One thing Iβve realized after being on Skool for 60 days is that you can see straight into a personβs psyche by how they run their community. Not through what they say they value but through how they actually move. What they respond to. What they ignore. How present they are. How they handle feedback. How they treat people when thereβs nothing to gain. Every post, every comment, every silence is information. A community is an extension of the leaderβs mind, priorities, standards, and self-awareness. The tone, the culture, the pace, the care (or lack of it) all mirror the person at the center. And hereβs the uncomfortable truth: If youβre not intentionally responding to your communityβs needs, concerns, and feedback, trust erodes. Slowly at first. Then all at once. People can feel when a leader is checked out, distracted, or more invested in optics than outcomes. At that point, no amount of branding can cover the gap. Strong communities arenβt built on content alone. Theyβre built on conscious, intentional leadership. Presence. Follow-through. A genuine investment in the people who chose to be there. Whatβs fascinating is that as a member, you start to recognize patterns. You begin to gravitate toward leaders whose operating principles you actually resonate with not just their tactics or the hype. Building (and observing) communities becomes a window into human nuance: values, ego, generosity, integrity, discipline. Skool isnβt just a platform. It's a window into your passion. Itβs a mirror. Look at leaders like @Jack Robinson @David Iya @Phil Clark @John Pogue @Brandon Decremer @Emmanuel Nelson these guys are building INSANE communities, you can learn A LOT from them! Curious to know if anyone else has noticed how clearly leadership psychology shows up once you know what (not) to look for.