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Glossary · 4 min read

Skool 77 ft — collaborations, not skool.com

If you typed *skool 77 ft* you're looking for Skool 77 collaboration tracks — the abbreviation *ft* in YouTube and Spotify titles means *featuring*. Skool 77 is a Mexican rap group; nothing to do with skool.com, the community SaaS. Here's the clarifier and where to actually find the music.

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TL;DR

Skool 77 ft is shorthand for Skool 77 featuring another artist — a typical YouTube/Spotify title format like "Skool 77 ft. [Artist Name] — [Track]". Skool 77 is a Mexican rap group active in the underground hip-hop scene; ft points to their collaboration tracks. None of this is related to skool.com, the SaaS used by creators to run paid online communities. If you came here researching the platform by accident — or you're a skool.com community owner looking for tools that automate DM sequences, churn recovery, and member CSV export — the second half of this page is where you actually want to be.

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What *ft* means in a song title

In music release titles, ft. is short for featuring. It signals a guest performer on the track — usually a vocalist, rapper, or producer who isn't part of the main act but contributed a verse, hook, or beat. So "Skool 77 ft. [X]" means Skool 77 made the track and [X] guested on it. Variants you'll see: feat., with, &, vs. — they all mean roughly the same thing on streaming platforms, though vs. sometimes implies a more equal billing. The convention got standardized through hip-hop and electronic music in the 2000s and now appears across pretty much every genre on Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube.

Where to find Skool 77 collaboration tracks

Search YouTube for "Skool 77 ft" and you'll get a results page sorted by view count — the top hits are typically the most popular collabs in their catalog. Skool 77 has features across multiple albums and singles, often with other Mexican underground rap acts. Spotify and Apple Music carry parts of the catalog but coverage is patchy by region. For lyrics on individual ft tracks, Genius and Letras.com host user-submitted transcriptions; cross-check two sources because most are crowd-sourced rather than published officially. We're stopping here because this isn't a lyrics or music site — we're a tools layer for skool.com — and pointing you to the right place is more useful than guessing.

About skool.com (the platform people sometimes confuse this with)

skool.com is a SaaS for paid online communities — a single product with a feed, courses, calendar, and group chat. Creators run subscription groups there; members pay monthly for access. Owners pay skool.com $99/month per group plus a transaction fee on member payments. The platform launched in 2019 and is heavily used by info-product creators, coaches, and agency owners — Iman Gadzhi, Alex Hormozi, and Sam Ovens all run large groups there. By design skool.com keeps the feature set narrow: no native automation, no bulk DM, no CRM, no churn detection, no analytics export. The reasoning is product simplicity. The side effect is that owners doing real volume run into manual workflow ceilings fast.

Where tools4skool fits

tools4skool is a Chrome extension and dashboard that adds the workflow layer skool.com doesn't ship. The feature list maps directly to the things owners would otherwise do by hand: auto DM sequences with multi-condition triggers, image DMs, churn risk scores, a 60-second Churn Saver recovery DM, an unreplied comments filter, scheduled posts with a Post-Now button, member CSV export, Comment Miner, Keyword Monitor, DM Blast, and a Kanban CRM pipeline. It uses your existing logged-in skool.com session — no password stored, no API key, no separate login. Free plan is permanent: 1 sequence, 20 DMs per day, 1 account. Paid plans run $29 (Starter) / $59 (Pro) / $149 (Agency) per month — about half what comparable Skool tools charge. Real customer Kate Capelli reports $4,000/month in extra member revenue within two weeks on the $59 plan.

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Frequently asked

ft is short for featuring — it marks a collaboration where a guest artist appears on the track. So "Skool 77 ft. [Name]" means Skool 77 made the song and the named guest performed on it. The convention came out of hip-hop and now shows up across every genre on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music. You'll also see feat., with, and & used roughly interchangeably.

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