Feedback doesn’t belong in a dashboard. It belongs in your team.
You measure. You collect scores. But who inside your club actually sees that feedback?
In many sports clubs, feedback ends up with one person. Or worse: in a dashboard nobody looks at. Not because people don’t care, but because sharing was never organised.
That’s a missed opportunity. Because feedback only becomes valuable when it reaches the right people. The critical voices as well as the positive ones.
Share the positive just as loudly
A member writes that a trainer’s class made their week. Who sees that? If that compliment disappears into a report, no one does. By sharing it, your trainer sees the real impact they have on members.
Positive feedback motivates. It shows what works.
Make one person responsible
Feedback doesn’t spread on its own. Assign someone to review the scores, spot patterns, and make sure the right colleagues see it in time. Without ownership, feedback gets lost in good intentions.
Act on it and communicate it
When members see their feedback leads to change, it builds trust. And trust keeps them coming back. It doesn’t have to be big. “You told us the Wednesday spinning class was too early. We’ve adjusted it for you.”
Clubs that actively share feedback across their organisation don’t build customers. They build ambassadors.






