I will skool community setup skool credit repair skool online course community setup


About this gig
Every Skool community starts with a vision. Most never live up to it.
Members join excited, then quietly disappear. The classroom sits half-finished. Engagement flatlines two weeks in. And the creator who had so much to offer ends up wondering if community is even worth it.
Whether you're launching a credit repair community, rolling out an online course, or building a coaching hub on Skool the setup, structure, and strategy behind it matter more than most people realize.
WHAT YOU WILL GET:
- Full Skool Online Community Setup
- Advanced Skool Automation
- Course Sales Funnel
- Skool Course Creation
- Connect Skool with CRM
- Course SEO
- Credit Repair Course Creation
- Community Management
- Community Branding Setup
- Community Event Setup
- Course Payment Integration
- Member Management
- Ongoing Support
- Online Course Creation
- SEO Optimization
- Skool Plugins (Membership Questions, etc)
- Gamification Features
Stop losing members to a community that wasn't built to hold them. Message me and let's fix that.
Get to know Steven Friday
Your Skool community shouldn't just exist it should perform
- FromUnited States
- Member sinceApr 2026
Languages
English, Spanish, German, French, Italian
My Portfolio
FAQ
Do I really need a professional to set up my Skool community?
Honestly? No. If you're okay with spending weeks figuring out the tech, watching members lose interest before you even launch, and rebuilding everything six months later — you can absolutely do it yourself. But if you'd rather get it right the first time, that's what I'm here for.
What if my niche is too small for a community to work?
Smaller niches actually build tighter, more loyal communities. The problem was never your niche — it was the setup. A credit repair community, a coaching group, a course hub — they all work when built with the right structure. The ones that fail were just never built intentionally.
Can't I just use a free template and figure it out?
You can. Most people do. And most people end up with a community that looks fine but performs terribly. Templates don't come with strategy, engagement systems, or the experience of knowing what actually keeps members active. But if a template feels like enough — go for it.
What if my community fails even after you set it up?
That's a fair fear. But here's the truth — communities don't fail because of bad setups alone. They fail because of no strategy, no onboarding, no culture, and no engagement plan. That's exactly what I build in from day one. The setup I deliver isn't decoration — it's a system.
Is this worth it if I only have a small audience?
The worst time to build a community is after you've already grown. Small audiences are easier to onboard, easier to engage, and easier to build culture with. Waiting until you're "big enough" is how people end up with 10,000 followers and a dead community.
How do I know you won't just hand me something generic?
You don't — until you look at the work. Every community I build is shaped around the creator's brand, niche, and goals. If you want a cookie-cutter setup you could've Googled yourself, I'm probably not the right fit. If you want something built to actually convert and retain — we should talk.
What if I'm not tech-savvy enough to manage it after you set it up?
Good. That means you'll actually use what I build instead of overcomplicating it. I set up communities that are simple to manage on the back end and powerful on the front end. You don't need to be technical — you just need to show up and serve your members.

