Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Zully JF

AccessZully Community

17 members • Free

Guiding individuals with disabilities out of quiet survival and into the digital space to access, design, and live life on our own terms.

Memberships

the skool CLASSIFIEDS

1.8k members • Free

Digital Boss Skool Hub

455 members • Free

Scale Your Brand

465 members • Free

PPP-Skool💰→Optimize-w-Clarity

151 members • $2/month

Digital Growth Community

59.9k members • Free

AuthorityCam

277 members • Free

Neurodiverse Minds

148 members • Free

KDP Publishing

1k members • Free

GCC & Wok Star Community

22 members • Free

7 contributions to KDP Publishing
What Books Did You Read in Childhood?
📚 Throwback Question: What Did You Read as a Kid? I was thinking back to my childhood reading habits, and it hit me how different they were compared to what I read now. Back then, I was all about fun, fictional books—anything that kept me entertained and pulled me into a story. One of my favorites was the Goosebumps series. I used to fly through those books as a pre-teen. And then when the Goosebumps show came out, it was such a cool experience seeing those stories come to life. I remember noticing how some parts were different from what I had imagined while reading—which made it even more fun. It really made me realize how powerful storytelling is… especially when it sticks with you years later. Now I’m curious—what about YOU? - What books or series did you love growing up? - Were you into fiction, or something totally different? - Did any of those stories stick with you into adulthood? Drop your favorites below 👇 Let’s take a little trip down memory lane.
What Books Did You Read in Childhood?
4 likes • 21h
Coming from a foreign land, not having access to books, the first book I was introduced to in my new home was a picture dictionary. I loved the images and fantasizing about the language.
Let's Build A Story Together 📖
Let’s build a story together 👀 I’ll start with one sentence…and each person adds the NEXT sentence in the comments. Build on to the story by creating the next sentence. If you see someone typing, wait for their sentence and then type yours out, building on theirs Let’s see where this goes 😂 Here's the first sentence: 👉 Ashley was walking through the grocery store when all of a sudden, everything got quiet, and the lights started to flicker. Your turn 👇 (Only ONE sentence per comment—no overthinking it, just keep it going)
Let's Build A Story Together 📖
4 likes • 3d
a very wise dog who was able to interpret every sound and observe every gesture made by humans
🎉 FRIDAY SHARE 🎉
It’s time to put yourself out there. Share whatever you’re working on or proud of right now. This community is full of creators, authors, and entrepreneurs, and sometimes the best thing we can do is help each other get a little more visibility. 💡 IDEAS ON WHAT YOU COULD SHARE: • Yourself and what you do • Your Skool community • A book you're writing or recently published • A project you're building • A shoutout to another member • A video, post, or resource • Affiliate links (yes, those are allowed) The goal is simple: help our members get seen. Just one request so this stays valuable for everyone. 👉 1 RULE: If you share something, please also leave a thoughtful or helpful comment on someone else’s post. Support goes both ways, and when we all participate, the whole community benefits. Now let’s see what everyone is building 👇
🎉 FRIDAY SHARE 🎉
5 likes • 5d
On Wednesday, May 7 at 8:00 PM EDT I will be a featured guest on the Landmark Difference Makers Interview Series, live and open to the public. 📕We will be talking about my book, From Where I Sit: Anything and Everything Is Possible, the work of Causes for Change International, and what becomes possible when a person decides to stop accepting the minimum and start building a life by design. This is a conversation I have been looking forward to. I would love for you to be there. I can provide you with the link to register, let me know. ❤️Create. Design. Build with Intention. Live with Purpose.
0 likes • 3d
@Bec K thank you, I have received great feedback
Driving Traffic to Skool or Books?
You might have heard of Linktree…it's a way to create a microsite that you add to your social media platforms. But here’s a better option built inside the Skool ecosystem by one of our own. @Jeff Baer runs BIO BUILDERS, and it’s honestly one of the most practical tools I’ve used for turning social traffic into real conversions. I recently updated my own microsite (you can check it out here 👉 https://ez.to/kbrea) and made one simple change: instead of just listing links, I featured my Skool community visually right at the top. Not just a button—but something that actually stands out and pulls attention. That one shift made a noticeable difference. My conversion rate from microsite → Skool community is now close to 50%. Most people treat their bio link like a dumping ground for links, but it should really function more like a focused landing page. Whether you’re trying to grow your Skool community, promote a book, or drive traffic to an offer, you want one clear priority that people can’t miss. What I like about Jeff’s setup is that it actually supports that goal. It’s: - Simple to customize - Built with conversions in mind - Affordable (under $9/month) And if you don’t want to build it yourself, he also offers a VIP option (~$160) where he’ll set everything up with you on a Zoom call and optimize it for conversions. If you’re already creating content and getting traffic, this is one of those small upgrades that can make a real difference in your results. ➡️ GO JOIN BIOBUILDERS
Driving Traffic to Skool or Books?
4 likes • 11d
@Krista Brea very nice microsite. It’s cheery, energetic, and legible
Feeling overwhelmed by the idea of writing a book? 😅📚
Let me take some pressure off you real quick… You don’t have to do this the hard way. Here are a few options most people don’t realize they have: 1. You don’t have to write it yourself. You can hire a ghostwriter or collaborate with someone who helps bring your ideas to life. Your role becomes the visionary, not the one staring at a blank page. 2. Start simple (seriously) Your first book does NOT need to be a 30,000-word masterpiece. You can start with: 📖 Workbooks 📓 Journals 🗓️ Planners ✏️ Coloring books This is one of the fastest ways to learn the KDP process without getting stuck in overthinking. 3. Repurpose what you already know. You probably already have content sitting somewhere: • Past posts • Emails • Trainings • Voice notes That can all be turned into a book way faster than starting from scratch. 4. Use AI as your assistant (not your replacement)AI can help you: • Outline your book • Expand ideas • Reword sections • Speed up your workflow You’re still the creator—it just helps you move faster. 5. Validate BEFORE you write. This is where most people go wrong. Before you spend weeks creating something, make sure people are actually searching for it. A simple keyword check can save you from writing a book no one buys. 6. Think of your book as a tool, not just a product. Your book can: 💰Bring in passive income 🌟 Grow your authority 🧑‍🤝‍🧑Send people into your community 🎉 Turn readers into clients It’s bigger than just “selling a book.” If you’ve been putting this off because it feels like too much… this is your sign to simplify it. You don’t need perfect. You just need to start. 💡
Feeling overwhelmed by the idea of writing a book? 😅📚
3 likes • 12d
I love journals , I created a few to get started.
2 likes • 12d
@Krista Brea I understand what you are saying about getting a “ little addicting”. I had to force myself to stop , otherwise my book would not have been written.
1-7 of 7
Zully JF Alvarado
3
35points to level up
@zully-jf-alvarado-7590
I guide individuals with disabilities out of quiet survival and into the digital space to access, design, and live life on their own terms.

Active 6h ago
Joined Apr 11, 2026
Florida
Powered by