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Owned by Piotr

Stary Człowiek i Może

6 members • Free

Centrum mądrości i technologii! 🌊 Opanuj AI z asystentem Santiago. Kursy dla dojrzałych, biznes i witalność. Twoje doświadczenie, nasze narzędzia!

Memberships

Modern Millionaires AI Club

216 members • Free

The SKOOL Directory

561 members • Free

What Is Skool?

1k members • Free

7 Figure Online

53 members • Free

Polska Kawiarenka

46 members • Free

11 contributions to What Is Skool?
What Are Your Thoughts On Tiers
Now that tiers are out & we can see what version 1 looks like... What are you planning to do with them?
What Are Your Thoughts On Tiers
2 likes • Feb 14
I just have trouble translating it
0 likes • Feb 14
Yes. I use Chrome. Google Translate. Now too. All languages.
Get Your Skool Community Discovered by AI Webinar
What an absolutely generous and informative webinar. Thank you so much @Matthew Burns for sharing your time and knowledge with us. Thanks to @Jenna Ostrye also for sharing such gems with us as well!
0 likes • Feb 14
Yes, that's great
Welcome to What is Skool? A Free Public Community
This community helps you understand what Skool is, how the platform works, and stay up to date with platform changes that affect how people use it. Sometimes I will highlight Skool communities that are worth checking out. These are shared as real examples of how people are using the platform and what different types of communities can look like in practice. So What is Skool? Skool is a community platform where people can discover or create communities. People use Skool to run communities that include content, discussions, events, and memberships in one place. Inside the Classroom, you will find three main resources: Skool Basics This walks through what Skool is, what Skoolers is, and how the Skool Games work. Skool Build Template This is a practical starter kit you get free access to just by joining the community. The build template includes a checklist, a questionnaire to help you think through your idea, and Canva templates you can use to set things up visually. Skool Clarity Call Feedback Real responses from community members about their ideas and the clarity they gained from clarity calls. This is something I recommend community owners do for their own members when starting out, no matter what their community is about. You can see what others have to say by joining the community for free. What will the content in here look like? You will see: - Resources and templates you can use. - Our latest 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.
Welcome to What is Skool? A Free Public Community
0 likes • Feb 12
@Markus Thonett You write about art. Can you be more specific?
0 likes • Feb 12
@Markus Thonett For now, stay here and watch.
Why the Skoolers Community Uses Vague Rules on Purpose
I’ve been asked this directly and I’ve also seen a lot of people asking it publicly. Why are the Skoolers community rules vague? Some people are totally fine with it. Others really dislike it. Both reactions are okay. Some people prefer things extremely clear with exact limits. Some are used to platforms where everything is spelled out. Others have been part of large communities before and already understand why vague rules exist in the first place. Here’s the part that matters and why I now strongly recommend vague rules… even for smaller communities. Hard rules create loopholes. Vague rules create better communities. The moment you introduce hard limits, people naturally want to reach those limits. Instead of looking at the intention of a post, it turns into “does this technically fit in the guidelines?” It even takes away from something that makes a community really wonderful. If a community like Skoolers spelled out exactly what a good post is and what a bad post is, we might never see some of the creativity that comes from someone trying something out. From experimenting. From sharing something that wasn’t done before that ends up being genuinely good. Vague rules leave room for that. They also mean that as moderators and admins, we end up having a lot of conversations. We look at patterns. We make decisions based on context instead of black and white rules. Sometimes there is a new person who is just trying to fit in. A post might technically be questionable, but the right response is to welcome them and guide them. Other times someone is new and blatantly self promoting, which clearly is not allowed. In that case, we can redirect and still welcome them without letting the behavior continue. Those situations look similar on paper but they are very different in reality. Vague rules allow for that distinction. They also protect against bad actors. An example that Andrew Kirby shared explains this well. If people were told they would not be prosecuted for stealing things under $50, you would immediately see people stealing things up to $49. The clear rule creates the behavior.
Poll
48 members have voted
Why the Skoolers Community Uses Vague Rules on Purpose
1 like • Feb 10
@Jenna Ostrye Właściwie to wszedłem tu, bo wszedłem. Rozmawiałem z ludźmi i klikałem co mi się spodobało. Także publikowałem coś. Ale później to już nie czytałem, klikałem i pisałem. Zatraciłem sens tego. Obiecuję poprawę.
1 like • Feb 10
@Ryan Duncan I've read and analyzed what you're writing. If I can't learn anything, why stay here? Of course, I'm still hoping things will change.
Live at 3pm CST | Leveraging a Public Skool Community
We are hosting a live call today focused on leveraging a public Skool community. Join @Matthew Burns and I as we set up my ProveWorth community page in real time and talk through updated learnings around AI discoverability in 2026. Matthew will also share what he has learned recently now that my own website is being analyzed by ChatGPT and other AI tools hundreds of times a day. This call is especially relevant if you run a public Skool community or are considering making one public. Add it to your calendar or set an alarm: ProveWorth AI Discoverability @ 3pm CST
Poll
20 members have voted
Live at 3pm CST | Leveraging a Public Skool Community
0 likes • Feb 5
@Tina Saxena Na zdjęciu jesteś SUPER. Oczu prawie nie widzę. Zbliżenie oczu daj :-)
1 like • Feb 5
@Tina Saxena You look GREAT in this photo. I can barely see your eyes. Give me a close-up of your eyes :-)
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Piotr Sasin
3
38points to level up
@piotr-sasin-9597
Urodziny 18 maja 1964 roku. Obecnie jestem założycielem Grupy Stary Człowiek i Może oraz pomagam w Polska Kawiarenka, którą też polecam.

Active 10d ago
Joined Feb 4, 2026
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