Excel is familiar, free, and flexible. For small clubs with few members and an engaged secretary, it often works for years. Eventually, almost every club hits limits — usually right before the annual general meeting or when someone changes roles.
Typical signs of Excel chaos
Does any of this sound familiar?
- Multiple lists: One file for contacts, one for fees, one for events — and nobody knows which is current
- Knowledge in people's heads: Only one person knows where the "right" spreadsheet lives and how it is structured
- Retyping paper forms: Registration forms get typed in by hand, and typos creep in
- Payment status unclear: Treasurer and secretary have different figures — members call to ask
- Tool switching: Mailchimp for newsletters, WhatsApp for updates, Excel for members — triple maintenance
That costs more than time. It costs trust on the board and nerves before the AGM.
When Excel is still enough
Excel is fine when:
- you have fewer than 30–40 active members
- one volunteer reliably maintains the list
- fees are simple (one amount, few exceptions)
- the board rarely needs member data
Once several people work in parallel or payments get more complex, Excel becomes a source of errors.
When association software makes sense
A switch typically pays off when at least two of these apply:
- Several board roles need the same overview (treasurer, secretary, president)
- Membership fees should be paid online (TWINT, QR bill)
- New members should register digitally — without retyping
- The AGM is approaching and nobody knows exactly who has paid
- Someone is stepping down and knowledge should not leave with them
Association software does not replace your work — it brings it to one place the whole board can use.
What to consider when switching
Migration: Import existing members via CSV instead of retyping. Start with our member list template (Excel/CSV).
Swiss specifics: QR bills, TWINT, and integrations with payment providers like zahls.ch matter for Swiss clubs — generic tools often do not cover this.
Cost: Many clubs start with a free basic plan. Try it with your real member base before committing.
Board buy-in: Invite everyone, look at a live list together — that convinces more than a slide deck.
The first step does not have to be big
You do not need to "digitise everything". Often this is enough: