TLDR: I started another community.
I think all of us have been here. We have great ideas, we're experts in an area, but we don't know where to focus... so we do a little too much. I am way too guilty of this. I'm multi-passionate and I really love helping people. I have solid content, solid feedback, and solid ideas (yes, I'm bragging on myself), but I've also gotten that same feedback from others, so it's not just me being delusional. This was one of the reasons I started The Freelancer Network. I kept seeing that the help I was giving was actually working, and I wanted to focus that energy in one place. I was tired of jumping from community to community, call to call, spreading myself thin trying to help everyone everywhere. The Freelancer Network is my passion project. I have big ideas for it. But some of those ideas take time. Some don't work out. And some just burn you out before they even get off the ground. So while I'm building that out, I also launched Skoolepreneurs. Different purpose entirely. Skoolepreneurs is a free community that hosts my content... courses, templates, resources... and people can purchase what they want, when they want. Everyone is welcome. No subscriptions locking you out. No pressure to buy anything. Low barrier to entry, low pressure, but still engaging. I've seen other communities run this model and I really like the philosophy behind it. I'm not doing anything in-person with it right now either. Maybe eventually, but only if the community actually needs it... not because it looks good on a sales page. Between the two, I've let my beta group into The Freelancer Network, I've shown up for every single call I offer, and I still feel like something is missing. Is it my audience? Is it my offer? Or is the idea just... an idea? I know a lot of you in here are running Skool communities too, so I'd love to hear from others who've hit this wall. What helped you push through? What did you change? I'm not in this to hit some 6-figure screenshot. A cute little $1k MRR would do just fine.