After I created my community, a lot of friends and people I know asked me the same questions:
“Why?”
“What’s the point?”
“Isn’t it crazy to pay for a platform when you can make a group anywhere for free or cheaper?”
Then came the doubts:
“What if it doesn’t work?”
“What if Skool doesn’t make you money?”
“What if you lose your investment?”
Here’s exactly what I told them.
If you fail on OnlyFans… do you blame the platform, or yourself?
Most people say: “Myself. The platform just gives me the space.”
Exactly.
Skool is the same thing just in a different category. It’s not about entertainment, it’s about education, value, and community.
A platform where I can:
That’s literally the cost of cigarettes for a week.
So the real question is not “Will Skool make me money?”
The real question is:
“Can I create something valuable enough that people are willing to pay for?”
Because success or failure has nothing to do with Skool.
It depends entirely on you.
People are hearing about it constantly.
That means one very important thing:
It’s easier to sell a subscription on Skool than on your own random website or unknown platform.
There’s already trust.
There’s already awareness.
You’re not starting from zero.
And I’m not stopping at one community I’m planning to build multiple.
Why?
Because people don’t want “everything.”
They want specific results.
If you’re good at 10 things and you put everything into one community, people will get overwhelmed.
They’ll get lost.
Even if the price is good confusion kills conversions.
So instead of one general community…
I’d rather have 10 specific ones.
But your chances of making money? Much higher.
“You’ll never be like the top 1%.”
That mindset is already a failure.
Unrealistic expectations kill projects before they even start.
Instead of asking:
“How do I become the best in the world?”
Ask this:
“How much do I need to earn per month to solve one real problem in my life right now?”
Start there.
Because later, your goals will evolve anyway but at least you’ll already be making money.
Be yourself.
Trust your instinct.
Attract the right people not everyone.
It gets maybe 50 visitors per month.
And guess what?
Every single one of them buys.
Why?
Because those 50 people are sent there directly by him.
“Hey, if you want it go here and buy.”
That’s it.
No funnels.
No complexity.
No overthinking.
Don’t set unrealistic standards.
Don’t wait for perfection.
Start with one simple thing.
Make it work.
Then grow from there.
That’s how this actually works.
Create your own community
“Why?”
“What’s the point?”
“Isn’t it crazy to pay for a platform when you can make a group anywhere for free or cheaper?”
Then came the doubts:
“What if it doesn’t work?”
“What if Skool doesn’t make you money?”
“What if you lose your investment?”
Here’s exactly what I told them.
If you fail on OnlyFans… do you blame the platform, or yourself?
Most people say: “Myself. The platform just gives me the space.”
Exactly.
Skool is the same thing just in a different category. It’s not about entertainment, it’s about education, value, and community.
My Way of Thinking
Let’s break it down simply:A platform where I can:
- Upload all my content
- Organize it cleanly
- Set tiers and one-time payments
- Host unlimited media
- Build a real community
That’s literally the cost of cigarettes for a week.
So the real question is not “Will Skool make me money?”
The real question is:
“Can I create something valuable enough that people are willing to pay for?”
Because success or failure has nothing to do with Skool.
It depends entirely on you.
The Hidden Advantage Nobody Talks About
Skool is being promoted everywhere.People are hearing about it constantly.
That means one very important thing:
It’s easier to sell a subscription on Skool than on your own random website or unknown platform.
There’s already trust.
There’s already awareness.
You’re not starting from zero.
My Strategy Going Forward
I’m moving everything digital I have onto Skool.And I’m not stopping at one community I’m planning to build multiple.
Why?
Because people don’t want “everything.”
They want specific results.
If you’re good at 10 things and you put everything into one community, people will get overwhelmed.
They’ll get lost.
Even if the price is good confusion kills conversions.
So instead of one general community…
I’d rather have 10 specific ones.
- Clear topic
- Clear value
- Clear audience
But your chances of making money? Much higher.
The Biggest Mistake People Make
Some people told me:“You’ll never be like the top 1%.”
That mindset is already a failure.
Unrealistic expectations kill projects before they even start.
Instead of asking:
“How do I become the best in the world?”
Ask this:
“How much do I need to earn per month to solve one real problem in my life right now?”
Start there.
Because later, your goals will evolve anyway but at least you’ll already be making money.
Personal Advice (Take It or Leave It)
Forget all the advice you hear no matter who it comes from.Be yourself.
Trust your instinct.
Attract the right people not everyone.
Simple Example
A friend of mine has a terrible website.It gets maybe 50 visitors per month.
And guess what?
Every single one of them buys.
Why?
Because those 50 people are sent there directly by him.
“Hey, if you want it go here and buy.”
That’s it.
No funnels.
No complexity.
No overthinking.
Final Thought
Don’t complicate things.Don’t set unrealistic standards.
Don’t wait for perfection.
Start with one simple thing.
Make it work.
Then grow from there.
That’s how this actually works.
Create your own community