For most associations and professional networks, annual conferences and quarterly meetups act as the primary touchpoints for their members. After the event ends, engagement fades and renewal rates slip while non-dues revenue flatlines until the following year.
A well-built membership engagement strategy helps you keep members connected and engaged 12 months a year.
We'll walk you through a proven engagement framework with practical tactics you can put to work. We'll also explore the right metrics to measure your results.
Your membership engagement plan should combine a defined structure with specific tactics if it's to work sustainably throughout the year. Here’s a quick highlight of the 5 proven membership engagement ideas we'll unpack in the sections ahead.
Your members have more professional development options than at any point in the past decade. Free webinars and LinkedIn communities compete for the same attention your association or professional network needs.
Here's what's at stake when engagement falls short.
Strong member engagement strategies protect your bottom line and create a membership experience worth the annual fee.
Before you pick tactics, you need a structure. A membership strategy works best when it accounts for who your members are and what they value. You also need to understand how they prefer to connect.
Let’s check out the main components you need to consider.
Your early-career professionals have different goals than veteran practitioners who've spent 20 years in the field.
When you have a strong community management strategy in place, you can group members by career stage and engagement history to tailor outreach to what each group needs.
Once you've identified your segments, you need a clear answer to "why should I stay?" for each one.
A new member might value peer access and mentorship. A senior leader might care more about credentials and thought leadership.
You’ll have to make that value visible through your onboarding emails and community spaces and reinforce it again when renewal time comes.
Your members won't engage if you're hard to find, which means you have to meet them where they already are, whether that's email or a mobile community app.
The content you share through your channels should feel relevant and timely, especially when you blend online community engagement activities with structured education to maintain year-round member activity.
Your mobile experience also matters just as much as your desktop experience. Members who can engage from their phones during a commute or lunch break will participate more than those who must wait until they're at a desk.
When these components work together, your engagement efforts feel cohesive to your members because nobody wants random, disconnected touchpoints.
Now that you have the framework, here are 5 association member engagement strategies you can put to work. Some of these will feel familiar. Others might challenge your current approach. Let’s dive deeper.
Build a welcome sequence that introduces new members to relevant peers and community spaces within the first week.
You can also create a welcome packet with a guide to all your online community management resources and a curated list of recommended courses.
Later on, you can follow up at 30 and 90 days with personalized messages that show your team cares about their experience.
You'll want to create mentorship programs that give experienced professionals a way to contribute while newer members get the guidance they need. Members who form genuine connections with peers are much more likely to renew.
You can structure these programs by career stage and specialty to keep members engaged in your online communities and make the matches more relevant.
Make the first introduction, then let the relationship develop on its own.
If your association or professional network has strong peer programs, you can achieve higher annual renewal rates and greater member involvement.
Continuing education is one of the strongest reasons professionals join associations and professional networks. For many members, structured learning becomes the primary path to improve their careers throughout the year.
Your members expect more than a static course library and are actually looking for paths that connect to their credential goals and career ambitions. When you tie education to community, something powerful happens. Members discuss what they've learned with peers and apply it to real professional challenges.
The result is deeper expertise that members build together, and new non-dues revenue opportunities for your organization as socialized learning takes root.
Since people stay where they feel valued, you can strengthen that sense of belonging by highlighting active members through public shoutouts and member spotlights in your community spaces. Featured member profiles are another strong signal that your organization notices contributions.
You should also think about elevated roles. When you promote active contributors to moderator or ambassador positions, you distribute leadership and give members a reason to stay invested.
Generic email blasts won't cut it at a time when your members expect content that reflects their interests and career stage. Behavioral data from your community and learning systems helps you identify which members are active and which ones face retention risk.
You can use these insights to personalize your outreach to ensure a mid-career nurse and a newly certified technician don't receive the same newsletter. If your content is more targeted, the more relevant your organization feels to every individual member.
These 5 strategies work best when you combine them into one connected engagement approach. Your next step is to ensure you have the right tools and processes to put them into action.
Having a plan is one thing. How you execute it across your entire organization is another challenge. Membership engagement strategies yield better results when your team has the right tools and a clear process to support them.
Start with an audit of what you already have. Many associations and professional networks use separate systems for email and learning, with a separate community tool on the side.
These disconnected systems create gaps in your member data and make it hard to personalize the experience. A unified solution that brings community and learning together, with built-in analytics, helps your team act on real-time member behavior.
You can use our free return on engagement calculator to estimate the value a connected member community creates for your organization.
You should also assign clear ownership. Your membership team and education staff need to understand their roles in the membership engagement plan. Regular check-ins help you spot what produces results and what needs a new approach.
Start with a pilot group of engaged members who can test new community features and give feedback before you launch to the full membership.
At Forj, our solutions replace these fragmented systems with one connected member experience. Here's how we support your membership engagement efforts at every stage of the member journey.
Explore how Forj can transform your member experience.
Measurement separates a real member engagement strategy from a wish list. Here are the key member engagement metrics that show whether your efforts are working.
Review these numbers monthly with your team and compare quarter over quarter to see the trends, which matter more than any single data point. Your members' behavior will tell you what to do next if you always measure the right metrics.
Here are the most common questions about building a practical membership engagement strategy.
Member engagement and member retention are related but distinct. Engagement tracks how your members interact with your association or professional network through events and community conversations.
On the other hand, retention measures how many of your members renew. Engagement is the leading indicator, while retention is the lagging one. Strong engagement produces strong retention, but the reverse doesn't always hold.
The time it takes to see results from a membership engagement strategy depends on your starting point and the tactics you choose.
You can expect early signals like increased community activity within the first 2 to 3 months. Meaningful changes in renewal rates and non-dues revenue can take 6 to 12 months as your members respond to consistent engagement.
The membership engagement strategy needs a clear owner at the director or VP level within your membership or community team. Your education staff and marketing colleagues should contribute to the effort. One person coordinates and holds everyone accountable for results.
Your budget for member engagement depends on your organization's size and the tools you use. Many associations put 15% to 25% of their technology budget toward engagement solutions. What matters most is choosing a unified solution that eliminates duplicate tools and gives your team the data to make informed choices.
A strong membership engagement strategy helps your association or professional network move from one annual or quarterly touchpoint to year-round member value. Once you combine community and ongoing education with built-in behavioral insights, your members get a smoother, more connected journey.
We help associations and professional networks connect their touchpoints throughout the year. Forj brings learning and community together in one place with built-in analytics that reveal what your members need most.
See how Forj can bring your membership engagement strategy to life.