Clubs have spent the last decade investing in facilities, F&B, and service upgrades to provide members with a valuable experience.
But after analyzing thousands of player comments across clubs worldwide, a different pattern emerges:
That’s not what defines value for members.
Members don’t primarily judge their experience based on what a club has. They judge it on how the club makes them feel.
Clubs track rounds played, revenue per member, and satisfaction scores.
But the underlying driver of all three is rarely measured directly:
Do members feel valued?
When they do:
When they don’t:
This isn’t a “soft” concept. It’s the system behind your core metrics.
Across a decade of player feedback, 5 consistent drivers show up:
Members don’t expect special treatment. They expect to be known.
Being greeted by name. Staff remembering preferences. Small signals that say: you’re not just another booking.
Personalization beats perks.
One great experience is memorable. Consistently having great experiences builds trust.
When service depends on who’s working or how busy the club is, value becomes unpredictable.
And unpredictability erodes confidence.
Perceived favoritism is one of the fastest ways to destroy value.
Members notice who gets priority, access, and attention.
The moment someone feels like they matter less than others, the experience breaks.
Value isn’t just service. It’s identity.
Members who feel part of the club stay longer and engage more.
Those who feel like outsiders drift, regardless of how strong the offering is.
This is especially visible among new members and underrepresented groups.
Members don’t just want to be served. They want to be heard.
When feedback disappears into a void, value drops.
When it leads to visible action, value increases.
Most clubs already deliver moments of value. Friendly staff, strong first impressions, individual employees who go the extra mile.
The issue isn’t awareness, it’s consistency.
Where things break:
None of these are operational failures. They’re experiential gaps.
Most clubs create moments where members feel valued.
Few create systems to ensure it happens every time.
The real shift happens when you move:
Because if you can’t see where members feel overlooked, you can’t fix it consistently.
The Bottom Line
Facilities matter. Service matters.
But they’re no longer the differentiator.
The clubs that win are the ones where members consistently feel:
In simple terms:
They feel like they matter.
And that’s what drives everything else.