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Owned by Ryan

Skool Speedrun

149 members โ€ข $9/month

Build a Profitable Skool Community!

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12 contributions to What Is Skool?
How Nick Saraev Built $300K per Month on Skool With YouTube
If youโ€™re looking at Skoolers who are making a lot of money, winning games, and consistently getting traffic from Skool, youโ€™ll notice something simple... They have a YouTube channel! Not all of them. But enough of the top earners that it stops being a coincidence. That's also when they start to get an amazing amount of traffic from Skool, because it's coming alongside their outside traffic and accelerating their growth. I remembered watching a Skool Games recording where The Goat at the time shared his story of winning Games, hitting $300k/m without a team, and making 95% profit.. so I went on a hunt to find something about that recording. Wanted to share it with you: I grabbed the video at the time stamp 1:00:01 and MUST watch til about 1:05:33. But I recommend watching it til about 1:35:06. I was just trying to find how much content he was making at one point, which he shares how he started and where he was at the time of the video. A quote I liked from Sam Ovens in this was "I think the main point is you got to make content. You're going to suck at first. You got to keep going. Make a lot." Alex Hormozi said for a volume example he put out about 35,000 pieces of content so far that year... which is a LOT! That recording was July 29, 2025 when he was at $300k per month. At the time of this post, he is still at $227,217 per month.. which means he's definitely doing something right even if it's a bit different of a plan now. I've been working on my content plan for when I start posting consistently again on YouTube. I know I won't necessarily hit Alex's amount of content lol but I do want to have a good bit ready to go, because I'm learning those lessons that there are many phases to motherhood ...while also working on health stuff. It can be a lot! BUT one step at a time. So I'm planning on at least doing 3 videos a week, until I can build up to more. ๐Ÿ‘‡ If you are building right now, what does your actual output look like? ๐Ÿ‘‡ If you want to put out more, what would that look like?
5 likes โ€ข Mar 3
Nick da goat
Why the Skoolers Community Uses Vague Rules on Purpose
Iโ€™ve been asked this directly and Iโ€™ve also seen a lot of people asking it publicly. Why are the Skoolers community rules vague? Some people are totally fine with it. Others really dislike it. Both reactions are okay. Some people prefer things extremely clear with exact limits. Some are used to platforms where everything is spelled out. Others have been part of large communities before and already understand why vague rules exist in the first place. Hereโ€™s the part that matters and why I now strongly recommend vague rulesโ€ฆ even for smaller communities. Hard rules create loopholes. Vague rules create better communities. The moment you introduce hard limits, people naturally want to reach those limits. Instead of looking at the intention of a post, it turns into โ€œdoes this technically fit in the guidelines?โ€ It even takes away from something that makes a community really wonderful. If a community like Skoolers spelled out exactly what a good post is and what a bad post is, we might never see some of the creativity that comes from someone trying something out. From experimenting. From sharing something that wasnโ€™t done before that ends up being genuinely good. Vague rules leave room for that. They also mean that as moderators and admins, we end up having a lot of conversations. We look at patterns. We make decisions based on context instead of black and white rules. Sometimes there is a new person who is just trying to fit in. A post might technically be questionable, but the right response is to welcome them and guide them. Other times someone is new and blatantly self promoting, which clearly is not allowed. In that case, we can redirect and still welcome them without letting the behavior continue. Those situations look similar on paper but they are very different in reality. Vague rules allow for that distinction. They also protect against bad actors. An example that Andrew Kirby shared explains this well. If people were told they would not be prosecuted for stealing things under $50, you would immediately see people stealing things up to $49. The clear rule creates the behavior.
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49 members have voted
Why the Skoolers Community Uses Vague Rules on Purpose
2 likes โ€ข Feb 10
@Jenna Ostrye skool community actually, it was really fun and a cool spot to hang out, skool games was definitely better for the information about the games, scaling the community etc
3 likes โ€ข Feb 18
@Ellis Sargent
New Video: Some of you might not like this.
But if you're trying to make money on Skool, this is my recommendation. Whether you're just getting started or need a better plan, this shows how to use the 14-day trial to your advantage. Inside the video: โ€ข How to pick a topic people will pay for โ€ข A challenge format that helps members take quick action โ€ข What Sam Ovens says to do before you ever launch โ€ข What to do if you run out of time before you're ready โ€ข How to build momentum without overthinking it This is the video I wish more people watched before they opened a community. ๐Ÿ‘‰ The Fastest Way To Make Money On Skool If you'd like to help the channel show this to more people, leave a comment on YouTube with challenges you think would do well.
3 likes โ€ข Jul '25
@Artin Asghari
3 likes โ€ข Jul '25
@Artin Asghari I was just about to buy kourse too :/
The Untold Story Of How I First Talked To Ryan Duncan LOL
I just dropped a new YouTube short sharing how I first talked to @Ryan Duncanโ€ฆ and yes, it involved me totally chickening out unless my friend agreed to join the call too. This was back when Skoolers was still called Skool Community and it wasnโ€™t officially against the rules to drop Zoom links. Ryan posted one, and I really wanted to go. But I didnโ€™t know him. Didnโ€™t know the vibe. Didnโ€™t know who else would show up. So I peer pressured my friend (and podcast co-host) to go with me right after we finished recording an episode. LOL ๐Ÿ˜‚ Funny thing is, I ended up talking a bit in there and the vibe was chill. Now Iโ€™ll jump into calls without a second thought. I even remember my first Zoom with Sam. I was slightly nervous again. Why? I have no idea. But now itโ€™s not a big deal at all. ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™€๏ธ Confidence gets tested in all kinds of ways, even when you think you already have it. Push through. It gets easier every time. You can watch the YouTube Short here, if you want: https://youtube.com/shorts/aKWkqoa0PUM?si=rg0ZM-uiKHrwYBpw (Iโ€™ll share one of my tips for pushing past nervousness in the comments.) ๐Ÿ‘‡ Whatโ€™s something you were nervous aboutโ€ฆ but ended up being totally fine once you did it?
The Untold Story Of How I First Talked To Ryan Duncan LOL
6 likes โ€ข May '25
So much fun!
The Guy Sam Ovens Trusts with Skoolโ€™s Money Made a Free Group
I checked with James Agius to make sure this community is active and he said yes. He's Skoolโ€™s Financial Controller and created this group to help you get clarity around both personal and business finance. If youโ€™re confused about money, whether itโ€™s managing your personal budget or making smarter business decisions, this will help. James has worked closely with Sam for years. You mightโ€™ve even noticed their photos look almost identical.. ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ Inside the group, youโ€™ll find support around budgeting, saving, investing, accounting, financial strategy, and how to take control of your money instead of guessing. Itโ€™s simple, direct, and genuinely useful whether youโ€™re just getting started or already earning online. Join here ๐Ÿ‘‰ Skool of Finance If you're already in, feel free to share what you've gotten out of it so far.
The Guy Sam Ovens Trusts with Skoolโ€™s Money Made a Free Group
4 likes โ€ข Apr '25
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Ryan Duncan
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139points to level up
" The Skool Guy" ๐Ÿ† 7x Skool Games Winner ๐Ÿ”ฅ Want The Sauce? ๐Ÿ‘‰ Skool.com/sauce

Active 9m ago
Joined Oct 10, 2024
ENFP
skool.com/free
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