This time of year, the events calendar fills up fast. Across the sector, membership professionals are packing their bags for congresses, conferences, and summits, rooms full of people who care deeply about the future of associations and the communities they serve. I'm one of them. As I prepare for my speaking slots at the Association of Association Executives World Congress, I've found myself doing what I always do before I step onto a platform - sitting back, blocking out the noise, and asking what's actually going on.
And the honest answer, is that the sector is at a genuine inflection point.
There's a particular kind of optimism that exists in membership. You willl find it in survey reports, conference keynotes, and leadership away days. Leaders are broadly positive. Growth targets are set. Plans are made. And then reality bites.
Half of associations are reporting flat or declining membership. Only 11% describe their value proposition as "very compelling." A quarter don't have a documented engagement plan. For the fourth consecutive year, member engagement tops the list of priorities, which tells you everything you need to know about whether it's actually being solved.
What I'm seeing in 2026 is a sector that knows it needs to change, but is still finding reasons not to.
I was recently in a peer session with a small group of membership executives, exactly the kind of candid, off-the-record conversation that rarely makes it into conference presentations. We were discussing retention, value proposition, the usual. And then someone mentioned they hadn't surveyed their members in two or three years.
They weren't embarrassed about it. They said it matter-of-factly, because to them, they already knew what their members wanted.
And that, for me, is one of the most significant challenges facing the membership sector right now. Not the technology gap. Not the AI readiness question. But the fundamental assumption that we know, without asking, what our members need, what they value, and why they stay or leave.
In that same conversation, another executive described carefully ranking the importance of their membership benefits. Their ranking. Based on their judgment. Not their members' actual feedback.
When was the last time you asked your members to rank what matters to them? Not what you think matters. What they tell you matters. And critically, when did you last reach beyond your existing membership to ask those who've lapsed, or who've never joined at all, what it would take?
The answer, in many organisations, is uncomfortable.
There's a related problem. Google, LinkedIn, and YouTube have replaced associations as the first port of call for professional knowledge. Members aren't waiting for the quarterly newsletter. They're getting insight, connection, and community from open platforms, for free, on demand, personalised to their interests.
That doesn't make associations irrelevant. Far from it. But it does mean the bar for what membership needs to deliver has shifted dramatically. If your digital presence, content, and community experience aren't competing with the platforms your members use every day, you are losing ground, whether you can see it yet or not.
In that peer group, one organisation described their member area as "hell on earth." Members couldn't find anything, couldn't collaborate, and largely avoided it. They knew it. They'd known it for some time. The fix was underway, but the damage to member experience had already been done quietly, invisibly, over years.
This is far from unique. Across the sector, legacy platforms, outdated CRMs, and fragmented data systems are actively undermining the member experience. Members benchmark your digital touchpoints against Netflix, Spotify, and LinkedIn. When they log into your portal and find a static page and a PDF events calendar, the disconnect is immediate and damaging.
Technology debt doesn't just slow you down operationally. It costs you members.
The AI discussion in membership has reached a strange place. Everyone agrees it matters. Very few organisations have moved beyond exploration. In 2026, the question is no longer whether to use AI. It's whether your organisation has the foundations in place to use it well.
And most don't. Fragmented data, unclear member journeys, and the absence of any formal AI policy mean that even where the will exists, the capability doesn't follow. Meanwhile, member expectations for personalisation, responsiveness, and relevance keep rising.
The organisations that will lead this decade are the ones treating AI as an operational capability, not a pilot project or a talking point saved for the board agenda.
The conversation about attracting younger members tends to focus on marketing and outreach. But the real issue runs deeper. Employers are covering professional memberships less frequently. Younger professionals have tighter budgets and higher expectations. They want career growth, peer connection, and mentoring, and they want to feel that the organisation genuinely understands them.
You can't retrofit a 20-year-old membership model with a few social media posts and call it a generational strategy. It requires a genuine rethink of what membership delivers, and for whom.
This one doesn't get enough airtime, and I suspect it will come up in congress rooms more than once. Associations are facing a dual crisis: burnout among existing volunteers and a significant drop in new ones coming forward. Committees that once had waiting lists now struggle to fill seats. The ask is the same. The willingness, increasingly, is not.
This has real consequences for governance, event delivery, and the peer-led value that sits at the heart of what membership organisations are built on.
Geopolitical instability, trade tensions, regulatory change, inflationary pressure. None of this is abstract for membership organisations. It directly affects conference attendance, international collaboration, sponsorship appetite, and what members actually need from you right now. The associations navigating this well have positioned themselves as a trusted, calm, informed voice, not just a directory with an annual conference attached.
It means 2026 is a year for honesty. And it starts with the most basic act of listening.
Survey your members. Survey the ones who left. Survey the people who should be members but aren't. Ask them to rank what matters, and be prepared to be surprised by the answers. As one participant in that peer session noted, when they finally ran a member survey, they discovered people didn't even know about half the benefits on offer. The survey wasn't just research. It was communication.
Then ask the harder questions at board level. Is your value proposition genuinely compelling, or just familiar? Is your technology serving your members, or frustrating them? Is your engagement strategy built on evidence, or assumption?
The membership sector has an extraordinary foundation to build from. The trust is there. The community is there. The purpose is real. But purpose alone doesn't retain members, and optimism alone doesn't drive growth.
As I head into congress season, these are the questions sitting with me, and I suspect I'm not alone. I'd love to hear what's sitting with you.