Synthesizer by Andrew Kirby β Member Review
This is my community review of Synthesizer by Andrew Kirby. "The culture inside Synthesizer makes it easy to jump in and partictipate just by reading the threads." I originally joined because of Andrew Kirby himself. On Skool, heβs always been someone I paid attention to. Along with Ryan Duncan, he was one of the people I followed closely to understand how communities are built and how they actually function. Andrew already had a community, and I wanted to experience it from the inside. When I realized the focus of Synthesizer was about taking in information, integrating it, and then figuring out how it works for you, it immediately clicked. Thatβs basically what I do every day. I love researching, learning, and then synthesizing ideas into something that actually works in real life. I joined because of Andrewβ¦ but I stayed because the content and conversations are genuinely good. Itβs not just about building a Skool community. A lot of the discussions revolve around relationship building, culture, and how communities actually function. You can create a group easily, but building real interaction and connection is a completely different thing. Thatβs where the conversations inside Synthesizer tend to go. Every Monday thereβs a call thatβs full of useful ideas about community building on Skool. The calls also help strengthen relationships between members. The discussions tend to go deep, and people are very supportive of each other. What really stands out though is the culture. When you go into the community feed, you can immediately see how people interact. You can open a post and just read through the comment threadsβ¦ and then the threads inside the threads. It becomes a living example of how community conversation works. There are also memes and lighter moments, but overall the environment feels like a group of people who genuinely care about building thoughtful communities. It also works really well as a kind of think tank. If youβre trying to work through an idea, test a concept, or synthesize something youβre learning, people will engage with it and help you think it through.