It’s January in Chicago, which means gray skies and packed gyms, at least for the first few weeks. You see it every year. People start strong, then the motivation wears off.
Membership businesses are not that different.
When retention slips, most website owners assume something big is broken. Pricing. Content volume. Marketing. In reality, one of the most common reasons members leave is much simpler.
They never quite understood what “success” looked like after they joined.
- Define the first win
Ask yourself: what is the smallest meaningful result a new member should achieve in 7 days? Watching one lesson. Completing one setup step. Posting once. Keep it simple. - Make that win obvious
Put it front and center on the member homepage or first email. One sentence is enough. “Start here” should not be ambiguous. - Remove distractions from the first visit
If everything is important, nothing is. Hide or de-emphasize anything that does not help a new member reach that first win. - Acknowledge progress
When they complete the step, tell them it matters. This reinforces momentum and makes the membership feel intentional, not overwhelming.
This approach aligns with what behavioral research shows about habit formation. People are more likely to stick with something when the next step is clear and achievable.
Retention improves when members feel oriented, not impressed.
Clear early guidance reduces cognitive load, builds confidence, and helps members quickly answer the question every subscriber asks, often silently: “Am I in the right place?”
You do not need a redesign to do this. You need one clear path.
As winter drags on here in Chicago, the people who stick with anything are usually not the most motivated. They are the ones who know exactly what to do next.
The same is true for your members.
Happy New Year!

Marvin
Chief Growth Officer
MemberSpace