Here’s What You Get:
Who Is Tim Yoon
Tim Yoon is an entrepreneur and the CEO of Operator Incubator.
According to his LinkedIn, he has experience scaling businesses, working with creators, and building a “growth operator” model.
On YouTube, he publishes content about being a “Growth Operator,” how to scale creators, outreach, sales, and operations.
What Is Operator Incubator
Operator Incubator is a community / training program run by Tim Yoon. On Skool (a community platform), there is a “Operator Incubator” group that is described as: “The Best Growth Operator Community in the World.”
According to Tim’s Skool profile, there are different “incubators”:
Info Incubator by Tim Yoon — this has a large community (around 4.5k members) and offers courses related to the “info space” (coaching, creating info products, etc.).
Operator Incubator — smaller group (27 members listed on Skool at the time of the crawl).
The “growth operator” concept: Tim Yoon’s model seems to be about working as an operator (i.e., providing operational, growth, and scaling services) to other creators / companies, rather than just being a coach or consultant.
The Operator Incubator likely provides:
Training / course content on how to be a growth operator (strategy, outreach, sales, operations)
Templates / SOPs (e.g., Notion SOPs) for operating in a business / creator’s world. (Some public mention of “private Notion SOPs” associated with this incubator)
Community access: being part of a Skool cohort / group where members can share, network, and learn together.
Lead generation & outreach resources: Tim shares content on how to find “growth operator creators,” how to do DM outreach and close clients.
What You Can Learn / Get from It
Here are likely learning outcomes or benefits if you join Operator Incubator:
Understanding the Growth Operator Role
What exactly is a growth operator. (Not just consultant — someone who “runs growth” for creators or businesses.)
How to structure that service as a business: pricing, deliverables, operations.
Sales & Outreach
How to find potential creator / business clients. Tim has content on “how to get your first Growth Operator Creator.”
Scripts for outreach (DMs) + lead magnets → he provides guidance there.
Sales processes tailored for this model.
Operational Frameworks / SOPs
Use of Notion SOPs to systematize the operator work. These help you run recurring operational tasks, onboarding, deliverables, etc.
Templates and systems for scaling the operator business.
Scaling & Growth
Guidance on scaling: how to grow from doing small gigs to potentially large recurring operator clients.
Strategic frameworks: figuring out pricing, operations leverage, automated systems.
Community & Network
Access to a private community of other “operators” / growth-focused people.
Peer support + accountability + possibly collaboration opportunities.
Who It’s For
Operator Incubator seems particularly well-suited for:
People who want to become Growth Operators, i.e., providing business operations + growth services to creators, coaches, or info-businesses.
Entrepreneurs who prefer to build a service business (not just be a coach, but run real high-impact operational work).
Creators or operators who are willing to implement systems (SOPs, Notion, operations) and not just do high-level strategy.
Those who want a community of like-minded “operators” + a structured training + system to scale their operational service.
Pros
Very practical: It’s not just theory — SOPs, real operational frameworks.
Scalable business potential: If you do operator work well, you can scale and charge premium.
Community support: Access to other operators, which can help with growth, accountability, and learning.
Proven creator: Tim Yoon himself has shown success scaling creators, which adds credibility.
Free / paid tier: There’s a “free course” on growth operating according to his YouTube.
Risks / Considerations
Small group: The Operator Incubator group on Skool is quite small (27 members), which could mean limited peer interaction or limited spots.
Price & ROI: Depending on the cost (not publicly super transparent), you need to make sure the investment is worth it based on what you’ll earn operating.
Implementation demand: Becoming a growth operator involves doing a lot of operational work. If you don’t like systems, processes, or “doing the work,” it might not be a good fit.
Competition: As more people learn to be growth operators, the competition could grow; you need to differentiate.
Client acquisition: Getting your first clients might be challenging; having good outreach + sales methods is critical.
My Verdict
This is a very strong program if you are serious about building a business as a “growth operator.”
If you just want to coach or consult, this may or may not be the right model — depends on whether you want to provide strategic + operational services.
For someone who is results-driven, system-oriented, and wants a service business that can scale in a predictable, operational way, Operator Incubator could be a high-leverage bet.











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