Why Should Your Industry or Trade Association Hire an Outside Consultant for Member Surveys?
An independent research consultant helps trade and industry associations get higher response rates, candid member feedback, and credible data the board, management, and staff can act on – by combining guaranteed confidentiality, multimode outreach (phone, email, text, and mail), and the impartiality of a third party who understands association governance.
Important
- Confidentiality unlocks honesty. Members are far more likely to share real opinions about leadership, dues value, and organizational direction when a neutral third party – not association management – collects the data.
- Multimode outreach captures the full membership. Most associations blast an email link and call it research. A consultant can reach members how they prefer to communicate – by phone, email, text, and mail, pulling in voices that a single channel misses.
- Third-party credibility protects the findings. When results come from an impartial firm, they are far less likely to be dismissed – especially on divisive issues like dues increases, policy positions, or leadership performance.
- Representative data strengthens the association’s voice. Associations exist to speak for an industry, profession, or trade. A methodologically sound survey ensures that voice actually reflects the membership.

Why Do Most Board- and Management-led Association Surveys Underperform?
Management doesn’t have the same tools as professional researchers, nor can they credibly promise confidentiality. This means low response rates, largely from the most engaged members. The data ends up reflecting a narrow, self-selected slice of the membership – not the broad base the association represents.
How Does Confidentiality Change What Members Are Willing to Say?
Whether it’s fear of embarrassment, or retribution, or something else, members often avoid honest answers on sensitive topics. An outside consultant creates a clear separation between individual responses and association leadership.
The firewall matters on questions that matter most: satisfaction with management/staff performance, perceived value of dues, effectiveness of advocacy efforts, and values alignment.
Why Does Multimode Outreach Matter for Associations?
We all have different communication preferences. Email. Text message. Phone calls. Mail. Choose only one mode and you will limit your responses. Choose more than one or all of them and your participation rate increases dramatically.
Layering these modes closes the gap between engaged insiders and the broader, quieter membership. That distinction matters — boards and staff already know what the engaged members think. The value of a survey is hearing from everyone else.
What Makes a Third-Party Consultant More Credible?
Impartiality removes the most common objection to survey findings: that board leadership or management shaped the questions or the results to support a predetermined conclusion.
You value having a consultant who has direct experience in association governance – understanding board structures, committee dynamics, member segmentation, and the political realities of running a membership organization. That experience produces smarter questionnaire design, analysis, and findings presented in terms the board and management can immediately act on.
All survey results should be assumed to be confidential (for internal use only) unless there is an overt decision otherwise. If there is intention to use data externally, for advocacy / regulatory comments / public testimony (“80% of our membership opposes the new legislation”), or media (“We want to partner with local community colleges to help train the next generation of our trade. An internal survey of our members found near unanimous support for diversifying our workforce.”). Policymakers and journalists scrutinize methodology. Data collected by an independent research firm withstands that scrutiny.
When Should a Trade Association Bring In an Outside Consultant?
When the board or management needs member input they can defend – internally or externally. Common scenarios include:
| Scenario | Why Outside Research Helps |
|---|---|
| Annual member satisfaction surveys | Establishes a credible benchmark the board can track year over year |
| Dues increase or restructuring | Demonstrates actual member willingness to pay before the board votes |
| Strategic planning | Captures priorities from the full membership, not just committees |
| Legislative and regulatory advocacy | Produces defensible data for testimony, public comment, and media |
| Merger or partnership discussions | Gauges member sentiment before committing the organization |
| Event and programming evaluation | Identifies what members actually value versus what staff assumptions |
FAQ
Can’t our association manager just run the survey internally?
Yes, they can. And managers have operational knowledge that is invaluable in designing a survey, but whether real or just assumed, they have a stake in the outcome. Members know this. An independent consultant removes that perceived conflict, which is what makes the difference between data the board debates and data the board acts on.
Is this cost-effective for a smaller or regional association?
Maybe. If you are struggling to pay the rent or phone bill, then hiring a professional research firm is not a good idea. The cost often depends on factors like size (number of members) and length of survey (number of questions). You should budget single-digit thousands to tens of thousands.
How long does a professionally managed association survey take?
Most projects run six to eight weeks from questionnaire design through final reporting. The field period – when members are being contacted across all modes – typically lasts three to four weeks.
Probolsky Research is a market and opinion research firm with association, corporate, election, government, and nonprofit clients.



