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TL;DR
'Skool ive got' isn't a documented Skool feature, term, or famous community we can find indexed publicly. It's almost certainly a fragment of a community name — something like 'I've Got This Coaching' or 'I've Got Receipts' — that someone heard and partially remembered. The fix is the same regardless: go to skool.com/discovery, search the exact phrase plus any other word you remember (niche, creator name, color of the cover image), and verify the owner before paying. If you can't find it there, the group is private and you need a direct invite link from the creator's Instagram, YouTube description, or email list.

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What people usually mean by this query
Skool communities tend to be named after the host's brand or a punchy phrase. 'I've got' shows up in coaching brands a lot — 'I've got the receipts', 'I've got next', 'I've got time today' — because it pattern-matches the confident-friend tone Skool creators use. When the search volume is essentially zero, that's a tell: this is a partial recall, not a known brand.
A few other possibilities worth ruling out. It could be a typo for a course inside a community ('module: I've Got Leverage'). It could be the name of a free Skool community that hasn't ranked publicly yet — Skool launched in 2019 and most communities are still fewer than 1,000 members, which is below the threshold for serious organic search. Or it could be from a screenshot you saw with the host saying 'in Skool, I've got…' followed by a number. Each of these has a different fix.
How to actually find the group
Open skool.com/discovery — that's the public directory. Filter by category if you remember the niche (Business, Health, Hobbies, etc.) and sort by Members. The top 100 communities cover most paid traffic, so if it's a real growing group it'll show up there. If not, search Google for site:skool.com "I've got" — that returns indexed About pages that mention the phrase.
Still nothing? The community is either invite-only or brand-new. Check the creator's link-in-bio on Instagram and TikTok — Skool creators almost always pin the join URL there. YouTube descriptions are the second-best place. If you only remember the host's first name, search "first-name" skool community — most hosts are explicit on social.
One more option: paste the phrase into a search engine with 'in the context of skool.com communities' — recent web indexes can sometimes match it to a creator faster than Discovery's internal search.
Vetting before you join (or pay)
Skool makes it easy to spin up a paid community fast, which means the vetting bar is on you. Before you pay anything north of $30/month, read the About tab end to end — real owners list specific outcomes, named member wins, and how they handle refunds. Scan the Calendar tab: an active group has weekly calls. Scan the Classroom: a serious paid community has at least 5–10 hours of structured content, not just one welcome video.
Then DM-test. Send the host a 2-line question about whether the group fits your situation. If the reply comes from an obvious template within seconds, that's an automation (totally fine — many top creators run sequences with tools4skool or similar). If you never get a reply at all in 48 hours, that's a real signal. Engaged owners answer.
If you're the owner of this group
If your community is the one people are typing 'skool ive got' to find, you have a discoverability problem worth fixing in an afternoon. First, claim the exact phrase as a tagline on your About page so it indexes in Google. Second, plant the join link in every YouTube description, Instagram bio, and email signature — pSEO won't save you, distribution will.
Third, automate the boring parts of welcoming new members so you can scale without burning out. tools4skool runs auto DM sequences with multi-condition triggers (joined-but-no-classroom-progress, watched-1-lesson-then-stopped, etc.) using your existing skool.com session — no password leaves your laptop. The free plan covers one sequence and 20 DMs/day, which is enough to test if welcome automation actually moves your activation rate before you pay anything.
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