Table Of Content
- Why Add Community Features?
- Plan Your Community
- Practical Steps to Add Forums on Skool
- Add Live Coaching Links
- Use Peer Practice Groups
- Badge and Reward Systems
- Use Simple Tools Inside Skool
- Keep Community Safe and Kind
- Measure What Works
- Example Launch Plan (First 30 Days)
- Final Notes from TheEduAssist.com
Building a friendly learning place helps your sales students learn faster. This guide shows simple steps to add community features to your Skool sales course. We keep words short and steps clear so anyone can follow.
Why add community features?
People learn better when they talk and share. A good community helps students ask questions, practice, and get real feedback. If you want more sign-ups and better results, use community tools with your course.
Tip: Start small. Add one or two features first and watch how learners use them.
Plan your community
- Pick your goals. Ask: Do we want more practice? Faster answers? Peer reviews?
- Choose spaces. Use forums, live coaching links, and study groups.
- Set simple rules. Tell students how to be kind, how to ask, and how to help.
This planning step fits every course. It makes the rest easier.
Practical steps to add forums on Skool
- Create topic rooms. Make a room for sales scripts, objections, role play, and wins.
- Use clear titles. Name rooms like “Cold Call Scripts” or “Deal Wins.”
- Pin starter posts. Add a post to show how to ask questions and how to reply.
- Add weekly prompts. Post one small task each week to keep the room active.
When students see clear rooms, they join and share more. That builds trust fast.
Add live coaching links.
- Set regular sessions. Hold a 30–45 minute live coaching meet-up once a week.
- Use simple sign-ups. Share a calendar link or a sign-up post in the forum.
- Record sessions. Save them so students can watch later.
- Make follow-up posts. After each session, post key tips and action items.
Live links let students see the coach and ask quick questions. It makes the course feel real and helpful.
Use peer practice groups.
- Group by time or level. Put learners with similar schedules or skills together.
- Give role-play frames. Share a short script and a goal for the practice.
- Rotate partners. Change pairs every week so learners meet more people.
- Ask for short feedback. Use a simple form: “What went well? One tip?”
Peer groups build confidence. They also make the course more active each week.
Badge and reward systems
- Set tiny wins. Give badges for “First Post,” “Role-Play Star,” or “Deal Shared.”
- Show progress. Let learners see badges on their profiles.
- Celebrate in the feed. Share small wins in the main community area.
Badges help learners feel proud. They keep people coming back.
Use simple tools inside Skool.
- Forums for long talks and questions.
- Live links for coaching calls and Q&A.
- Files to share scripts and templates.
- Polls to ask quick questions and get fast feedback.
Use tools that are easy to find. If tools are simple, learners will use them.
Keep the community safe and kind.
- Set clear rules. No spam, be kind, help each other.
- Pick moderators. Choose a few helpers to keep the talks friendly.
- Fix problems fast. If someone needs help, act quickly.
A safe place makes learners feel at home and brave enough to practice.
Measure what works
- Watch the activity. Count posts, replies, and live session sign-ups.
- Ask for quick feedback. Use short polls after sessions.
- Change as needed. If a room is quiet, try new prompts or a live event.
Track the small wins. That helps you know what grows engagement.
Example launch plan (first 30 days)
- Week 1: Open forums and post starter threads.
- Week 2: Start live coaching link and record session.
- Week 3: Form peer practice groups and run the first role play.
- Week 4: Add badges and celebrate wins; ask for feedback.
A clear plan helps learners join fast and feel guided.
Final notes from TheEduAssist.com
Integrating community features makes your sales course stronger. Use forums, live coaching links, peer groups, and small rewards. Keep things simple and kinder. Test, watch, and change what learners need.
TheEduAssist.com can help set up your first forum and plan your live coaching links so your students start talking and winning fast.