TL;DR
Oficial is Spanish for official. In music search, it tags the artist's own upload — "Skool 77 — Mexico (Video Oficial)" — versus a fan or aggregator re-upload. So skool 77 oficial points you to the rap group's verified channel and authorized tracks on YouTube. None of this connects to skool.com, the paid community SaaS. If you accidentally landed here while researching the platform, the rest of the page covers what skool.com is, who runs paid groups there, and how a Chrome extension called tools4skool automates the work skool.com leaves manual.

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What *(Oficial)* means in a video title
Oficial is a tag artists or their labels add to YouTube and Spotify titles to mark authorized uploads — (Video Oficial), (Audio Oficial), (Lyric Video Oficial). The tag exists because YouTube hosts thousands of unauthorized re-uploads alongside the artist's own. Sorting by oficial helps you find the canonical version: cleanest audio, correct attribution, and the one whose view count actually accrues to the artist. For Skool 77, searching their name plus oficial surfaces the verified channel uploads — the right place to listen if you care about the artist getting credit and the audio being clean rather than re-encoded through a fan dump.
Finding Skool 77's official catalog
On YouTube, search "Skool 77 oficial" — verified or artist-owned channels are usually marked with a music note icon next to the channel name. Look for that. Their catalog includes Loco, Mexico, Gota a Gota, Caer y Levantarse, El Día de mi Suerte, Color en la Ciudad, Solo Tú y Yo, Canción de Cuna, and others. Spotify and Apple Music carry parts of the catalog under the verified Skool 77 artist page; coverage varies by track and country. For lyrics, Genius and Letras.com host crowd-transcribed versions — official-source lyrics are rare for underground rap because labels often don't bother publishing them. We're stopping here because this isn't a music site.
About skool.com (the SaaS people sometimes confuse this with)
skool.com is a SaaS for paid online communities — one product with a feed, courses, calendar, and chat. Creators run subscription groups where members pay monthly. Owners pay skool.com $99/month per group plus a transaction fee on member payments. Heavily used by coaches, info-product creators, and agency owners; the largest groups belong to Iman Gadzhi, Alex Hormozi, and Sam Ovens. By design skool.com is feature-light: no automation, no bulk DM, no CRM, no churn detection, no analytics export. That keeps the platform simple for new owners but caps the workload ceiling once a group hits 200–500 paid members. The repeating manual tasks — welcome DMs, comment replies, churn watching — start eating real hours.
tools4skool — for owners who want their evenings back
tools4skool is a Chrome extension and web dashboard that closes the automation gap. It runs through your existing logged-in skool.com session — no password stored, no API key. Features: auto DM sequences with multi-condition triggers, image DMs, churn risk scores per member, Churn Saver (60-second recovery DM), unreplied comments filter, scheduled posts with Post-Now, member CSV export, Comment Miner, Keyword Monitor, DM Blast, Kanban CRM. Free plan: 1 sequence, 20 DMs per day, 1 account, forever. Paid: $29 (Starter) / $59 (Pro) / $149 (Agency) per month — about half what comparable Skool tools charge, with more trigger conditions and image DMs than the closest competitor Skoot. Customer Kate Capelli reports $4,000/month in extra revenue within two weeks on the $59 Pro plan.
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tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.
Book a demo →"$59/mo plan made me $4,000/mo extra in two weeks — Churn Saver paid for itself day one."
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