Table of Contents
- Quick answers: What I wish I knew upfront
- My early mistakes (so you can avoid them)
- Mistake #1: Thinking I needed a massive audience first
- Mistake #2: Building on platforms my members barely used
- Mistake #3: Selling “access” instead of a clear outcome
- Mistake #4: Overbuilding before anyone joined
- Mistake #5: Underestimating accountability and gamification
- The mindset shifts that changed everything
- Shift #1: From “content machine” to “results architect”
- Shift #2: From “everyone is welcome” to “this is for these people”
- Shift #3: From “I have to do everything” to “members are the engine”
- Why Skool is the platform I wish I had from day one
- 1. Courses + community in one clean interface
- 2. Simple pricing and easy setup
- 3. Engagement built-in: levels, points, and leaderboards
- 4. Great mobile app (this is underrated)
- 5. Easy to run live experiences and events
- 6. Builder-friendly for creators at any level
- How to start your online community the right way (step-by-step)
- Step 1: Define your “one-sentence promise”
- Step 2: Map the member journey
- Step 3: Start with a “minimum viable curriculum”
- Step 4: Design your weekly rhythm
- Step 5: Launch with “founding members” first
- Step 6: Use Skool’s gamification to drive behavior
- Step 7: Make your offer clear and simple
- Common community mistakes (and how Skool helps you dodge them)
- Mistake: Too many channels, not enough focus
- Mistake: No onboarding structure
- Mistake: Relying only on async posts
- Mistake: Ignoring data and feedback
- Simple comparison: Skool vs common alternatives
- What I’d do in my first 30 days on Skool
- Week 1: Setup and structure
- Week 2: Founding member invitations
- Week 3: Deliver, listen, adjust
- Week 4: Solidify your rhythm and add light gamification
- FAQ: Starting an online community on Skool
- 1. Do I need a big audience before launching a Skool community?
- 2. Should my community be free or paid at the start?
- 3. Is Skool only for course creators?
- 4. What if I’m not “techy”? Can I still set this up?
- 5. How do I keep my community active over time?
- 6. Is Skool worth it if I’m just starting out?
- Final thoughts: Build the community you wish you had
- More tools you might like

Quick answers: What I wish I knew upfront
- You don’t need a huge audience to start a paid or free community.
- You do need a clear promise and a clear path for members.
- The platform matters more than you think—friction kills engagement.
- Trying to “be everywhere” burns you out and confuses your people.
- Communities thrive when content, accountability, and connection are in one place.
- Skool handles courses, community, events, and gamification in a single simple app.
My early mistakes (so you can avoid them)
Mistake #1: Thinking I needed a massive audience first
- “I’ll start when I hit X followers.”
- “I’m not an expert enough yet.”
- “Who am I to charge for a community?”
- You don’t need thousands of people; you need the right 20–50 to start.
- Communities grow from clarity and transformation, not vanity metrics.
- If people are already asking for ongoing help, you’re ready.
- A specific topic (e.g., email marketing, fitness for busy parents, coding bootcamps, wedding photography)
- A repeatable result you can help people get
- Even a small group of engaged followers or clients
Mistake #2: Building on platforms my members barely used
- A Facebook Group (algorithm roulette, tons of distractions)
- A Slack workspace (felt like work, not like a community)
- A course platform with a “forum” bolted on (clunky, no one checked it)
- People bought the course… then never logged back in.
- New posts got buried by bad UI and notifications no one saw.
- Community “energy” died because nothing pulled people back.
- Courses, community, events, and DMs live together.
- Members get pull-notifications when something matters.
- The mobile app is actually good, so people participate on the go.
Mistake #3: Selling “access” instead of a clear outcome
“Join my community to connect with like-minded people and get support!”
- “Go from zero to your first $1,000 online in 8 weeks.”
- “Publish your first newsletter in 30 days with our help.”
- “Lose 10 pounds in 90 days without crazy dieting.”
- Who is it for? (be specific)
- What problem does it solve?
- What’s the main result they can expect?
- What milestones will they hit along the way?
Mistake #4: Overbuilding before anyone joined
- Fancy course curriculums no one finished
- Complicated tech stacks with automation webs
- Custom designs and branding
- Launch messy with a minimum viable structure.
- Serve your first members deeply.
- Build with them instead of for an imaginary audience.
- Create a simple course area with a few core modules.
- Add more lessons as questions come up.
- Adjust the community categories, rules, and events in real-time.
Mistake #5: Underestimating accountability and gamification
- Create accountability (check-ins, challenges, action tasks)
- Make participation rewarding (progress, status, recognition)
- Levels and points for engagement
- Leaderboards and rewards
- Simple ways to run challenges and track progress
The mindset shifts that changed everything
Shift #1: From “content machine” to “results architect”
“If I just release more content, people will stick around.”
- Map the journey from A → B.
- Create only the content needed to move them along that path.
- Use the community for implementation, not just consumption.
- A course area with 5–10 core modules (not 50).
- Weekly implementation calls or Q&A sessions.
- A feed where members share wins, ask questions, and get feedback.
Shift #2: From “everyone is welcome” to “this is for these people”
- Mixed expectations
- People at wildly different levels
- Vague conversations that went nowhere
- “Beginner creators who want their first $1,000 online”
- “Busy parents who want to get fit in 30 minutes/day”
- “Developers aiming for their first remote job”
- Design specific lessons
- Run targeted challenges
- Celebrate relevant wins
Shift #3: From “I have to do everything” to “members are the engine”
- Answer every question myself
- Start every conversation
- Host every call
- Encouraging members to help each other
- Highlighting member wins and contributions
- Giving leadership roles to power users
- Leaderboards that surface your most active members
- Levels that can be tied to perks (like co-hosting calls, moderating, or getting access to special channels)
Why Skool is the platform I wish I had from day one
1. Courses + community in one clean interface
- Courses in one app
- Community in a Facebook Group or Slack
- Events inside another calendar tool
- Community feed – like a focused, distraction-free group.
- Classroom – your course modules, drip content, and resources.
- Calendar – live calls, workshops, office hours.
- DMs & profiles – members connect with each other easily.
2. Simple pricing and easy setup
- Course platform
- Community platform
- Payment processor upgrades
- Calendar/booking tools
- One simple monthly fee per community (with built-in payments)
- Unlimited members on paid tiers
- Straightforward setup that doesn’t require a developer
- Create your Skool community.
- Add a few intro lessons.
- Set your price.
- Invite your first members.
3. Engagement built-in: levels, points, and leaderboards
- Members earn points for posting, commenting, and helping.
- They level up as they participate.
- You can unlock bonuses at certain levels (hidden content, special calls, etc.).
- People love visible progress.
- Friendly competition gets them to show up.
- You no longer have to nag people to participate.
- Level 3 unlocks a bonus “advanced Q&A” call.
- Level 5 unlocks a private channel for power members.
- Levels unlock extra resources or templates inside the Classroom.
4. Great mobile app (this is underrated)
- Has a clunky mobile experience
- Sends confusing or delayed notifications
- Makes posting or replying annoying
- Check the community feed
- Watch lessons
- Join calls from event links
- Reply to posts and DMs
5. Easy to run live experiences and events
- Add recurring weekly calls to the calendar
- Drop Zoom (or other tool) links in the event
- Have members RSVP and get reminders
- Weekly Q&A
- Hot-seat coaching calls
- Implementation sessions (“Coworking” focus blocks)
- Monthly guest expert sessions
6. Builder-friendly for creators at any level
- Just starting with 20–50 “founding members,” or
- Managing hundreds or thousands of students
- Start with 2–3 categories in the community feed.
- Add a basic course with your core lessons.
- Introduce levels and bonuses once you have momentum.
How to start your online community the right way (step-by-step)
Step 1: Define your “one-sentence promise”
I help [specific people] get [specific result] in [timeframe or context] through [your method].
- “I help freelance designers land better clients in 90 days through positioning, outbound scripts, and a portfolio makeover.”
- “I help busy moms build a consistent workout habit in 8 weeks using 30-minute at-home routines.”
- “I help junior developers get their first remote job by building real projects and improving interview skills.”
Step 2: Map the member journey
- Onboarding – Getting oriented, setting goals.
- Foundation – Key skills, mindset, and core knowledge.
- Implementation – Doing the work with feedback.
- Acceleration – Advanced strategies, scaling, optimization.
- Mastery / Alumni – Staying sharp, giving back, mentoring.
- Course modules that match these stages.
- Community categories that mirror them (e.g., #wins, #questions, #resources).
- Events aligned with each stage.
Step 3: Start with a “minimum viable curriculum”
- 1 welcome / orientation lesson
- 3–7 core lessons on fundamentals
- 1–2 quick-win exercises or templates
Step 4: Design your weekly rhythm
- Mondays: Goal-setting or intention post
- Mid-week: Live Q&A or implementation call
- Fridays: Wins + reflection thread
- Schedule recurring events on the community calendar
- Post weekly prompts that members come to expect
- Use pinned posts for ongoing challenges or announcements
Step 5: Launch with “founding members” first
- Invite a small group of 10–50 founding members.
- Offer them a special deal (e.g., lower rate or lifetime access) in exchange for feedback.
- Work closely with them for 4–8 weeks.
- Improve your onboarding.
- Refine your curriculum.
- Tweak pricing and positioning if needed.
- Clear “Start Here” posts.
- Introductory lessons in the Classroom.
- Profile questions to learn about your members.
Step 6: Use Skool’s gamification to drive behavior
- Posting implementation updates
- Helping others solve problems
- Attending live calls
- Unlock secret resources at Level 3.
- Access a private advanced channel at Level 5.
- Get a 1:1 call draw entry when hitting certain milestones.
Step 7: Make your offer clear and simple
- Who it’s for
- What they get (community, calls, course, support)
- The main outcome/result
- The price and what’s included
- Headline: Get [result] in [time] without [big pain]
- Subhead: Join a small, focused community where we do this together.
- Section: “This is for you if…” (3–5 bullets)
- Section: “Inside, you’ll get…” (course, calls, community, templates)
- Section: “How it works” (step-by-step)
Common community mistakes (and how Skool helps you dodge them)
Mistake: Too many channels, not enough focus
- 10+ categories
- Multiple platforms (Discord + FB + separate course site)
- Complex rules that no one remembers
- Start Here / Announcements
- Wins & Accountability
- Questions & Feedback
- Resources
Mistake: No onboarding structure
- Pinned “Start Here” post in the community feed.
- A short Orientation module in the Classroom.
- A welcome challenge (e.g., introduce yourself, share your goal, complete the first exercise).
Mistake: Relying only on async posts
- Weekly office hours or Q&A
- Monthly workshops or guest sessions
- Implementation sprints
Mistake: Ignoring data and feedback
- Which posts get engagement
- What questions keep repeating
- Where people drop off in your lessons
- Use Skool’s stats and activity feed to see what’s working.
- Ask members directly what they need more/less of.
- Adjust your content and events every 4–8 weeks.
Simple comparison: Skool vs common alternatives
Feature / Need | Skool | Facebook Group | Slack/Discord |
Courses + Community | Yes, in one place | No (needs external tool) | No (needs external tool) |
Distraction level | Low, focused | High (feeds, ads, DMs) | Medium-High (chat noise) |
Gamification (levels/points) | Built-in | None (needs manual hacks) | Limited (bots, custom coding) |
Events & Calendar | Built-in | Basic events, scattered | Bots/integrations required |
Mobile app experience | Clean, purpose-built | Good but noisy | Varies, often overwhelming |
Payment integration | Built-in checkout | Needs 3rd-party tools | Needs 3rd-party tools |
What I’d do in my first 30 days on Skool
Week 1: Setup and structure
- Clarify the one-sentence promise.
- Create the Skool community and set up:
- Name, branding, and description
- 3–5 core community categories
- 1–2 recurring weekly events
- Add a “Start Here” post and orientation lesson.
- Create 3–7 core lessons in the Classroom.
Week 2: Founding member invitations
- Personally invite your warmest leads:
- Past clients
- Engaged followers
- Email subscribers who reply often
- Offer a “founding member” deal with a clear deadline.
- Onboard each member with a welcome DM and tag them in the “Introduce Yourself” thread.
Week 3: Deliver, listen, adjust
- Run your first live call (Q&A + orientation).
- Encourage members to post wins and questions.
- Note common struggles and add or tweak lessons in the Classroom.
- Ask for honest feedback: “What’s most valuable so far? What’s missing?”
Week 4: Solidify your rhythm and add light gamification
- Lock in your weekly rhythm (e.g., Monday goals, mid-week call, Friday wins).
- Turn on Skool’s levels/points (if you haven’t already).
- Announce simple rewards for hitting certain levels.
- Collect 3–5 short testimonials from early members.
- A real community with real members
- A tested structure and rhythm
- Proof that your offer works (or clarity on how to refine it)
FAQ: Starting an online community on Skool
1. Do I need a big audience before launching a Skool community?
2. Should my community be free or paid at the start?
3. Is Skool only for course creators?
4. What if I’m not “techy”? Can I still set this up?
5. How do I keep my community active over time?
6. Is Skool worth it if I’m just starting out?
Final thoughts: Build the community you wish you had
- Start before you feel perfectly ready.
- Focus on a clear promise and a clear path.
- Build with your members, not for imaginary ones.
- Use tools that make showing up easy and fun—for you and for them.






