7 reviews
If you've spent more than 30 minutes online, you know that the Internet is drowning in hustlers and screenshot-verified scams. Matt Burns isn't just building a community; he is building a bastion of honesty. I thought I was joining a support group for software. I found a masterclass in integrity. Matt’s background at monday.com shows; he thinks in actionable systems instead of just "vibes." The real selling point for me came when I read his take on negative reviews. Instead of coaching us to bury them, he taught us to view them as "social proof that you're real". He gave us a framework to handle unfair criticism with such grace that it actually wins more customers than a perfect 5-star record ever could. If you are selling smoke and mirrors, stay away. ProveWorth will expose you. But if you are doing real work and want a system that proves it, get in here before the Premium Launch in February.
I've wasted large chunks of my life kicking myself because I couldn't force my brain to navigate a straight line. I spent decades trying to shove my "curvy, swirly brain into pencil-shaped slots," wishing I could just be "normal". It turns out, the problem wasn't me. It was that I have a Mac brain in a PC world. That's the kind of revelation waiting for you inside The ADHD Nest. Elizabeth Hadzic isn't just another coach throwing a planner at you and shouting at you to "Hustle harder!" She is a therapist who understands that we are the world's creatives and the innovators, not broken machines needing repair. There is a specific lesson in Level 1 regarding the history of ADHD that hit me so hard I had to pause. The core message? "You were never broken — just ahead of your time". As I told Elizabeth in the comments, I wish I'd had someone tell me that when I was a kid. It could've saved me a lifetime of shame. If you are exhausted from trying to run Windows 95 on a supercomputer, stop fighting. Come join us in the Nest. It's a welcoming space that stops trying to "fix" you and starts showing you how to actually drive the Ferrari you were born with.
Lots of free communities are parking lots for spam. Heather Di Rocco has built a fortress of value. Heather cuts through the noise of the "AI Gold Rush" with the precision of a military intelligence officer. The prompts she gives away aren't just distractions; they're strategic levers that move mountains. I've beenusing AI since ChatGPT 3 , but the results I get from Heather's propts still have my jaw on the floor. She charges $1 a year as friction to keep the robots out, which I appreciate. Everyone in her comunity is a real human with genuine curiosity. Do not let the price tag fool you; this is a masterclass masquerading as a community. Get in before the secret gets out.
When you’re building a Skool community, it helps to have a room full of people who are doing the same thing—testing, learning, iterating, and sharing what actually works. Skoolers is that room. I’ll be honest: because all community owners get auto-admitted, it can feel overwhelming at first, and I wasn’t as active early on as I could’ve been. But as I’ve gotten clearer on what I’m building, I’ve been engaging more—and the value shows up fast. When you ask a real question, you get practical answers. When you share a win or a lesson, people actually respond. And it’s a solid way to discover other Skool communities and builders worth connecting with. If you’re a Skool community owner and you want friendly support, quick feedback, and a network of people who understand what you're trying to build, Skoolers is absolutely worth being in.
I struggled with my finances for years. The problem wasn’t a lack of brainpower; I’m smart enough to figure out a simple spreadsheet. It was secrecy. No one ever taught me how to talk about money, and that silence did real damage. Unmuted Money is the rare money community that understands the real problem isn’t math—it’s shame. Rebecca built a space where people can talk openly about money without criticism, without status-flexing, and without pressure to share more than they want. The culture is kindness-first and privacy-protective, grounded in a simple ethos: progress matters more than perfection. What I appreciate most is how actionable it is while still being human. You can show up anxious, embarrassed, or stuck—and instead of getting lectured, you get encouragement, accountability, and helpful reflection. It’s especially valuable if you’re paying off debt, building savings, learning to negotiate, or trying to rebuild trust in your own decisions. If conversations about money usually make you tense or defensive, this community feels like an exhale.
I joined Focus Founders because I didn’t need more advice—I needed traction and a community that understands how ADHD actually shows up for those of us trying to launch our own businesses. What I found was a group culture that’s generous, direct in a helpful way, and genuinely invested in boosting each other up. The tone is "online family," and the occasional (constructive) competition made it super-easy to show up consistently. I have made more progress toward escaping my 9-5 in the three months since I joined than I did in the previous fifteen years of struggling alone. If you’re an ADHD entrepreneur who wants support that turns into action and a room that feels like real humans supporting one another, then Focus Founders is worth a look.
I joined Focus Founders because I didn’t need more advice—I needed traction and a community that understands how ADHD actually shows up for those of us trying to launch our own businesses. What I found was a group culture that’s generous, direct in a helpful way, and genuinely invested in boosting each other up. The tone is "online family," and the occasional (constructive) competition made it super-easy to show up consistently. I have made more progress toward escaping my 9-5 in the three months since I joined than I did in the previous fifteen years of struggling alone. If you’re an ADHD entrepreneur who wants support that turns into action and a room that feels like real humans supporting one another, then Focus Founders is worth a look.