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Owned by William

Unshakeable Entrepreneurs

125 members • Free

This group keeps entrepreneurs steady inside so their business grows predicatably outside. No Zero Days 🔥

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The Skool Nichers

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Agentic Entrepreneurs

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28 contributions to WISE Skool Building Hub 🤓
1 like • 4d
Great stuff, thanks for compiling Wendy
Skool News #38 - How to Reduce Churn
Sam Ovens & Andrew Kirby share: - How to reduce churn + platform averages - The longer members stay, the less they churn (only 2% churn after 6-months!) - Common patterns + examples of people who reduced churn - How to deal with trouble members + manage community - When to use moderators and how to find them Watch it on YouTube@skool-news channel here
1 like • 6d
This was great episode
Your WISE Skool Building Journey
The CATALYST Path of Progress EXPLORER When you first land here, you’re an Explorer. Think of this space like the front porch. You get to look around, check things out, and see how Skool actually works for small businesses without feeling like you’re committing to anything. When you join you get the ABC 5-Day Challenge, a 1:1 Quickstart session, and it starts with a simple 15 minute Quick Connect call so we can meet and explore what you’re building. People are always surprised that the Quickstart session is free because they get so much clarity. I want everyone to start with a focused direction instead of guessing in the dark. This stage is just about getting oriented and seeing what’s possible. BUILDER When you decide you want to build something for yourself, you shift into the Builder stage. This is when the lightbulb goes on and you think, “Okay, I want my own Skool,” or “I want help getting mine set up the right way.” Builders usually jump into the one-day setup, the full Catalyst Kit, or the Hotline if they already have a community and just want a direct line to me instead of digging for answers on their own. In Builder mode, you’re putting your foundation together and figuring out what kind of experience you want to create for your customers or members. Nothing fancy, nothing overwhelming. Just building something that works for your life and your business. CREATOR As things start clicking, you naturally step into the Creator stage. This is where you’ve got enough figured out that your questions become more specific and your goals get bigger. Maybe you’re ready to lead workshops or run private groups. Maybe you want to polish your setup, open a second Skool, or seriously boost engagement and visibility. This stage has more support, more feedback, and a closer circle of people who are building at the same pace as you. The work goes deeper here because you’re not just setting things up anymore. You’re shaping a real community that grows with you.
Your WISE Skool Building Journey
3 likes • 12d
Crystal clear roadmap there Wendy 🔥
How To Grow A Profitable Skool Community Without Building A Funnel Factory
Notes and takeaways from the 2025 Q3 Skool Games Winners 1-day in LA with Alex Hormozi Summary: This session is basically a Skool “advanced class” on three things: content, communities, and offers. On content, Alex explains that most people create “four-minute voice memo” content that should have been 30 seconds. The fix is structure and pre-thinking. Capture content in the most natural way (lives, calls, workshops), then edit for each platform. Start with volume so you get data, then squeeze that volume into fewer, higher-quality pieces over time. On communities, the theme is simplicity and leverage. Most small business owners and wellness providers are stuck in the same trap... Too many platforms. Too many funnels. Too many half-finished ideas. And then someone tells you to “make more content” on top of all that. The result is exactly what Alex described: Your content becomes that four-minute voice memo that should have been 30 seconds. You feel like you’re working hard and still not seeing steady growth. Let’s fix that. In this post I want to distill what was discussed and give you a simple way to think about: - How to create content that actually moves people without burning out - How to use one Skool live as a full content engine - Why the About page can beat a traditional funnel - When to use free, paid, public, private, and tiers - What really keeps people paying month after month All in plain language, so you can put it to work in your own Skool community. 1. Stop talking like a four-minute voice memo If you’ve ever listened to a long voice note and thought, “This could have been 30 seconds,” you already know the problem. Most creators hit record before they think. The fix is not to turn into a robot.
3 likes • 12d
Nice! I’ll put this into practice tomorrow
Yes, You Can Grow a Profitable Skool Without a Big Audience
Building a profitable Skool doesn’t require a big audience, demand aheavy content schedule, or need a bunch of tech platforms. Most small business owners limit growth because they think they need something. More followers, more money, more content. Drop the excuses and just start. Here’s the real path that works pulled from a community earning over $16K/month with roughly a thousand subscribers. 🔬 Don’t go broad. Go microscopic. Most people make “general content” and hope someone bites. What actually converts are ultra-specific videos that speak to one problem for one type of person. A video with 112 views can outperform one with 20,000 when the content is precise. Your niche is not the category or topic as much as the moment someone realizes you solved the exact problem they have. Let's unpack that. Most people define a “niche” as: ❌ yoga teachers ❌ fitness over 40 ❌ business owners ❌ women in wellness ❌ local service providers That’s categories. What is the definition of a niche? a job, position, or place that is very suitable for someone A business niche is a specialized, focused segment of a larger market with a specific target audience A niche becomes real the second a person recognizes: “That’s exactly the problem I’m dealing with right now.” That moment is the sale. Topics are broad. Moments are specific. Specific is what converts. A topic is what you talk about. A moment is why they pay attention. People join communities because something clicked: - “That’s my exact bottleneck.” - “That’s the frustration I haven’t been able to fix.” - “That’s why nothing else has worked.” - “That’s the exact step I’ve been missing.” Not the subject matter. Not the content category. Not the demographic. The attraction lives in the intersection: - A specific pain they can feel in their body or business. - A specific moment where they say, “That’s me.” - Your ability to solve that moment quickly.
Yes, You Can Grow a Profitable Skool Without a Big Audience
2 likes • 13d
I fully agree on going niche (at least to start) I could stand to go a few levels more niche myself.
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William Carter
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@willcarter
I help entrepreneurs stabilise their identity so execution becomes predictable.

Active 6h ago
Joined Aug 21, 2025
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