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Knowing how to get started is tough. This free tool breaks down exactly how to start right, so you hit your targets fast. šŸ”„ Skool Launch Planner šŸ”„ Enter a few details about your idea and get a FULL custom plan including... - Positioning - Offer Structure - First 20 Members - Pricing Strategy - Copy Bank - 7-Day Launch - Onboarding - Daily Actions
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Get your FREE Skool Launch Plan šŸ”„
How to Get Your First 100 Community Members
Starting a community feels hard when you have zero members. But the first 100 are actually the most important. Once you reach that point, momentum usually starts to build. If you're thinking about launching your own community, you can start one here Here’s a simple way many creators get their first members šŸ‘‡ šŸ‘„ Start with people you already know Friends, colleagues, your audience, or people in your niche. šŸ“£ Share the mission People join communities because they want to be part of something. šŸ’¬ Personally invite people Direct messages often work better than public posts early on. šŸš€ Focus on early wins Highlight member progress and conversations to build momentum. The first 100 members aren’t about scale. They’re about culture. Get the right people in, create good discussions, and the community often grows naturally from there. If you’re thinking about building a community around your niche, you can create one here
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How Skool Pricing Works (And How Creators Make Money)
A lot of people are curious about Skool but don’t fully understand how the pricing works. The model is actually very simple. Creators build a community… …and charge members a monthly subscription. If you're thinking about launching one yourself, you can start your community here Here’s how it works šŸ‘‡ šŸ’° Creators set their own price Most communities charge somewhere between $10 and $100 per month. šŸ‘„ Members pay to join They get access to discussions, courses, events, and other members. šŸ“ˆ Revenue scales with members More members = more recurring income. Example: 100 members Ɨ $30/month = $3,000/month Simple. Why many creators like this model: • Recurring income instead of one-off sales • Strong communities increase retention • Members help each other (less pressure on the host) A successful community can become a very valuable digital asset. If you’re thinking about building a community around your niche, you can create one here
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AI Is Replacing Jobs Faster Than People Think (Here’s the Opportunity)
AI isn’t just changing jobs. It’s removing entire categories of work. Copywriting Basic design Customer support Research Even junior coding For a lot of people that’s scary. But there’s a huge opportunity most people are missing. If you want to build something more resilient online, you can start your own community here Instead of selling your time… You build a community around a niche. People join because they want: • support • learning • accountability • networking • shared goals And the creator earns from membership revenue. Why communities are becoming powerful right now: • AI can replace tasks, but not relationships • People want connection and belonging • Niche communities are exploding in popularity When you build the right community, it becomes an asset instead of a job. Members help each other. The conversations create value. And growth often happens through referrals. You don’t need thousands of members either. Even a small community can work. 100 members paying $20/month = $2,000/month And many communities grow far beyond that. If you’re thinking about building something that AI can’t easily replace, launching a community is one of the most interesting opportunities right now. You can create your Skool community here
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5 Community Engagement Ideas That Don’t Feel Forced
Most community owners struggle with the same problem. They get members… but nobody posts. The mistake is trying to force engagement. ā€œComment below šŸ‘‡ā€ ā€œSay hi!ā€ ā€œIntroduce yourself!ā€ That stuff dies quickly. Good communities design engagement naturally. If you're thinking about starting one yourself, you can launch your community here Here are a few engagement ideas that actually work: • Weekly wins — ask members to share one win from their week • Member spotlights — highlight one member regularly • Opinion questions — ask what people think, not just teach • Progress threads — let members document their journey • Simple polls — quick interactions build momentum The goal isn't forcing engagement. It's making participation easy. When members start talking to each other (not just to you), the community becomes self-sustaining. If you’re thinking about building a community around your audience, you can create one here
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