Membership Lifecycle
Most membership reports tell boards how many members they have. The most important questions — about structural risk, retention patterns, and long-term resilience — go unanswered.
Conventional membership reporting was designed to answer one question: how many members does the club have? It does that well. The problem is that the most important questions about membership health are different ones — and the standard reports were never built to answer them. These are the seven structural risks that are present in most clubs, and invisible to most boards.
The GMLB Membership Lifecycle
The Full Assessment identifies which of these risks are present in your club, how significant each one is, and where the evidence sits in your data. It shows how member behaviour — particularly around handicap registration and early-tenure engagement — determines long-term membership value, and where the greatest opportunities to improve that value lie.
The Membership Lifecycle
Members who gain a handicap retain at three times the rate of those who don't — and are far more likely to progress into established membership.
By handicap
The three stages
The steepest part of the curve. Members are still determining whether the club fits their life, and most future churn originates here.
Members who reach this stage have passed the highest-risk window. Retention improves materially, but progression into established membership is not yet secure.
Members who reach established status rarely leave. They form the stable core of the membership and contribute disproportionately to its long-term resilience.
A GMLB Full Membership Assessment reveals the retention patterns and structural risks that conventional membership reporting cannot see.
Request a Full Assessment