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32 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
2 likes • 1d
@Marama Elizabeth If you've already been freemium and will grandparent the people with free membership, that's different from going paid out of the gate. It'll require more work to gain enough trust for people to join your community, especially at a higher price point.
0 likes • 1h
@Marama Elizabeth $9 is probably low enough that people would be willing to pay that to try it for a month to see if they want to stay.
The Skool Morning Show 🧹 Spring Cleaning Your Skool
Happy First Day Of Spring!! Today we are going over 12 things you can do to Spring clean your Skool (Business)! Plus, a fun rate on a scale of 1-10 for outside traffic sources! @Eric Howell We are going LIVE for The Skool Morning Show now. 🎥 👇 To Chat with us LIVE comment on this post and we'll pull up some of the comments.
2 likes • Mar 23
@Jesse Woltersom is teaching how to "WIN" at LinkedIn right here, y'all!
2 likes • Mar 24
@Jesse Woltersom what winning by failing taught me about B2B sales.
Should You Have a Public Skool Community or a Private One? 🤔
There is no "one-size-fits-all" answer to this question, and I think that is why so many people feel unsure about what to choose. Most people are trying to make this decision based on what they think they “should” or are “supposed” to do, instead of what actually makes sense for their niche, their goals, and the type of community they want to build. Including whether they even have a real plan for getting members. 👀 And a big part of the stress around this choice comes from thinking it is final. Like once you pick public or private, you are locked into it forever. That is not actually how I look at it. 🤷‍♀️ You have way more flexibility than you think. You are allowed to test. You are allowed to change your mind. You are allowed to treat this like an experiment and collect real data instead of trying to make the perfect decision upfront. Whatever you choose is going to show you how people actually respond. What they engage with, what they ignore, and what needs to change. Don't forget to track it! ✍️ You have way more flexibility than you think. In fact, you should be testing. You should be changing your mind when you get more information. And if you needed someone to tell you, you are allowed to have more than one community serving different purposes. Especially if one of them is meant to help you get discovered. It does not have to be complicated or add a "massive" amount of work. Because I will tell you one big myth that is still floating around out there.. you know the one.. "If you build it, they will come." No. 😐 That is not how it works. So much good work never gets seen. Not because it is bad. Not because the person is not smart or capable. But because nobody ever sat them down and said the simple truth. You have to get traffic. * hello * Please read that again.. PLEASE! lol This is not me trying to sell you on a traffic package. Yes, I have found people that can help you like @Eric Howell and his upcoming Free community Traffic Lounge and then even @Matthew Burns with his ProveWorth community that is essentially the community Trust Pilot or Yelp. Two people I trust a lot, because I know traffic is needed for you to even get the business help.
Poll
37 members have voted
Should You Have a Public Skool Community or a Private One? 🤔
2 likes • Feb 16
@Jenna Ostrye In a Public community, is the classroom stuff is private? Like, if I post replay videos there, only members can access those?
1 like • Feb 16
@Jenna Ostrye Ahh. Thank you for explaining.
Position Your Skool for AI Search in 2026 (Replay)
On this call, @Matthew Burns shared more on what he's been learning about AI discoverability and got more practical about what this actually means for your Skool community. How ChatGPT and other AI tools are influencing decisions, and what that means for how you structure your Skool content moving forward. Most of the call focused on how to stop guessing what to post and start using actual data. Google Keyword Planner tells you what people are typing. That should influence your About page, your YouTube titles, and your public posts. AI tools pull from content that answers questions directly and repeats positioning consistently. My biggest takeaway was how you should start recommending yourself! What we covered on this call: How AI tools decide what to surface in an answer How to use Google Keyword Planner for real direction How YouTube supports AI visibility Why public posts and comments help with indexing How to build a simple system so you are not creating randomly The point is simple. If AI cannot clearly understand what you do and who it is for, it will not recommend you. 🎥 Watch the replay here: ChatGPT Is The New Search Engine | Position Your Skool Community In 2026 Now 👇 If someone asked ChatGPT about your niche today, would your Skool community be obvious as an option?
3 likes • Feb 15
Thanks for the call, @Jenna Ostrye @Matthew Burns !
How Many Communities Are You In?
Being considered a Skool "Power User", I'm in a lot of communities.. But I don't see that as a bad thing. One of the signs that someone is going to stick around on the platform is when they get plugged in and are a part of several communities! There are a mix of people in here.. some OGs, some who have been around a bit, & some brand new. I want to know how many communities you're in and what makes you join and stay in a community? Be as specific as you want to be :) This will be helpful for those who are wanting and working on creating a community worth joining and investing time to really become a member. 🫶
2 likes • Sep '25
@Tiffany Noel Taylor
1 like • Feb 14
@Astrid Angarita welcome! My favorite way to find communities is to click on the profile of someone whose posts I enjoy, and then see which communities they're in.
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Ren Tyler
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106points to level up
@ren
Philomath who loves to share what I learn. I own 33 Van Damme films but would rather hang out with Dolph Lundgren.

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Joined Dec 17, 2024
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