The idea of building a “membership community” used to make me panic.
I pictured forums with zero posts, clunky logins, and me begging people to join. I had no clue where to start… or if anyone would care.
But here’s the twist: when I finally did build one, without fancy tech or a huge list, it became the most rewarding thing I’ve done in my business.
If you’ve been thinking about creating your own membership space (and avoiding it because it feels complicated), let me walk you through the easiest way I’ve found. No coding. No overwhelm. Just a real approach that works for creators, coaches, or anyone building a brand online.
How It All Started? (Spoiler: I Had No Idea What I Was Doing)
So a couple years back, I launched a digital product. It did okay. But what I noticed? People kept emailing me with questions. Not just about the product — but about everything else related to the topic.
That’s when the idea hit: what if I had a space where we could all hang out, ask questions, and go deeper together? I didn’t want to build a course. I didn’t want to post daily content like a maniac. I just wanted connection and recurring income.
After testing a few tools and formats, I landed on a super simple setup — and it worked. I’m talking low-effort, high-value.
Here’s exactly what I did.
Step 1: Pick a Simple Platform (Skip the Complicated Ones)
Please don’t start by Googling “best membership software.” I went down that rabbit hole. Nightmare.
I tested Kajabi, Mighty Networks, Discord, Slack, even a Facebook Group with Stripe plug-ins. You know what worked best for me? Payhip. Super clean. Built-in membership tiers. It handles payments, content delivery, and access control — no plug-ins or integrations.
If Payhip’s not your vibe, Circle or Skool are also great. But the key here is: keep it stupid simple. If it takes more than a day to set up, you’ll lose momentum.
Step 2: Create Just Enough Content to Start
This is where most people get stuck — they think they need to create a whole course before launching. Nope. I started with:
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One welcome video
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A calendar of upcoming live calls
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A small library of past trainings I already had
That’s it.
People aren’t joining for content. They’re joining for connection, access, and consistency. Start with a few valuable things, then grow it as you go. You don’t need 50 modules and a private podcast on day one.
Step 3: Choose a Pricing Model That Feels Good
I went with a monthly plan at $19 and an annual plan with two free months. Easy math. No stress. A few people asked for lifetime access, so I added that too later on.
Here’s what I learned:
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Keep the tiers simple — don’t confuse people.
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Offer a free trial or promo to get momentum.
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Don’t price it like it’s a full course. It’s a membership, not Harvard.
Step 4: Focus on Community, Not “Deliverables”
I burned out real fast when I tried to promise new content every single week. So I pivoted.
Now, I run:
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1 live Zoom call per month (Q&A or a workshop)
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An open discussion thread for questions
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Occasional member spotlights or bonus resources
Turns out, people showed up more for the vibe than the vault. Engagement shot up when I stopped thinking like a teacher and started thinking like a host.
Step 5: Launch Ugly and Improve Later
My first version? Clunky. My welcome video was just me talking on Loom. I used Canva for all the graphics. I announced the launch on my email list with the subject line: “This might flop, but I’m trying something…”
And guess what? I got 26 signups in 3 days.
That momentum was all I needed to keep going. Perfection is the killer of progress in this game. Launch now, polish later.
Tools I Actually Use (and Love)
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Payhip: Membership site, payments, product bundling — done.
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Canva: Graphics, logos, community visuals.
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Loom: Quick training videos or walkthroughs.
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Google Docs: Content planning and swipe files.
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ConvertKit: Email announcements and automation.
You don’t need a stack of 10 tools. Just a few that work well together.
Final Thoughts: Just Start (Even If It’s Messy)
Building a membership community doesn’t need to feel heavy. You don’t need a massive audience or a fancy course. You just need a reason, a platform, and a few people who trust you.
If I waited until everything was “ready,” I’d still be stuck on version zero.
Start where you are. Keep it simple. Focus on people, not perfection. And remember — messy action builds real communities.








