Oubliez Excel — comment votre club obtient un vrai registre des membres
Excel suffit jusqu'à ce que le club grandisse. Les problèmes d'un registre des membres sous Excel — partage, RGPD, doublons, cotisations — et comment un vrai registre les résout.
Publié le 15 juin 2026
Almost every club starts the same way: a member register in Excel. A spreadsheet with names, emails and whether the fee is paid. It works — until the club grows, the treasurer is replaced, or someone asks to have their data deleted. That's when the Excel sheet becomes a liability. This guide covers why, and what to switch to.
Why Excel stops working
A spreadsheet is excellent — for one person, on one occasion. As an ongoing member register for a club it has four built-in problems:
1. Sharing and versions
The treasurer has one version, the chair another, the secretary a third from last year. Who has the latest? The file gets emailed back and forth as members_2026_FINAL_v3_copy.xlsx. Edits get overwritten.
2. Duplicates and bad data
The same member is entered twice with different spelling. An email has a trailing space. When you send the AGM notice, half the rows are broken — and by then it's too late.
3. Fees tracked by hand
Who has paid the membership fee? In Excel it becomes a column where you colour the cells green yourself. No reminder goes out automatically. There's no link between "paid" and an actual invoice.
4. GDPR — the big risk
A member register contains personal data, so GDPR applies fully — even to a small sports club. An Excel sheet sitting in someone's private Dropbox, emailed unencrypted with no access control, is hard to defend if a member complains. Who has access? Where is it stored? How do you delete a member completely — including from every emailed copy?
What a proper member register gives you
- A single source of truth — everyone sees the same up-to-date list
- Roles and permissions — the treasurer sees fees, the secretary sees contacts
- Validation — email and phone are checked on entry, duplicates flagged
- Member categories — junior, senior, supporting, honorary — with different fees
- Search and filter — "all seniors who haven't paid" in two seconds
- Export whenever you want — you're never locked in
Moving over: CSV import
The best part of switching is that you don't start over. Save your existing Excel sheet as CSV and import it — the columns map to fields like name, email and category. In a few minutes the whole club is in the new register, with duplicates cleaned up along the way.
Invoice membership fees — automatically
This is where a proper register really pays off. With members in the register you can invoice the membership fee straight from it: one invoice per member or a batch for a whole category, different amounts per category, sent as PDF with correct sequential numbering and all mandatory fields — and you instantly see who's paid and who needs a reminder.
GDPR becomes manageable (EU)
- EU hosting — data never leaves the EU
- Access control — you know exactly who can see what
- Real deletion — a member can be removed completely
- Export — a member has a right to their data; one click
- Data minimisation — store only name, contact and category
For the full rules, see our GDPR checklist for small businesses and clubs.
Summary
Excel is a good tool in the wrong place. For a growing club it creates version chaos, duplicates, manual fee-chasing and a GDPR risk that's hard to defend. A proper member register gives you a single source of truth, automatic membership invoicing and manageable data protection — and you migrate in minutes with CSV import.
Read more about a member register for clubs or see how 1invoice.online works for clubs and associations.