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TL;DR
'Skool justus hirt' is a long-tail search that combines a person's name with the platform skool.com. The most likely reasons people type it: they heard about a community Justus Hirt runs on Skool, they saw a course or coaching offer, or they're trying to verify whether such a group exists. There is no central public directory of every Skool community at name level — the platform is invite-and-link driven, not search-engine driven. If a creator hosts on Skool, you usually find them through the creator's own site, YouTube channel, or an email funnel that ends in a skool.com/<community> link. If you're the creator behind the search, the practical question is: how do you actually run a paid community on Skool well, and what tooling do you need? That's where this page goes next.

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What 'skool justus hirt' usually means
Searches that pair a name with 'skool' fall into three buckets. Bucket one is people who watched a YouTube video, podcast, or ad and want to confirm the community is real before paying. Bucket two is existing members trying to log back into a community they already joined — they don't remember the URL, only the host's name. Bucket three is competitors and curious creators benchmarking who else is running a Skool group in the same niche.
If you're in bucket one or two, the fastest path is to go to the creator's main website or social profile and follow the link from there. Skool community URLs follow the pattern skool.com/<slug>. The slug isn't always the creator's name — it's whatever they picked when they set up the community. So a creator named Justus Hirt might have a community at skool.com/something-else. There is no built-in public search, on purpose: Skool is closer to Discord-meets-Kajabi than it is to Reddit.
What skool.com actually is
Skool.com is a community platform built for creators who sell coaching, courses, or memberships. Each community has a discussion feed, a courses module, a calendar for live calls, a gamified leaderboard, and a Stripe-based payment layer for paid groups. The pricing is famously simple — $99/month per community for the host, with no per-member fees and no transaction cuts beyond Stripe's own. That flat price is one reason coaches and educators have moved over from Circle, Mighty Networks, and Kajabi communities.
What Skool doesn't give you out of the box: serious automation. There are no built-in DM sequences, no churn alerts when a member's behavior drops, no comment-mining tool to find lurkers, no member-export CSV, no scheduled-post button worth its name. Active hosts patch this with Chrome extensions and external tools. tools4skool is one of those — a one-click extension plus dashboard that adds DM sequences, a Churn Saver flow, slash commands, and analytics on top of skool.com. We'll get to it below.
How to find a specific creator's Skool community
If you're hunting for a community by creator name, here's the order that actually works:
1. Google `"<creator name>" site:skool.com` — sometimes their About section or pinned post is indexed. 2. Check the creator's link-in-bio on Instagram, YouTube, X, or LinkedIn. Skool links almost always live there. 3. Search YouTube for the creator's recent videos. Most Skool hosts pin the join link in the description. 4. Email them. Sounds dumb, works often. Most coaches reply within a day if you say you want to join. 5. Avoid third-party 'Skool directories' — almost all are scraped, outdated, and sometimes outright wrong.
If nothing surfaces, the creator either doesn't have a Skool community yet, has paused or archived it, or runs it as a private/invite-only group that they only share with email subscribers.
If you're the creator behind the search
If you are Justus Hirt — or any creator wondering whether starting a Skool community is worth it — the honest answer in 2025 is: yes, for most coaches and course creators, it's the cleanest place to start. The reasons: flat pricing, low setup time (you can be live in an afternoon), built-in gamification that drives daily logins, and a member experience that actually feels modern.
The two things you'll outgrow fastest are DMs and churn. Skool's native DM is fine for one-off replies but useless for onboarding sequences, re-engagement, or win-back flows. Members go quiet, you don't know until they cancel, and by then you have 60 minutes to save them before Stripe processes the cancel. tools4skool exists for exactly that gap: automatic DM sequences with multi-condition triggers, a Churn Saver that fires within 60 seconds of a cancel, and a churn risk score so you see disengagement before it turns into a refund request.
Tools creators run on top of Skool
Most serious Skool hosts run some combination of: a scheduling tool (Calendly or Cal.com) for 1:1 calls, a transactional email service for receipts, a video host (YouTube unlisted or Loom) for course content, and a community-automation layer. The community-automation slot is where tools4skool sits. It's a Chrome extension that uses your existing skool.com session — no password stored, no API key juggling — plus a dashboard for sequences, analytics, and CRM-style pipeline views.
Kate Capelli, an early user, put $59/month into tools4skool and added $4,000/month in retained revenue inside two weeks — a 7,000% ROI driven mostly by the Churn Saver flow. The free plan covers one sequence and 20 DMs/day, which is enough to test the whole loop. Paid tiers start at $29/month. If you're standing up a community for the first time, ignore tools entirely for the first 30 days, get to 50 paying members, then layer automation in. Tooling without distribution is a hobby.
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