There’s a quiet shift happening in leisure.
Members are sharing more data than ever before.
Wearables track sleep and recovery.
Gym equipment logs performance.
Apps capture habits, preferences, and routines.
At the same time, operators are getting better at filling the funnel.
AI is helping drive prospecting, conversion, and acquisition.
More members. More data. More opportunity.
But there’s a question sitting underneath all of this:
What happens next?
The industry has already made strong progress in how it uses AI.
Prospecting, targeting, and conversion have all moved forward quickly.
But the experience that follows has not evolved at the same pace.
We’re getting better at knowing more about members. We’re not yet as good at deciding what to do with that knowledge.
We know more than ever. But do we understand it?
Most operators now have access to a constant stream of signals:
On the surface, it feels like progress.
But data on its own doesn’t create understanding.
A drop in visits might look like disengagement.
It might also mean a change in routine, a loss of confidence, or simply a busy week.
The signal is clear. The meaning isn’t.
That gap between signal and meaning is where most personalisation breaks down.
AI is often framed as a way to increase personalisation.
In reality, its value is much simpler.
It helps connect patterns that would otherwise be missed.
It adds context to behaviour that looks obvious on the surface.
Done well, it moves operators from:
That’s where it becomes useful.
As data becomes richer and interpretation becomes more powerful, the question changes.
Not “can we do this?”
But “should we?”
There is a clear line.
“You haven’t been in for 10 days”
“Want a simple way to get back into your routine?”
“We’ve noticed your sleep has dropped and your recovery looks low…”
Even if it’s accurate, the reaction is often:
“How do you know that?”
That’s the moment trust starts to erode.
We often talk about hyper personalisation in leisure.
But this is moving beyond messaging.
When you combine:
You move closer to understanding not just what members do, but what might be happening around them.
That’s powerful.
It also changes the responsibility of the operator.
The industry has made strong progress in getting members through the door.
The next shift is what happens after that.
Not just more data.
Not just more messages.
Better understanding.
Better timing.
Better judgement.
Before using any new data point, or introducing any new AI driven interaction, ask:
Would this feel helpful if the member knew exactly how we used it?
If the answer is no, you’ve crossed the line.
Because in the end, trust isn’t built on how much you know.
It’s built on how carefully you use it.