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Glossary · 4 min read

Skool Ultimate Editors: video editing communities on skool.com

Here's how to find them, what they cost, and why Skool fits the editor-creator niche well.

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What "Skool Ultimate Editors" usually means

Most searches map to paid video-editing communities on skool.com — usually run by established editors who teach Premiere, After Effects, DaVinci Resolve, CapCut, or short-form workflows. Some are branded explicitly with names like 'Ultimate Editors'.

These communities typically include training in the Classroom, a feed for project showcases and feedback, weekly live calls, and sometimes freelance pipelines connecting members to clients.

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Finding video-editing communities on skool.com

Browse skool.com/discover under Tech or Personal Development. Search for terms like "video editor", "after effects", "premiere", "editing". Most established creators in this space link from their YouTube channels.

Pricing typically:

  • Tutorial-led communities: $30–$60/month
  • Active feedback + weekly call: $80–$150/month
  • Coaching with project review and freelance pipeline: $200+/month

Why Skool fits the editing-creator niche

Several Skool features happen to fit editor-creators well:

  • Classroom for structured tutorials — modules per software (Premiere, After Effects, etc.)
  • Feed for project showcases — members post finished edits, get feedback
  • DMs for one-to-one project review
  • Calendar for weekly live edit-along calls
  • Levels and leaderboard — incentivise consistent posting (which is the foundation of getting better)

The gaps are around automation. New editors join, get overwhelmed, and quietly leave. Welcome DMs that point them to the first lesson and the active feed thread make a measurable difference.

If you run an editing community

Practical patterns:

  • Lead with one short course (5–10 lessons) covering the foundation. Don't ship the 80-lesson masterclass on day one.
  • Daily feed prompt: "Drop your latest edit for feedback". Becomes the heartbeat.
  • Weekly live edit-along on the Calendar. Recorded for replay.
  • Pinned thread: "Free templates, here's the link". Hooks the casual joiner into staying.

For automating welcome DMs (point new joiners at the first lesson) and churn-saver flows (catch members who go quiet for 14 days), tools4skool is the Chrome extension we built. Free tier covers basic welcome automation; paid tiers $29–$149/month for the rest.

Stop leaving DMs, churn, and revenue on the table.

tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.

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Frequently asked

Yes — plenty of paid video-editing communities run on Skool. The platform is content-agnostic. Owners are responsible for content rights (any tutorial footage you use must be licensed appropriately).

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Drop your email — we'll loop you in the day access opens.

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