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TL;DR
'Skool Yoel Master' isn't a publicly known product or course we can identify in available records. The most likely interpretation: a specific creator named Yoel runs a Skool community or course branded as a 'master' or 'mastermind' tier program, and the searcher is trying to find them. Without the creator's full name, niche, or community URL, we can't point at a specific community. Below is how to find the actual creator if you remember partial context, plus a note on how mastermind-tier programs typically work on Skool. If you're a mastermind operator yourself looking for tooling, the operational notes apply to any mastermind on the platform.

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What 'skool yoel master' probably means
Three plausible interpretations. First: a creator named Yoel runs a Skool community with 'master,' 'masterclass,' or 'mastermind' in the program name. 'Yoel' is a Hebrew name equivalent to Joel in English, common across Hebrew-speaking and Spanish-speaking communities. Second: a search for a specific Skool community member with the handle 'Yoel Master' — a personal display name some members use inside communities. Third: a misspelling or partial-recall search where the searcher remembers a creator's first name and the word 'master' but not the rest. The right next step in all three cases is to search for the creator's full name on YouTube, Twitter/X, or directly on skool.com. Skool's discovery page (skool.com/discovery) lists public communities — useful for finding creators by partial name when you remember the niche.
How to find the actual creator
Three search strategies. One: try 'Yoel + [niche]' on YouTube or Twitter. Most Skool community owners have a YouTube channel or Twitter presence promoting the community, and search engines index those better than skool.com itself. Two: search 'site:skool.com Yoel' on Google to find any public Skool community pages mentioning the name. Public Skool community URLs follow the pattern skool.com/communityname, and many are indexed. Three: if you remember the niche (trading, marketing, fitness, copywriting, etc.) browse Skool's discovery page filtered to that category and scan for the name. If none of these work, the creator may be running a private community without public marketing, in which case you'll need a referral link from the original source where you heard about them.
How mastermind tiers typically work on Skool
Many Skool creators run a free or low-cost main community ($30–$100/month) and a separate 'mastermind' or 'master' tier ($500–$2,500/month) for their highest-paying clients. The structure usually looks like: a separate Skool community for the mastermind, with weekly or bi-weekly group calls (Zoom integrated through Skool), a private chat thread, peer accountability pairings, and direct access to the owner. The mastermind tier is where the owner makes most of their money — even a small mastermind (20 members at $1,000/month) generates $20k/month in MRR with much less work than running a 5,000-member main community. Skool itself doesn't natively support tiered access within a single community well — most operators just run two separate communities and link between them. This is structurally awkward but workable.
Tooling for mastermind operators
Mastermind operators have specific automation needs. Onboarding: every new mastermind member should get a personalized welcome DM within 24 hours, plus a calendar link to book their first 1-on-1. Retention: at $1,000+/month price points, churn is brutal — losing one member is $12k+ in annual revenue. Auto-detection of disengagement (member hasn't posted or attended a call in 14 days) and a personal check-in DM can save real money. Reporting: monthly member exports for tracking attendance, engagement, and renewal risk. tools4skool was built to handle exactly these workflows. The Pro plan ($59/month) covers most mastermind needs; the Agency plan ($149/month) is overkill for a single mastermind but useful if you're running multiple. Compared to Skoot, the closest competitor, tools4skool offers more trigger conditions, image DMs in welcome sequences (which mastermind operators love for personal touches), and slash commands at roughly half the price.
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