Demo slots — limited this weekBook a demo →
Glossary · 4 min read

'Skool Yaya': A Disambiguation Page

'Yaya' is a name, a slang term in several languages, and a community handle in many places. None of those map cleanly to skool.com as a product. Here's the disambiguation.

Try Skool free →Book a tools4skool demo
On this page

TL;DR

'Skool yaya' has no canonical meaning. 'Yaya' is a common name in many cultures (Filipino for grandmother or caregiver, Greek term of endearment, a personal first name in dozens of languages), and it's also used as a community handle by countless individuals. There's no specific product, course, or community on skool.com publicly known by exactly this name as of writing. The search is most likely either a misspelling, a personal handle, or a mash-up. If you meant a specific creator or community, search their full name directly. If you meant the skool.com platform itself, the rest of this site covers it in depth.

skool.com logo

Start your own Skool community in 60 seconds.

14-day free trial — no card required. Most community owners decide whether Skool fits within the first week.

Start Skool free trial →

What 'skool yaya' probably means

Four plausible interpretations. First: a personal name — someone named Yaya who runs a Skool community or course, where the searcher is looking for that specific creator. Without more context (Yaya's last name, niche, or community URL) we can't point at a specific person. Second: a Filipino, Greek, or Spanish slang/affectionate term combined with 'skool' as a casual phrase or social-media post — not a product. Third: a misspelling of another search — possibly 'skool gaga,' 'skool yay,' or a typo. Fourth: a brand name in development that hasn't broken into public awareness. None of these have substantive content to mine, which is why this article is short and disambiguation-focused. If you have a specific person or community in mind, the right next step is to search their full name or the community URL directly on skool.com.

On 'Yaya' as a handle inside Skool

Skool communities allow members to set custom display names. Many members go by short handles, nicknames, or single words — 'Yaya' would be a perfectly normal display name inside any community. If you saw 'Yaya' in a Skool community feed and searched for them, the right approach is to click directly on their profile inside that community. Skool member profiles show their display name, joined-date, level, and any communities they're publicly part of. There's no global member directory, so if you're not already in the same community, you can't search them by handle alone. This is by design — Skool keeps community membership relatively private, similar to Discord servers. tools4skool, our Chrome extension, has a member-export feature that helps community owners pull their full member list to CSV for outreach and analysis, but that's an admin-only function.

If you meant skool.com — the platform

Skool.com is a US-based SaaS platform launched in 2019 by Sam Ovens. It hosts paid online communities for creators, coaches, and educators. The product combines a community feed (Reddit-style threads), course modules, Stripe-based payments, and a gamified leaderboard. Pricing is a flat $99/month per community with a 14-day free trial. Alex Hormozi publicly invested at a $1 billion valuation in 2023. The platform is used by tens of thousands of paying communities globally. If you're trying to figure out whether Skool is right for your community, the rest of this site has comparison pages (Skool vs Circle, Mighty Networks, Discord, Kajabi), pricing breakdowns, and reviews.

Tooling for Skool community owners

Skool's native feature set is deliberately minimal — community feed, courses, payments, leaderboard, and that's mostly it. There's no built-in auto-DM, no scheduled post queue, no churn-risk dashboard, no member CSV export. Operators running active communities almost always reach for third-party tools to cover those gaps. tools4skool is a Chrome extension built specifically for this. It runs auto-DM sequences with multi-condition triggers (e.g., 'send DM when member joins AND has not posted within 7 days'), fires a 60-second churn-save when payment fails, and exports member CSVs for win-back ads or external CRM sync. The extension uses your existing Skool session — no password storage, no API rate limits. Free plan covers 1 sequence and 20 DMs/day. Paid plans start at $29/month. Kate Capelli, a marketing community owner, recovered $4,000/month in MRR within two weeks of installing the churn-saver.

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

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

Book a demo →
30-second form · no credit card · we email when access opens
"$59/mo → $4,000/mo more in 2 weeks; 7,000% ROI"
Kate Capelli· $4,000/month MRR recovered through churn-save automation

Frequently asked

There's no canonical product or course publicly known by this name. 'Yaya' is a common name in many languages (Filipino, Greek, Spanish) and a frequent personal handle. The search most likely refers to a specific person or community member, not a product. If you have a specific creator in mind, search their full name directly.

Ready when you are.

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

Book a demo →
30-second form · no credit card · we email when access opens
Book a demo this week30-second form, no credit card
Get access