SleekPixel for Skool communities
Skool runs the group, the classroom, and the gamified leaderboard. WordPress often runs the public landing page that introduces new members. SleekPixel renders a per-group OG and Twitter card on the WordPress side so every share unfurls with the group name, member count, and price.
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Skool packs community and courses, WordPress fronts the brand
Skool bundles a community feed, a course classroom, a calendar, and a points-based leaderboard into a single product. For many operators that bundling is the appeal: members live in one place, and the gamification keeps daily engagement up. The marketing layer, though, almost always lives elsewhere, because Skool's own group pages are functional but not the place to put the brand story, the blog, the testimonials, or the SEO landing pages.
Many Skool operators run a WordPress site for that marketing layer. A custom post type per community or per tier holds the group name, the headline, the recurring price, the member count, and a join button pointing at the Skool group URL. Everything lines up except the share preview, which falls back to a default theme banner.
SleekPixel reads the community post fields on save and renders a card with the group name, the topic line, the member count if bound, and the recurring price. The PNG lands in uploads and the og:image and twitter:image tags update for the WordPress URL. Skool itself does not change, and the WordPress front door finally ships a real share preview for every link that gets pasted into a tweet, a newsletter, or a podcast show notes page.
Workflow
From Skool group to share-ready WordPress page
Build the WordPress community post type
Design the group template
Save the WordPress post
Share the landing page
Output
Per-group card layout
A 1200 by 630 OG and Twitter card: group name, headline subtitle, member count, recurring price, and brand wordmark, rendered from the WordPress community post on save.
Comparison
Default WordPress unfurl vs Skool-aware rendering
Default theme OG
- Skool group landing pages unfurl with a homepage banner on the WordPress side
- Member counts, level, and recurring price never reach the share preview
- Raw Skool group URLs share with Skool's own card, not the brand's
- Manual Canva cards per group stop happening after the first launch
- Brand or price changes require redoing every past landing-page card
SleekPixel
- Reads WordPress fields for each Skool group marketed through WP
- Free, paid, and tiered groups share the same template family
- Member count, recurring price, and level badge render automatically
- Bulk re-render every group landing page after a brand or pricing change
- Runs alongside any Skool join-button shortcode or block
Features
What SleekPixel gives you for Skool communities
Group-aware headlines
The group name and topic line become the card headline and subtitle. Readers see the focus of the group before the click.
Level or leaderboard slot
Optional level badge or leaderboard rank renders from a custom field, capturing the gamification that Skool members already pay attention to.
Recurring price slot
Recurring price renders as a corner mark with the cadence label, signalling the offer without forcing the reader onto the page first.
Use cases
Who runs Skool plus a WordPress front
Course-plus-community programs
Operators bundling a course and a community on Skool present the joint offer on WordPress with a per-program card.
Paid mastermind groups
Paid masterminds on Skool front their public sales page on WordPress, where every plan unfurls with a card showing price and member count.
Niche peer communities
Industry-specific peer communities on Skool keep a WordPress page that introduces the focus and unfurls with a real card on shares.
The bigger picture
Why landing-page cards lift Skool group signups
Skool growth is concentrated in a few sources: creator audiences on Twitter and YouTube, paid ads, and word of mouth between members. Every channel ends with a URL that gets shared, and almost every share resolves through a WordPress landing page or a Skool-hosted page. On the WordPress side, the share preview is typically a generic banner that names nothing.
A real group card with the actual name, member count, and recurring price closes the gap between what the reader saw and what they are about to click into. The lift is most visible during a creator-led launch, when the same URL gets dropped across multiple channels in a short window and consistency suddenly matters. The second compounding effect applies across an operator's portfolio.
A creator running three Skool groups looks like a coordinated business when every link unfurls with the same template family, and looks scattered when each share looks different. SleekPixel produces that coordination for free on every WordPress save, and the Skool platform keeps running the daily community work as before.
Questions
Common questions about SleekPixel for Skool communities
No. SleekPixel reads WordPress post fields. Skool continues to host the community itself, including the classroom and the leaderboard. Only the WordPress landing page needs to exist for the share card to render.
 Then SleekPixel has nothing to render against. The plugin only writes OG tags on WordPress URLs. Operators who keep the front on WordPress for SEO get the benefit; operators on the Skool page rely on Skool's preview.
 Skool's API access is limited, so most operators either update the count manually or read it through a scheduled script that scrapes a public group page. The number lands in a custom field that SleekPixel reads on render.
 Yes. A custom field selects the template variant. Free, paid, and high-tier groups each get a distinct look while sharing the same template family.
 Yes, if you bind a level or rank to a custom field. Many operators show 'Level 3' or a leaderboard rank as a small badge, leaning into the gamification that defines Skool.
 The free variant drops the price slot and uses a 'free to join' badge instead. The rest of the template stays the same. Useful for top-of-funnel free groups that funnel into a paid tier.
 On the next save of the WordPress community post. Updating price on Skool alone does not refresh the share image; the WordPress field needs to update, which most operators do at the same time.
 Course-specific cards are typically not needed because the classroom lives behind the join wall. The landing page is what gets shared, and that is what SleekPixel renders for.
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