Without any prior audience, authority or following
An email list is one of the most valuable assets an online business can have.
As Alex Hormozi said "If you're not making at least 30% of your revenue from email, you're missing out".
Imagine waking up every morning to a list of highly qualified email leads for your Skool community, all gathered effortlessly while you were catching some Zzz’s 😴.
Sounds pretty cool, right?
LinkedIn isn’t just for job hunting or networking anymore.
In this post, I’ll share how you can use simple tools to automate email extraction on LinkedIn.
No gimmicks, no lead magnets — just smart, thoughtful automation.
I’ll walk you through:
Let’s dive into this simple, no-sweat way to grow your email list and leads! 😊
Finding a niche isn’t guesswork; it’s strategy.
Using tested methods like the Niche Roadmap and AI tools, even creators with zero audience have created thriving communities in just 48 hours​​.
Combine your passion with proven market data, and you're unstoppable!
By the end of this post, you’ll have:
Here’s the exact roadmap for creating your own Skool community:
This is a complete review of Skool.com, the child of Sam Ovens and Alex Hormozi.
Picture this: You’re starting a community or launching an online course.
You want to keep things simple but powerful, and the idea of juggling five different platforms feels like trying to keep plates spinning at a carnival.
Enter Skool, a platform designed to bring courses, communities, payments and event schedules under one roof.
But is it the golden ticket you’ve been looking for?
Let’s dive into the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Skool, with some examples to see if running your own Skool group is right for you.
But first...
This post gained traction on skool.com and became a hot tip. Check it out!
To build a successful community, you don't need 1,000 fans.
You need 10 true regulars.
(Credit to David Spinks for this idea... It's brilliant).
This may contradict what most people imagine about communities — spaces with hundreds or thousands of people actively contributing and forming relationships where everyone is engaged and involved.
In reality, only a small percentage of your members will actively participate.
You don't need a lot of active members to get conversations flowing; you only need t...