Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Patrice

Word Masters

Public • 776 • Free

Learn 7-figure copywriting secrets to increase your business or freelancing conversions

Copywriting Skool

Private • 38 • $119/m

Get the 7-figure copywriting secrets that helped me get to $35k/month

Memberships

Skool Community

Public • 183.3k • Paid

The Skool Games

Private • 22.8k • Free

Wealth Through Real Estate

Private • 742 • Free

Diamond Club

Private • 43 • Free

Super Investors

Private • 64 • $499/m

Google Ads Masterclass (Free)

Private • 3k • Free

Skool Mastermind

Private • 83 • Paid

Date

Private • 2 • $69/m

128 contributions to Word Masters
Who's your dream client? ✨
Matthew Thompson asked me this question a couple months ago.... And I gave him a crazy answer... "Max Perzon" I then proceeded to gush for 10 minutes about how much I loved skool and how cool it would be to write for someone that was helping to grow the platform. Turns out Max was in the room. And Matthew said, "We're going to introduce you to him." After a moment of panic and I walked up and shook his hand. Its been crazy cool contributing to his brand however I can sense then. Moral of the story? Figure out who your dream client is, because they might just become your real client. Drop a comment below of an influencer, coach, or artist that you would like to collaborate/work with 👇
22
32
New comment 7h ago
Who's your dream client? ✨
1 like • 11h
@Bob Crawley bet! I have a close friend who worked with him. He typically only hires family prior to this gut
0 likes • 11h
Guy^
I am not great
Caught myself wondering something the other day: What’s the difference between good and great? In my opinion, it’s the difference between 1st and 2nd place. But it’s not a small gap. It occurs SO rarely, that a great person is inarguably recognizable. Interestingly…. The difference between good and bad is less than that between good and great. “Good” can become a successful product. It can generate millions. And an incredible life. But “Great?” “Great" generates a cult-like following and changes culture in a way that is irrevocable. It disrupts the world. It’s the difference between sacrificing 1 Saturday to meet with some customers, or putting a late night in 3-5 times a week. Or sacrificing Thanksgiving, your own birthday, vacations, movie night with your little sister, your 8 hours of sleep, and the “good” relationships and people who hold you back. “Great” is not 1% “Great” is 1 in a billion. “Great” happens once in a generation. 0.00000000000001% And so, I don’t casually say, “be great.” …considering how few have ever achieved that status. But the crazy thing? Everyone COULD be great. Like David Goggins says, even the most hard-working people typically only tap into 40% of their potential. And becoming “good” at your craft is something to be proud of. Maybe you want some balance in your life. That’s okay. Because there’s arguably a psychotic nature to the true “greats.” Elon Musk… Albert Einstein… Alexander the Great for goodness sake. Because greatness requires a certain “poorness.” Poorness in sleep, poorness in spontaneity, poorness in security, poorness in relationships. Because greats prioritize 1 thing, and 1 thing only: their craft. Not a person, not a hobby, not a lifestyle. They neglect every aspect of life that the majority of people deem as “important.” But that’s “Great.” And pure, psychotic, indomitable, commitment allows the world to make a leap once a generation. And for that sacrifice, the world is in debt.
18
25
New comment 1d ago
I am not great
1 like • 2d
@Mike Farley I love this! Massive respect to that! The world wouldn't function if we were all psycho like Musk. Studying people like him, though, shows the gap between where we all are and where we could be
2 likes • 2d
@Arthur Fox yeah and it’s all relative to the person
Imagine you were a part of Skool History?
I've been on this platform since the start of the skool games... And I've written copy for the biggest communities on here. But this month is incredibly exciting. @Atena Pegler and @Gabor Kriston are making history. They've done over 6-figures in less than three weeks with a community that's only a couple months old and a team of only 4. Why's that cool? Because it's changing the landscape of what's possible for you. If you have a Skool community, an agency, or any type of online business, you have an ability to scale faster than any generation before us. And how exciting has it been watching their CRAZY Skool Games trajectory? Being a part of this historic win is even cooler... As a copywriter, who specifically works with 7-figure brands, this software Gabor and Atena have created is changing my entire business. My time if more focused on strategic decisions, and high level marketing plans, as opposed to spending hours researching different ads and writing each piece of copy. Now I just go in, fine-tune the copy, and my clients are getting insane results. If you're not already in, I can't make a stronger recommendation for any offer on the entire Skool platform. Plus last I checked, there's only like 68 spots left 👀
15
4
New comment 3d ago
Imagine you were a part of Skool History?
3 likes • 4d
If you want to be a part of an insane win, get on a call or just sign up here >>> https://www.skool.com/aipreneurs-premium
2 likes • 4d
@Alvis Ciritis yeah I’d still consider myself a beginner tbh! I only started my community about 7 months ago. I think investing into systems is crucial, build profits from there, then reinvest into A-Players to help you scale
What should I do?
🚀 Quit my job at Duolingo to start my own business! 🤔 Which niche should I dive into - (1) pitch deck writing, (2) content writing, or (3) newsletter writing? 💡 Any advice for this newbie entrepreneur?
5
4
New comment 5d ago
What should I do?
0 likes • 5d
VSL's or ads would be super profitable. Why those 3?
Outreach method
I have a question, @Patrice Moore talks about on the Skool Podcast about reaching out and doing copy for former podcast guest in the online space in the beginning. Guest she had on her show. Any recommendations or things you found that works reaching out and figuring out what you can help with them and offering paid help. How do you do it natural and not seem like your reaching out to sell anything even if you are? Would love to see any insight from any of you?v
5
2
New comment 5d ago
0 likes • 5d
You don't reach out to sell. You reach out to learn and add value
1-10 of 128
Patrice Moore
6
466points to level up
Inspiring the next generation to skip college and jump right into entrepreneurship. Need help copywriting? https://tidycal.com/patriceamoor/freecall

Active 18m ago
Joined Jan 22, 2024
INTJ
powered by