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How To Set Up Ur Skool Profile And Get The Most Out Of The Community
Welcome to Locker Room Library 💖 (Read This First) Hey babe, I’m really glad you’re here. This space was built so dancers don’t have to figure everything out alone — especially when it comes to money, safety, sales, and what comes after the club.� To make sure you actually get value (and not just “another platform you forget about”), here’s a quick checklist to get set up and interacting from day one. 1️⃣ Set up your Skool profile (5 minutes) Profiles with a pic and a short bio get way more replies and feel safer for everyone — even if you stay anonymous or use a stage name.� How to edit your profile: Log into Skool. Click your picture/initials in the top right → click Profile. Hit Edit Profile on the right side.� Profile picture: Required by Skool, but it does not have to be your legal face.� Options that work for dancers: Stage photo you’re comfortable with Cropped/partial face Human-style avatar/illustration (not a blank image) Name: Use whatever feels safe: first name only, stage name, or nickname. Avoid legal full name if you don’t want that out there.� Bio (keep it 2–4 short lines): You can copy this and fill it in: “Dancer / [brand new | a few months in | years in | retired]. Here to work on [sales, money, safety, exit plan]. Keeping it low-key and anonymous is important to me.” Save your changes, then take 10 seconds to look at your profile and ask: “Would I trust and reply to this person?” If yes, you’re good. If no, tweak it. 2️⃣ How to interact & contribute here Communities feel alive when people talk, not just scroll. Here’s how to plug in without feeling awkward.� Start with low-pressure actions: Like posts that hit you. It tells me what to create more of. Drop short comments instead of essays: “This hit.” “I needed this today.” “Trying this next shift.” Where to post what: 💃🏽 Baby Stripper – beginner questions, first nights, auditions 💰 Sales & Hustle – scripts, “what do I say?”, slow-night strategy 🛡️ Safety & Bounds – red flags, boundaries, safety questions
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How To Navigate Thru The Massive Amount Info Of In The Locker Room Library
Category: 📌 Start Here Where To Start (Read This When You’re Overwhelmed) There’s a lot here. You don’t have to do it all at once. Start where you are. If you’re brand new / baby stripper: - Read: - Then take: Free Course 1 – Locker Room 101: Baby Stripper Orientation If you’re already dancing but feel lost on sales: - Read: - Then take: Free Course 2 – Sales Flow For People Who Hate 'Sales' - When you’re ready to go deeper: Paid Course 1 – Strip Club Sales System If you’re worried about safety and burnout: - Read: - Then take: Free Course 3 – Locker Room Safety Talk If you’re making money but it disappears: - Read: - Then take: Free Course 5 – Locker Room Money Basics - Ready for full business mode: Paid Course 3 – Running Your Stripping Business Like A Business If you’re thinking about your exit: - Start with: Paid Course 5 – Dancer Exit Strategy & Life Design - And hang out in 💵 Money & Business + 🛡️ Safety & Bounds. Drop a comment and tell us where you’re starting: “I’m starting with because .” We’ll help point you to the next step.
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Community Guidelines (Ever Evolving)
Category: 📌 Start Here Locker Room Library Community Guidelines This is a private, dancer-only space. To keep it safe, useful, and drama-free, we run on a few simple rules: 1. Dancers only.No customers, no management, no civilians “just curious.” Do not invite them in here. Do not share screenshots out of context. 2. Confidentiality.What’s shared here stays here. No outing other dancers, no sharing names or personal details outside this space. 3. No doxxing or naming & shaming.You can talk about experiences with clubs and customers, but don’t post legal names, identifiable details, or anything that could put someone at risk. 4. Respect different paths.Some dancers love this work. Some are trying to get out. Some are just starting. We don’t shame anyone for how they do their job, what they charge, or how long they’ve been in. 5. No hate, bigotry, or punching down.Racism, transphobia, homophobia, fatphobia, or any targeted abuse is an automatic no. 6. Advice, not orders.Share what’s worked for you, but remember everyone’s club, body, and life is different. “Here’s what I’ve seen” hits better than “you have to do this.” 7. Safety first. Always.If something feels off, your safety comes before money. That’s the culture here. 8. Use the categories.Post Baby Stripper questions in 💃🏽 Baby Stripper, money stuff in 💵 Money & Business, vents in 💬 General / Locker Room Talk, etc. It keeps things easy to find. If there’s something you think should be added to these guidelines, drop it in the comments. Comment: “One guideline I’d add is .”
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Still Thinking About Starting Stripping? Read This Before Ur First Shift!
If you’re stripper‑curious, about to audition, or sitting at home Googling “how to start stripping,” this is for you. Instead of a hype speech or a horror story, this is a set of questions dancers wish they had asked themselves before they started. You don’t have to have perfect answers. The goal is to go in with your eyes open, not to talk you into or out of it. 1. Legal stuff and club reality Before you think about outfits and stage names, ask yourself: - Do I know my local laws around clubs and nudity? - Do I need a permit, license, or registration to work where I live? - Am I comfortable with the level of nudity my local clubs require (bikini, topless, nude, contact/no contact)? A lot of baby strippers skip this and just show up. Dancers on r/stripper and in older forums say: know whether you’re walking into a bikini bar, a topless champagne room, or a fully nude, no‑alcohol club—the experience is different in each. 2. Club shopping (before you commit) You’re not marrying the first club you walk into. Ask yourself: - Have I gone to at least 2–3 clubs just to watch, before auditioning? - Which club’s vibe and rules felt safest / least sketchy? - Did dancers seem generally okay, or did they look miserable and overworked? - How did staff talk to dancers in front of customers? Dancers online consistently recommend: visit as a customer first if you can, tip the stage, watch how dancers and staff interact, and pay attention to your gut. 3. Money, costs, and expectations This is work where you can make a lot—or walk out with less than you spent. Check in with yourself: - Do I have some money set aside for: shoes, a couple outfits, house fees, and tip‑outs? - Can I emotionally handle a few low nights while I’m learning, without panicking? - Do I understand I’m basically self‑employed—no guaranteed hourly wage at most clubs? - Am I willing to track my money from the beginning (even just in a notes app) so it doesn’t evaporate? Guides aimed at dancers stress that early on your income can be very up and down, and it helps a lot to have even a small cushion and a plan for what to do with cash.
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✨ Introduce Yourself ✨ Who Are You??
💎 Welcome to The Champagne Room Society Before you dive in, let’s get to know your experience and background a little. Copy, paste, and answer these in your intro post 👇🏽 💃🏽 Your Experience 1. How long have you been dancing? 2. What type of club do you usually work in? (e.g. high-end, gentlemen’s, bikini, topless, nude, dive bar, etc.) 3. What city, state, or region do you usually dance in (or plan to work in)? 🪩 Your Learning & Growth 4. Have you ever taken any courses, trainings, or mentorships about dancing, sales, or the industry? 5. Have you read any books, blogs, or online resources about dancing, psychology, or the hustle? If yes — which ones would you recommend? 6. Is there a specific topic you’d love to learn more about here (ex: sales, branding, confidence, travel clubs, etc.)? 💼 Your Background 7. What other jobs, skills, or education have you had outside of dancing? 8. Do you feel those experiences have helped or influenced your success in the club? ✨ This helps us understand where everyone’s coming from — and what kind of wisdom we can all bring to the table. 🎉 ROLL CALL: Introduce Yourself 👋 Category: 💬 General / Locker Room Talk | PIN TO FEED We have dancers in here from all different stages — brand new, a few years in, decade-plus veterans, and some who are already on the other side building their next chapter. The only way this space actually feels like a community and not just a content dump is if we know who's in the room. So — roll call. 👇 Drop your intro below. Use your Skool name, your stage name, a made-up name, or just "anonymous" — whatever you're comfortable with. You don't have to share your city, your club, your real name, or anything identifying. Copy and fill in (or just freestyle it): 🌟 What I go by here: (anything you're comfortable with) 💃🏽 Where I'm at: (brand new / a few months in / a few years / long-time dancer / retired / not dancing yet but considering it — whatever fits) 🎯 Why I joined: (learning the business / need help with sales / money stuff / safety / community / just curious — all answers valid)
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Private dancer-only space 4 real conversation about sales, safety, money, clients & life beyond the club. No civilians. No judgment. Free to join. 💖
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