“You’ve visited 3 times this month. Ready to book your next session?”
It might arrive via email, WhatsApp, or push notification.
Different channel. Same logic.
It looks personalised.
It isn’t.
The illusion of progress
Operators today have access to more data than ever before:
On the surface, it feels like personalisation should be improving.
But for many members, the experience still feels generic.
Not because there isn’t enough data.
But because it isn’t being used in the right way.
Behaviour is easy to see. Harder to understand.
A member stops attending classes.
That could mean:
The signal is clear. The meaning isn’t.
This is where most personalisation breaks down.
Because behaviour is often interpreted too literally, without enough context.
And when the interpretation is wrong, the response is either:
Fragmented systems, fragmented understanding
There’s another challenge.
The data itself is rarely complete.
Across many operators, information sits in different places:
Not all of these systems are connected.
Not all activity is visible in one place.
That creates blind spots.
For example:
In some cases, this leads to missed opportunities.
In others, it leads to lost revenue. Because decisions are being made on partial visibility, not the full picture.
Either way, it limits how effective personalisation can be.
Personalisation is not a campaign
Too often, personalisation is treated as a marketing exercise.
A set of campaigns.
A set of messages.
A set of triggers.
But real personalisation isn’t about what you send.
It’s about when and why you act.
The difference is simple:
That might mean:
This is less about volume.
More about relevance.
Why this matters
When personalisation doesn’t land, it creates friction.
Messages feel:
And over time, members disengage not just from communication…
but from the experience itself.
Because it doesn’t feel like it understands them.
The shift that’s needed
Improving personalisation doesn’t start with more data.
It starts with better interpretation.
That means:
A simple test
Before calling something “personalised”, ask:
Would this still make sense if the member explained their situation back to you?
If the answer is no, it’s not personal.
Because real personalisation isn’t about what you can say.
It’s about how well you understand… and how well you respond.
Its not just about communication. It’s about how the operation itself adapts.