At Associations World Congress 2026, I had the privilege of running a session called Making Membership Matter: The IMPACT Framework. Before we got into frameworks and strategies, I asked the room a simple set of questions. What came back wasn’t shocking, but it was honest. And honest data, even from a small sample, tends to cut through.
Here’s what we found, and why I think it matters far beyond the walls of that conference room.
The session opened with a pointed question: How confident are you that your association articulates member value in language your members would use themselves?
Only 35% said they had significant or total confidence. And at the other end of the scale, 18% had no confidence at all.
That’s not a communications problem. That’s a strategic one. If the people running membership organisations can’t confidently say they speak their members’ language, no amount of clever copywriting will fix the renewal rate.
Value articulation is the foundation of a successful member journey, from proposition, and recruitment, all the way through to retention and renewal. When it’s weak, everything built on top of it becomes unstable.
When asked which touchpoint is most likely to lose a member, the answer was unambiguous: a passive, invoice-only renewal process named without hesitation as the single biggest risk.
That might seem obvious. But consider the contrast: the touchpoints that create the strongest sense of belonging were in-person events (the clear frontrunner), member forums, peer exchange, and shared values. The moments members feel most connected are rich, relational, and human. The moment they’re asked to recommit? Often a PDF invoice and a direct debit reminder.
The gap between those two experiences is where members quietly disappear.
Alongside passive renewal, respondents flagged long gaps in communication, governance-heavy online meetings, and low engagement before renewal as the other primary churn risks. The pattern is consistent: disconnection breeds disengagement, and disengagement precedes departure.
This one made people sit up.
35% of respondents said they had never retired a member benefit. Never. Not once. Six percent last reviewed their benefit set in 2015 or earlier.
Only 24% had taken action in the past year.
Among those who had retired benefits, the triggers were predictable once named: low usage, poor take-up, loss of relevance, or a change in funding. These are not difficult things to measure, but they do require the organisational will to actually ask the question and act on the answer.
Benefits that no longer deliver value don’t just take up budget. They quietly erode confidence in everything else your membership offers. If you’re carrying dead weight, members feel it, even if they can’t name it.
On the question of data and AI readiness, the results produced what I called a striking three-way split: 29% are collecting data but rarely acting on it; 29% are using data but see AI as out of reach; 29% are actively piloting AI and automation; and 12% are still working primarily from instinct and anecdote.
We are at an inflection point. The sector is not standing still, but neither is it moving fast. And the barriers named were familiar ones: time and capacity (the most cited), skills and knowledge, resources and funding, and system readiness.
The honest truth is that most associations are trying to make progress on AI while simultaneously running events, managing boards, chasing renewals, and onboarding new members. There’s no slack in the system. That’s not a failure of ambition — it’s a structural challenge that requires a different kind of support.
When asked what single challenge they most wanted the session to help solve, 53% said member engagement.
Not recruitment. Not retention. Not data. Engagement.
Which makes sense, because engagement is the engine that powers everything else. An engaged member renews, refers and tolerates the occasional invoice-only renewal because the relationship has enough depth to withstand it.
Value articulation and membership growth each drew 18% of responses. Retention and benefits prioritisation accounted for the remaining 12%.
The shape of those priorities tells its own story: organisations know that if they can improve engagement, many of the other problems become more manageable.
One of the most textured questions asked delegates to describe a moment where teams delivered brilliantly together or where a member fell through the cracks.
The success stories were striking in what they had in common: alignment around a shared objective. A flagship conference with record revenue. A lobbying campaign that secured regulatory change. A World Water Congress that brought membership, communications, events, and finance into genuine coordination. These weren’t accidents they were the result of teams who knew what they were trying to achieve together.
The failures were equally instructive: an IT system failure that created months of invoicing chaos; a three-year, £500k CRM project trying to get every team working from the same data. In each case, the member experience suffered because the internal infrastructure couldn’t support it.
Collaboration isn’t a soft skill, it’s a vital operational discipline.
The responses from one session at one conference are a snapshot, not a census. But these respondents are experienced, thoughtful practitioners and their answers reflect patterns we see consistently across the sector.
The picture they paint is one of organisations that care deeply about their members, are under real pressure, and are often working without the language, structure, or capacity to fully translate that care into the experience members feel.
That gap is closeable. It requires honest diagnosis, clear frameworks, and the right kind of support.
Don't Just Take Our Word For It
One delegate summed it up perfectly. They told us the session was one of the most note-worthy of the entire congress, and that they'd already started applying the contact mapping and relationship tracking approach from the IMPACT Framework to new connections made at AWC, with the goal of building a more personalised, meaningful follow-up process. As they put it,
“It was genuinely inspiring to see a framework that can be implemented straight away”
That's exactly the outcome we hope for. Frameworks are only useful if they get used and it's brilliant to see this one already at work, days after the session ended.
At Dovetail Creative, this is exactly the work we do and have done, across membership organisations, trade associations, and professional communities for over 25 years.
Whether you’re struggling to articulate member value in language that actually lands, navigating a renewal process that feels more like an admin task than a relationship moment, or wondering how to approach the AI and data readiness question without it becoming a multi-year project, we can help you find a practical path forward.
Our work spans membership strategy and proposition development, communications and content, events and community activation, and operational support for the teams behind it all. We work as a genuine extension of your team: we don’t parachute in with templates and leave. We stay close, stay curious, and stay focused on what your members actually need.
Find out more about the IMPACT Framework and how to create a compelling 2-minute elevator pitch by clicking the links below.