When running a creative membership starts to feel overwhelming.
Most people who start creative memberships do it for good reasons.
They want to share what they know.
They want to make space for others to learn or create alongside them.
They want community, not just customers.
Very few people start a membership because they want to perform all the time.
And yet, this is where many creative membership owners end up.
Posting constantly.
Trying to keep energy high.
Feeling as if they slow down, everything will fall apart.
When a membership starts to feel heavy, it’s easy to think the problem is a lack of motivation, discipline, or confidence.
But from what I’ve seen, that’s rarely the real issue.
Most of the time, it’s actually a structural problem.
Creative memberships often start naturally—with a good idea, a group of people, and a shared interest. But as things grow, the structure doesn’t always keep up.
There might be too many loose ends.
Too much pressure on the person running it.
Not enough clarity about what actually matters.
When there is no rhythm, everything relies on your energy.
And energy is not a reliable long-term strategy.
What makes creative memberships work is not doing more.
It is doing things with intention.
Clear expectations.
Simple structures.
A pace that allows for real life.
When your membership is set up to support both you and your members, everything shifts. It’s easier to show up, engagement feels more natural, and the whole experience becomes more human.
If you’re running a creative or craft-based membership and it feels harder than you thought it would, it doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong.
It usually just means your membership needs better support.
And that’s something you can build, one step at a time.

