Well managed club
Club Standards form the foundation of a well-managed club. Now that your club has successfully met all seven standards, establishing strong practices in governance and duty of care, England Athletics encourages you to use this collection to help embed these standards into your club’s day-to-day operations.
This collection focuses on the next steps in your journey—supporting your club to go beyond the basics and continue developing into a truly well-managed club.
A well-managed club operates within the principles of good governance and is led by a diverse committee that adheres to clear policies, ethical standards, and democratic decision-making processes. Good goverance means the committee will:
- Manages the club in a fair, open, and responsible way.
- Follow clear rules, make decisions together, and keep members informed.
- Oversees money carefully, keep accurate records, and ensures financial responsibility
- Ensures all legal and safety requirements are adhered too.
- Listen to members, encourage participation, and always look for ways to improve how the club is run.
- Be legally compliant
- Protect and support volunteers in their roles
- Ensure members are accessing club activity safely, protecting them from harm, incidents and accidents.
- Minimises club issues and conflicts
- Gives members the confidence that the volunteers have the interests of the club at heart and are making decisions based on what’s is right for the club
- Engage with members so they understand how the club operates and can contribute to the success
- Have happier members, less churn, bigger growth and perform better
- Save time when policies or procedures need to be adopted
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Start by reviewing your club legal structure. You can access the England Athletics Legal structure guidance and seek advice through Muckle PLC.
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The constitution is your club’s most important document, it provides the rules for your club. Ensure this is fit for purpose, up to date and agreed by your club committee.
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Promote the role of your committee. This will raise awareness of the committee and the work they do. It’s often the unseen volunteers of the club that make things happen. This will help with future recruitment and advocacy of the committee.
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Put annual review dates in for all club policies and procedures. Keeping these up to date will save time and ensure the club is operating efficiently.
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Use the club standard checklist to ensure you have the right policies and procedures in place. Put a plan in place for each club standard. Include timescales and work through them one at a time.
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Ensure any new members (including volunteers) are provided with an induction. This induction should include information on the committee, key policies and procedures.
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Use role descriptions for elected members. This will help volunteers understand their role and support the recruitment process.
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Consider the committee structure and associated subgroups. Does this structure allow you to deliver what is required?
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Reinvigorate your club committee to bring in new skills, experience and perspectives. Be proactive in identifying new volunteers to undertake important tasks.
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Think about succession planning. Agree a length of service for each position and start to identify new recruits early so the committee can come to a unanimous decision.