by Clyde1998 »
06 Sep 2025 20:16
Sutekh Thinking perhaps there’s other ways of doing this sort of thing. Norwich, for example, get their casual fans to pay £25 to annually register for home and/or away “clubs” which entitles fans in each club to buy tickets for home/away games based on how regularly that fan has attended home/away games previously.
Could be a good way to get revenue into the club at some point in the future. The old membership one-time fee basically killed off any regular income for the club through this manner. We seem to get at least 3,000 non-season ticket home fans per Saturday match. I don't know how many unique visitors we get each season, but say 20,000 people pay a £10 annual membership fee - that's an additional £200,000 for the club.
However, would you negatively impact on the number of people buying tickets? Tickets are already £25-27 for an adult, which is arguably too high to get people into the ground on a semi-regular basis already when compared to the capacity of the stadium. If you're only going to couple games a season, effectively adding £5 to the ticket price per person is probably going to deter folk.
I think we're in a stage where we need to maximise attendances: get more people going to games regularly; get new supporters. The secondary income (food, drink, merchandising) may well compensate for the lack of a membership fee over the course of the season. The long term impact will help the club in future seasons.
What could work is a membership scheme that's not directly tied to buying tickets, although it could still provide priority to tickets (a step down from season ticket holders). Perhaps a monthly subscription of £5 which provides discounts on tickets/merchandising; access to certain club events; entry into prize draws. This would be something existing season ticket holders may be interested in - increasing the potential pool of people paying the membership fee and providing revenue beyond what a simple membership fee for tickets would achieve.