤓
0 likes • Feb 2
@Megan Webb thx for your reply - really appreciate you reading my thoughts 🤓
I Made My Skool Community Public. Here’s What I’m Sharing Next 👇
Over the next few days, I am going to be sharing a series of posts about public Skool communities. Public communities rarely get the spotlight they deserve for how powerful they can be. It has been a long time coming, and I have gotten a lot of questions about this decision from people building on Skool, people considering it, and people trying to decide what direction to go. So instead of making one long post that could turn into a novel, I wanted to break it down into a series of posts so we can cover everything properly and answer questions as they come up. ✍️✅ Here is what we will cover: Why I made my Skool community public Should you have a public Skool community or a private one? Things to make sure you do if you go from private to public What will help your public Skool community Skool tips for a public community, including how to prevent spammers and low quality posts And the Skool strategy I personally recommend and will lead by example with After that, I will shift back to what this community is here for: - Resources and templates you can use. - New Skool videos and podcast episodes. - Highlighted communities that are worth checking out. - Posts about new Skool features and platform changes. - Breakdowns of how different Skool communities are structured and what is working. - Plus, little things I find across Skool that most people miss, like features, pages, or tools you might not know exist. Yes, I did say a podcast! 🎤 I finally can announce that my podcast host Eric and I are launching a new one together! We had one when we first started on Skool two years ago, took a break, and now we are starting fresh with a new one focused on online communities and what actually works in practice. So… who is @Eric Howell? If you are building a Skool, it is really easy to feel like you should be able to do everything yourself. Content, community, offers, systems, traffic. And the truth is, you probably can.. I know I felt like that.
Poll
59 members have voted
I Made My Skool Community Public. Here’s What I’m Sharing Next 👇
2 likes • Feb 2
Please look out for everyday skoolers , and don't get the same skoolers into the spotlight that we see anyway and everywhere...new and fresh impulses would be highly appreciated 🤓
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
6 likes • Jan 10
I really appreciate this post. I think @Jenna Ostrye you did a great job and delivered a lot of value. It genuinely invites reflection and discussion, which is exactly what strong community posts should do. I also agree that locking the chat at level 4 makes sense. We have seen good results with simple membership questions as well, for example a short calculation task or asking for the community color. It is not perfect, but it already filters a large portion of low quality signups. What has been especially helpful for us are moderators from within the community. They usually have strong intrinsic motivation to keep the space clean and healthy. That said, moderators do need guidance and training, especially on how to spot spam accounts. Factors like the timing of a Skool signup, the other communities a user is part of, and their previous contributions can already reveal a lot. Even a quick search of real names often helps to build a clearer picture of whether an entry makes sense. I also strongly agree on the importance of regular rule reminder posts like this one. They continuously reset awareness, especially for existing members, and make people more attentive overall. Great initiative and a very valuable contribution to the discussion.🤓
Build a Skool Community That Pays with the $9/m Plan (New Video)
Skool just released a $9/m pricing option, and it’s now easier than ever to build a low-ticket paid community around something you already care about. In this new video, I walk through how creators are using this plan to build simple Skool communities that are earning $1k a month or more, without needing a big audience or complicated offer. What the video covers: • Real examples of low ticket communities that are already working • How to calculate if your time investment makes sense • Why 143 members can equal your first $1,000 online • How to use Skool Discovery to get organic traffic • Ways to grow from low-ticket to higher offers Watch the video here: Turn $9 Into Your First $1K Online With Skool (Thank You Sam Ovens) If you’re still figuring out what to build, you can post questions in this community & I'd be happy to answer them! If you're wanting to build a community but need guidance, you can use my free build template in the classroom. Already built a $9 community? 👉 Drop your Skool link in the YouTube comments, and I might feature it so more people can find you. (This is also helpful for viewers to see others doing it! Encourage them and get eyes on your community!) 👇 What kind of community would you build for $9 per month?
3 likes • Jul '25
I think it´s important to point out that besides of all the reasonable hype multiple communities cause multiple workload at the same level - doesn't matter if they cost 9$ or 99$ - after that I do like the option of having a much lower barrier to enter the skool ecosystem as a community owner , connection driver and people enabler. And if you really want to find good communities effortlessly than I can only recommend using the community finder tool for that 🤓
Kirby Just Told Me This Skool Trick (Almost Nobody Knows)
Andrew Kirby shared a little-known Skool trick that almost nobody knew. At first, it was just him, Sam, and a couple of engineers who knew this even existed. When you post a YouTube video inside Skool, people can watch it, but those views won’t show up on your YouTube channel. You’re getting watch time inside Skool, but YouTube isn’t tracking it. Here’s how to fix it: - If your link is youtube.com, add &views to the end. - If your link is youtu.be, add ?views to the end. Now every view inside Skool will count toward your YouTube views. Andrew uses this for every Skool News episode. I tested it with my own videos too. It works. You can even add this to old posts you've created. Just edit the post, delete the old link, and add the new one with the &views or ?views to start making them count. Most people have no idea this exists. Now you do. There’s no CTA to subscribe, like, or join a community in the video, so you can feel free to share this information with others! :)
2 likes • Jun '25
Oh niceness - that was something I´ve realized myself but haven't had a clue - now this solves the problem - thanks for sharing Jenna 🤓
1-8 of 8
Michael Gründling
4
69points to level up
@michael-gruendling
💡 skool Community Consultant 💪🏼 Content Strategist 🌱 Empower People 🕊️ Freedom Lover | Author von "Das skool Buch" & "Jeder kann YouTube"

Active 43m ago
Joined Feb 27, 2025
ENFP
Leipzig
Powered by