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Owned by Dylan

Creator Launch Academy

Public • 67 • Free

Teaching editors the step-by-step frameworks to make 💰 with video editing and step into the world of the creator economy!

Video Editing Academy

Private • 23 • $1/m

Teaching editors the step-by-step frameworks to make 💰 with video editing!

Memberships

Editors Academy

Private • 913 • Free

Consulting Blueprint

Private • 411 • Free

Skool Community

Public • 191.4k • Paid

[CLOSED] ItsKeaton Group

Private • 2k • Free

Wealth Whispers Academy

Private • 9 • $29/m

Content Launchpad

Private • 1k • Free

Social Creator Club (Lite)

Private • 7.6k • Free

7FSS 4C Course

Private • 2.7k • Free

Amplify Views

Private • 18.7k • Free

9 contributions to Creator Launch Academy
shiny object syndrome
opinion: first start with this dylan video https://vimeo.com/987796860
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New comment Oct 31
shiny object syndrome
0 likes • Oct 30
Haha, thanks, man! This is so true! Everyone can succeed if they focus on one business model, go all in, and learn to block out distractions. So often, people dive into a model (like video editing, SMMA, etc.), but when results aren’t instant, they get distracted by the latest “guru” pitching a new E-Commerce opportunity. Here’s the thing: many of these “gurus” making their living by teaching a business model (like E-Commerce) are actually running education businesses, not E-Commerce ones. The best advice? Learn from those actively doing what you want to do. That’s why I continue working as an editor while also teaching others how to make a living from editing—I want to be a real example of making it happen. So, don’t let shiny new models throw you off track. The most successful, fit, and intelligent people didn’t get there by bouncing around. They focused all their energy on one thing. If you’re an editor, then go all in! - Start your business: Learn the ropes, edit for free or create your own projects. - Build your portfolio: Put it on platforms like YTJobs, create a sales funnel (if you’re already scaling), and start doing outreach. - Do the work: Edit 5-10 cool short videos for creators you admire, use existing content to make something unique, and share before-and-after footage, timelines, and other process insights on Instagram. - Every day, spend an hour reaching out to entrepreneurs on IG—they’re easy to find! This will help you get clients quickly. Once you do, over-deliver, keep improving, raise your prices, and go after bigger clients. By focusing on focus in one model, you’re building a real business.
Job Oppritunity
Hey guys, I am currently looking to hire an editor for a lot of projects. 2 videos a week is the scope of work each video is roughly around 8-12 minutes long but to apply a test edit needs to be done (only 2-3 minutes). I am going to look for an editor on other platforms later this week but I want to give this group priorty on first access. If you guys want to give it a go check out the instructions Trial edit click here PS. To submit your test edit send me a Google drive link in the private messaging via Skool
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New comment Oct 30
1 like • Oct 30
@Osura Deemantha Amazing man!
1 like • Oct 30
Thanks bro and sounds good can't wait to see what you create
Hey Dylan
Thanks for your amazing offer of allowing folks to get in for free - I also wanted to ask 1. Will you be offering the VSL Editor module? 2. Will the Video Editors 30-Day Client Roadmapmodule be available soon? Thank you.
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New comment Oct 30
1 like • Oct 30
Hey Tony! Thanks for asking... 1. This is my private paid coaching program 2. Yes I am working on it with a couple industry editors so should be done in a month but no specific date yet.
Curious, what is your main editing software?
I'm super curious to know what is the main software you guys use?
Poll
18 members have voted
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New comment Oct 29
Comfort
Who else experiences this? You have worked hard until you have found a client who pays you a substantial amount of money that can meet your needs. Then you stop looking for another client and become comfortable. That was my story for almost a year😁🤗 until my mentor questioned me on why I became comfortable with little.
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New comment Oct 26
1 like • Oct 26
Yeah man! This has happened to me and is super common, I have spoken to a lot of editors who experience this frequently. After a while, I realized that staying comfortable with 'enough' held me back from growing further. My mentor a few years back opened my eyes to the potential I was leaving on the table by not pushing for the next client, the next goal. A good way to combat this and what I do now, I see each client as a milestone to my ultimate goal (which could be a financial number or maybe a certain view count on a video you edit, etc), not the destination! Who else has found that the comfort zone sneaks up on you too?"
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Dylan Reynolds
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39points to level up
@dylan-reynolds-5571
I help video editors land their first clients in 30 days or less and launch their lives as creative entrepreneurs!

Active 56m ago
Joined Oct 21, 2024
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